Beijing: Days after it faced nationwide anti-government protests against its stringent zero-covid policy, China in a major shift of its coronavirus response policies has announced that it will scrap quarantine for international travellers from January 8 as it reopens its borders and comes out of international isolation after nearly three years.>
The National Health Commission (NHC) on Monday, December 26, announced that COVID-19 management will be downgraded from Class A to B from next month, in the same category as less-severe diseases, such as Dengue fever.>
China will cancel inbound quarantine for international arrivals starting from January 8, 2023, it said.>
Previously passengers coming from abroad had to mandatorily stay in over two weeks of quarantine in government accommodations, which was gradually reduced to five days with three days of observation.>
These announcements come at a time when the country is grappling with a sudden spurt in coronavirus infections fuelled by the Omicron variant after the Xi Jinping regime relaxed its stringent zero-Covid policy earlier this month following a wave of anti-government protests.>
Officials argue that the Omicron variant was not as lethal as the Delta strain, which caused massive casualties all over the world.>
COVID-19 has been managed as a top category ‘A’ infectious disease since 2020, putting it at par with bubonic plague and cholera, the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported.>
Under Chinese laws, authorities must impose the toughest restrictions such as quarantine and isolation of the infected and their close contacts, and lockdowns to contain those diseases.>
At the border, the infected must be isolated and those who might be infected quarantined, depending on the incubation period.
The NHC also stopped announcing daily COVID-19 cases from Sunday, December 25.>
The novel coronavirus first emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in December 2019 before it turned into a pandemic
(K.J.M. Varma)>