Ahead of the Winter Olympics, Beijing has been a fortress.
Flights and trains to the capital have been cancelled as soon as a region reports COVID-19 cases. And anyone who still makes the journey has to provide a negative PCR test.
But now there's a fortress within Beijing - the Olympics themselves.
The "closed-loop" system means the Olympics venues are now entirely
separate from the rest of Beijing. In effect, there is a city within a
city.
The barriers are formidable - COVID Checkpoint Charlies, manned by police and healthcare workers in full PPE.
Buses shuffle athletes and other attendees between the venues.
Officials have even warned Beijing residents not to come to the aid of
any Olympics vehicles involved in accidents (this is a city of fender
benders at the best of times).
It is less about keeping the athletes safe from COVID than protecting
Beijing. There have been more cases already from inside the loop than
out.
But those few cases - Beijing reported 20 new cases on Monday
- mean the city is anxious. Several districts have been locked down
over recent weeks and millions have been tested.
Most people I know have bought enough dried, tinned and frozen food to last a few weeks.
We
all watched the harsh lockdown in Xian, where starving residents begged
authorities for something to eat, or were beaten by officials for
venturing out to find it themselves.
You could get unlucky even if
your district remains COVID free - the anxiety is that your health
code, an app on your phone that tracks your location history and is
required for entry to any public venue, whether it's a supermarket,
restaurant or park - goes from green to yellow, or even red, notifying
the authorities.
But China will not abandon the policy soon and certainly not now, with the Olympics at hand.
This
was always going to be a different Winter games - one where the snow is
almost entirely artificial, one boycotted by several Western
governments.
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