restaurant in Zhengzhou, Henan, January 11, 2022 On 4 January 2022, 1.1 million people in
Yuzhou,
Henan received
stay at home order after three asymptomatic COVID-19 cases were reported. In the evening of the same day, Zhengzhou told its residents in risky areas that they could not leave the city without approval from health control authorities. The Xi'an outbreak appeared to ease, with 35 local symptomatic cases reported that day. On 11 January, the city of
Zhengzhou has upgraded measures and closed down non-essential services during a citywide mass testing campaign while
Anyang has been placed under lockdown. On 24 January, lockdown restrictions were lifted in Xi'an while 2 million residents of
Fengtai district of Beijing underwent mass testing. On 25 January, the border city of
Suifenhe was placed into lockdown. On 7 February, the city of
Baise in Guangxi province has been placed under lockdown after 37 symptomatic cases were reported on the day before. That same month, a team of analysts from
Lanzhou University predicted that the pandemic would end in late 2023. On 11 March, the city of
Changchun of
Jilin Province was placed into lockdown after the highest single day spike in cases since the Wuhan outbreak was reported. Food shortages related to shutdown measures were reported. Sporadic outbreaks have been reported in
Laixi and
Huangdao of Shandong province. On 14 March, the city of
Shenzhen was placed on lockdown, with factories halting production after new virus cases doubled nationwide to almost 3,400. The neighboring city of
Hong Kong was also battling a severe outbreak since January. Schools and public transport were closed in Shanghai and people were forbidden to enter or exit
Jilin as the entire province is closed to curb the virus spread. On 15 March, the whole area of
Langfang city, Hebei and the factory center of
Dongguan in Guangdong were put into lockdown. The earlier shutdown of Shenzhen has forced manufacturers such as Toyota, Volkswagen and Apple's supplier
Foxconn to suspend operations. The Shenzhen lockdowns ended on 23 March. On 20 March, China reported its first COVID-19 deaths since January 2021 and the first double daily toll since May 2020, with both fatalities coming from Jilin. On 23 March, lockdowns were implemented in the cities of
Tangshan and
Shenyang. On 28 March, the Shanghai city government announced the largest city-wide lockdown in China since the outbreak began in which
Shanghai will be locked down in two stages. The city of Shanghai became
the country's COVID-19 epicenter after a surge in cases. Shanghai's lockdowns has hit operations at the
city's ports, causing disruptions on the logistical chain to the manufacturing hubs nearby. There were reports of
panic buying to stock up supplies in the city. 's west gate due to the pandemic, Jiangsu, March 14, 2022 On 30 March, the city of
Xuzhou in Jiangsu has imposed a three-day lockdown. On 3 April, China reported 13,146 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, which was the highest single-day total of new cases since the height of the pandemic in
Wuhan in February 2020. On 4 April, officials in
Suzhou announced a new mutation of the Omicron variant was detected in
Changshu. The city of
Baicheng in Inner Mongolia was put into lockdown.
March–May 2022 Shanghai outbreak By 9 April, it is estimated that 23 Chinese cities, home to an estimated 193 million people and contribute 22% of China's GDP, have been implementing either full or partial lockdowns. In Shanghai, residents have reported food shortages due to lockdown measures. The city's health system has shown signs of strain as patients were turned away from hospitals as wards were closed and medical staff have been deployed to quarantine hospitals. A series of deaths were reported at the Shanghai Donghai Elderly Care hospital, which their relatives blame on lack of care due to hospital staff being taken away for quarantine. Videos have emerged on social media showing Shanghai residents engaging in protests and clashes with police over quarantine policies.
Increasing of rolling lockdown measures On 11 April, authorities in
Guangzhou closed the city to most arrivals and only allowed citizens with a "definite need" to leave. Lockdown measures continue to spread to other cities in China as restrictions on movement were reported in Suzhou, Zhengzhou,
Taiyuan and
Ningde. On 16 April, a temporary partial lockdown was again imposed in Xi'an after dozens of infections were reported. On 19 April, Tangshan re-enforced partial lockdowns in some of its districts. On 26 April,
Baotou in Inner Mongolia announced it will lock down for a week while Beijing begins mass testing of nearly all of its 21 million residents. On 28 April,
Hangzhou started mass testing while the wholesale hub of
Yiwu and the port city of
Qinhuangdao were put into lockdown. On 30 April, China recorded 47 deaths from Covid within 24 hours, bringing the total toll above 5,000. A Caixin media report cited that
Handan,
Lu'an,
Quanzhou,
Suqian,
Wuhu,
Xining, Xuzhou along with many cities in Jilin, Shanxi, Heilongjiang, Jiangsu and
Shaanxi were locked down in April, with more than 30 million people affected. The province of Jilin began to gradually lift COVID-19 control measures from the end of April. It reported a GDP shrinkage of 7.9% during the first quarter of 2022. On 3 May, the city of Zhengzhou imposed new movement restrictions, which halts all activities and only allows each household to one person with a negative test result to go out once a day to purchase basic supplies. On 13 May, Beijing authorities announced that parts of
Chaoyang,
Fangshan and
Shunyi districts would be subject to tighter curbs. On 22 May, lockdowns have been imposed on those three districts along with
Haidian and
Fengtai. On 24 May, the city of
Tianjin locked down its central district, causing delays and blank sailings at its ports. On 31 May, Shanghai began to start lifting its strict lockdown measures, allowing people to return to work and malls and shops to re-open in "low-risk" areas. In some neighborhoods and districts, residents were ordered to stay home until mid-June after completion of rounds of rigorous testing. On 6 June, Beijing authorities further relaxed curbs by allowing indoor dining while the city of
Erenhot and the
Sonid Right Banner of Xilin Gol, Inner Mongolia have imposed lockdowns. On 13 June, an outbreak linked to a nightclub forced Beijing authorities to shut down the Workers' Stadium and Sanlitun leisure and nightlife districts. Despite the flare up, Beijing declared an "initial victory" over COVID-19 on 16 June and allowed schools to resume in-class teaching on 27 June. On 29 June, the county of
Sixian of Anhui was put into lockdown. On 1 July, Anhui put a second county,
Lingbi, under lockdown. On 6 July, Shanghai reported the most virus infections since late May, with sporadic cases also propped up in Xuzhou and Wuxi. On 9 July, the city of
Haikou on Hainan Island imposed seven-day restrictions that shut down businesses and public venues. On 10 July,
Qinyang in Henan province almost completely locked down its residents while Xi'an and Lanzhou moved to tighter curbs. On 12 July,
Wugang,
Zhumadian and
Pingdingshan in Henan implemented a three days implementation of strict closed control. On 13 July,
Huaiyuan of Anhui and Lanzhou of Gansu were reported to have shifted into full lockdown. On 14 July, China reported an increase in cases tally as a new cluster emerged around
Beihai, Guangxi. On 17 July, lockdown was imposed in Beihai and the tourist island of
Weizhou, trapping more than 2,000 holidaymakers.
Dandong's mayor has apologised for an over 50-day lockdown that the North Korea-bordering city had to endure. On 27 July, authorities in Wuhan shut down
Jiangxia District of almost a million people after detecting four asymptomatic cases. Throughout July, Shenzhen's biggest manufacturers including
Foxconn,
Huawei and
BYD were forced to operate within a "closed loop" restricted system as the manufacturing hub was battling its latest Covid outbreak. On 3 August, the export hub of
Yiwu in Zhejiang suspended public gatherings and locked down some areas to cope with COVID-19 flare ups. On 6 August, authorities in the resort city of
Sanya of Hainan announced movement restrictions after hundreds of cases were reported, leaving around 80,000 tourists stranded. Danzhou, Qionghai and other cities on the island also enforced lockdown measures. On 8 August,
Lhasa, the regional capital of
Tibet recorded one symptomatic patient and seventeen asymptomatic cases while
Shigatse, Tibet's second biggest city imposed three days of curbs. The region reported only one infection in 2020, and had remained clear of cases since then. On 10 August, Ürümqi in Xinjiang started a five-day lockdown of its key districts. Other cities in Xinjiang including
Yining,
Korla,
Aksu and
Turpan were also hit by circuit breaking mechanism. On 21 August,
Taigu and
Pingyao of Shanxi and
Nanchong of Sichuan went into lockdown. On 28 August, Hebei authorities issued a stay-at-home order for residents of
Xianghe,
Zhuozhou and all urban districts of
Shijiazhuang. On 31 August,
Daqing in Heilongjiang was put into lockdown. On 1 September,
Chengdu announced a lockdown of its 21.2 million residents, the most populous city to be locked down since Shanghai earlier in 2022. Other major cities including Shenzhen and Dalian also stepped up COVID restrictions. On 5 September,
Guiyang sealed off six of its districts to contain Covid outbreak. On 15 September, lockdowns were mostly lifted in Chengdu, save for six districts. On 18 September, a bus carrying 47 people from Guiyang being taken to quarantine in
Libo County crashed in
Sandu County of
Guizhou province, killing 27 on board. The accident set off a storm of anger online over the harshness of strict COVID policies. On 5 October,
Xishuangbanna of Yunnan province went into full lockdown, leaving travellers stranded at its airport. On the same day, residents were banned from leaving Xinjiang over an outbreak, weeks after the region had been relaxing restrictions following a stringent lockdown. On 17 October, Zhengzhou locked down its district
Zhongyuan to tame a virus flareup. On 18 October, a 14-year-old girl died after falling ill in a quarantine center in
Ruzhou after being denied prompt medical care, according to her family's account. The case has sparked anger online, forcing censors to remove hashtags for "Ruzhou Girl" online. On 26 October, hundreds of migrant workers in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa took to the streets to protest harsh lockdown measures, which had been lasting for 74 days. In late October, dozens of cities across China have again ramped up their lockdowns, including districts of Shanghai, Guangzhou, Wuhan, Zhengzhou, Datong and Xining, affecting more than 200 million people. In Heilongjiang province,
Suihua and
Mudanjiang were also experiencing outbreaks. In Zhengzhou, workers at the
Foxconn factory have turned to social media for help and to voice their anger about inadequate food and lack of medical care amid strict control measures implemented on the campus. The complex employs more than 200,000 workers, thousands of them chose to escape the campus en masse, trekking across fields to return to their home. On 2 November, the death of a 3-year-old boy to a gas leak in
Lanzhou, reportedly after delay in receiving treatment due to movement restriction has triggered a wave of public anger. Videos on social media show residents taking to the streets demanding answer from authorities and buses containing SWAT teams arriving at the scene. Local authorities issued apologised the next day. On 9 November, movement restriction measures were placed in the urban districts of
Chongqing. It was reported that the city has been struggling to contain spread of virus.
Protests and end of zero-COVID measures In
Guangzhou, a surge in cases has spurred blanket lockdowns in the city. On 5 November,
Haizhu District was locked down and transport systems were suspended. On 9 November, the city reported more than 3,000 cases and locked down its central district of Liwan. On 14 November, it has been reported that residents in several districts have taken to the streets to protest against restriction policies. Videos posted online showed crowds crashing through lockdown barriers and marching down streets. On 21 November, Beijing authorities shut most non-essential business and issued stay home order in the city's largest district of
Chaoyang. The city reported three COVID-related deaths on the weekends before, the first deaths in mainland China since the Shanghai outbreak in May. On 23 November, China reported 31,444 new locally transmitted COVID-19 cases, the highest daily figure since the virus was first detected in 2019 and surpassing figures during the Shanghai outbreak between March and May. The government responded by tightening restrictions in cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. The government of
Changchun urged the public to halt non-essential movement and avoid going outside. In Zhengzhou, protests erupted at the Foxconn iPhone manufacturing factory campus over poor pay and restriction conditions, after authorities attempted to lock down the facility following an outbreak. On 24 November,
a building fire in under-lockdown
Ürümqi killed ten people and wounded nine. This sparked
widespread protests against lockdowns and COVID-19 policies across major Chinese cities, prompting the Chinese government to signal plans to ease restrictions. On 30 November, vice premier
Sun Chunlan announced that pandemic controls are entering a "new stage and mission", adding that the Omicron variant is less virulent and that rectification of control methods are underway. Sun said local governments should "respond to and resolve the reasonable demands of the masses". On 7 December, the
National Health Commission announced a nationwide loosening of COVID-19 restrictions, in which PCR testing would be reduced and lockdowns would also be limited. Among the changes, the health pass application will no longer be required for entry to most public spaces and patients with mild symptoms may quarantine at home rather than in the facilities. On 8 January 2023, the Chinese government removed some immigration restrictions and started issuing more passports to Chinese citizens and more visas to foreign nationals after almost three years of significant restrictions due to anti-pandemic control measures. The Hong Kong government also announced it would start to reopen its border with mainland China, allowing people to travel without quarantine. On 15 March 2023, China opens its borders to foreign tourists after more than three years of restrictions by allowing all categories of visas to be issued. == December 2022–January 2023 surge ==