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Shenzhen Locks Down; Obama Tests Positive: Virus Update

Coronavirus cases globally passed 45.5 crore, with deaths approaching 60 lakh.

Shenzhen Locks Down; Obama Tests Positive: Virus Update
Medicines on a table at a Covid-19 isolation center. (Photographer: T. Narayan/Bloomberg)

China placed the 17.5 million residents of the southern city of Shenzhen into a lockdown that’s due to last until March 20.

Hong Kong reported more than 32,000 new Covid cases and 190 deaths, underscoring the territory’s struggle to contain the latest wave of a pandemic that also threatens to expand on the mainland.

China reported more than 3,300 Covid-19 infections on Saturday as the country faces its worst outbreak since the early days of the pandemic and officials step up efforts to stem the spread.

Former U.S. President Barak Obama said on Sunday he has tested positive but is “feeling fine” apart from a “scratchy throat.”

Key Developments:

Shenzhen Locks Down; Obama Tests Positive: Virus Update

Obama Has Covid (3:56 p.m. NY)

Former U.S. President Barack Obama said on Sunday he has tested positive but is “feeling fine” apart from a “scratchy throat.” Michelle Obama tested negative, he said on Twitter.

“It’s a reminder to get vaccinated if you haven’t already, even as cases go down,” he said.

Pfizer CEO Says New Booster Needed ‘Now’ (2:30 p.m. NY)

A second booster shot against Covid-19 is needed “right now” because of waning immunity, Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said. 

The company is in the process of submitting data to U.S. health officials on an additional booster, as well as planning further for a vaccine that would “protect against all variants” and offer protection for a year, he said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

The first booster, he said, is still “quite good for hospitalizations and deaths. It’s not that good against infections.”

Bourla also said he expects to submit data on vaccines for children under age 5 next month. In February, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration postponed a review of Pfizer data for the youngest children, citing the need for more information on a three-dose regimen of shots. 

Shenzhen Locks Down (1:50 p.m. NY)

Shenzhen Locks Down; Obama Tests Positive: Virus Update

China placed the 17.5 million residents of the southern city of Shenzhen into a lockdown that’s due to last until March 20, according to a city government notice.

The measures, which came after virus cases doubled nationwide to nearly 3,400, extend restrictions placed earlier on the city’s central business district. The surge in infections is thought to be linked to the neighboring city of Hong Kong, where about 300,000 people are currently in isolation or under home quarantine. Alongside the lockdown, Shenzhen will launch three rounds of mass testing of residents.

All bus and subway systems across the city were ordered to shut during the restrictions. Businesses, except those providing essential services will also close, and employees will work from home if they can. Residents will be barred from leaving the city, except in limited situations, and they will need to produce a negative Covid test within 24 hours.

Hong Kong Says About 300,000 People in Isolation or Quarantine (2:17 p.m. HK)

Hong Kong reported more than 32,000 new Covid cases and 190 deaths, health official Dr. Albert Au said at a briefing. Persistent daily case counts of at least 30,000 a day show coronavirus clusters still exist in the city, Au said.

New cases include 13,335 confirmed by nucleic acid tests and 19,095 by rapid antigen tests. The city recorded 190 new Covid deaths, aged 39 to 105 years old, and 101 patients are in intensive care units, Hospital Authority Chief Manager Dr Sara Ho said. There were also 74 “backlogged” fatalities.

About 300,000 people in Hong Kong are currently in isolation or under home quarantine, Chief Executive Carrie Lam said at a press conference on Sunday. The city plans to mobilize all sectors to fight Covid and help quell the fifth wave of the pandemic.

China’s Virus Outbreak Worsens (10:20 a.m. HK)

China reported more than 3,300 Covid-19 infections on Saturday as the country faces its worst outbreak since the early days of the pandemic and officials step up efforts to stem the spread.

There were 1,807 confirmed local infections and 1,315 asymptomatic cases, the National Health Commission said on Sunday. The northeastern province of Jilin accounted for more than 2,100 of the cases. China also reported more than 200 imported cases. 

Shanghai to Halt Cross-Province Bus Services (3:40 p.m. HK)

Shenzhen Locks Down; Obama Tests Positive: Virus Update

Nine cross-province bus stations have halted operations in the city with destinations mainly to provinces including Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Shandong and Jiangxi, according to a statement on a local government website.

Shanghai will suspend all cross-province bus services from March 14. 

Brazil Reports 100,231 Covid-19 Cases (8 a.m. HK)

Brazil’s Covid-19 cases topped 29.4 million, with 100,231 confirmed in the last 24 hours, according to Health Ministry data. Meanwhile, the death toll rose by 859 to 654,945.

Virus Cases in U.S. Steady (4:55 a.m. HK)

Coronavirus cases in the U.S. were little changed from the previous day at about 79.5 million, as of 2:40 a.m. Hong Kong time on Saturday, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University and Bloomberg News. The national increase in cases matched the average daily gain of less than 0.1% over the past week.

Brazil to Review Sinovac Use on Children Ages 3 to 5 (3:05 a.m. HK)

Instituto Butantan, the distributor of the Sinovac shot, has asked Brazil to use the Sinovac vaccine on 3 to 5 year olds. Brazil’s health regulatory agency will have seven days starting Monday to review the request, according to a statement from the agency known as Anvisa.

Sinovac’s CoronaVac Covid vaccine has been in use in Brazil since June 2021, and was extended to children as young as six this year.

China’s Tech Hub to Work from Home (8:40 p.m. HK)

China has asked residents in the technology hub of Shenzhen to work from home and has closed non-essential venues in a southern Chinese city as the country braces for a nationwide Covid-19 resurgence.

The growing clusters spawned by the highly infectious omicron variant in China’s most developed large cities and economic powerhouses have turned into an unprecedented challenge for the country’s Covid Zero strategy, a policy abandoned by the rest of the world. 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg