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China Test-Drives Olympics Covid Restrictions at National Games

China wants the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics to go off without a hitch and without jeopardizing the country’s Covid Zero strategy.

China Test-Drives Olympics Covid Restrictions at National Games
A torchbearer participates in the torch relay for China’s 14th National Games in Xi’an, on Aug. 16. (Photographer: Jin Zheming/VCG/Getty Images)

China wants the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics to go off without a hitch -- and without jeopardizing the country’s Covid Zero strategy. That suggests broader and stricter restrictions compared with the Tokyo summer games, which logged around 430 cases.

Beijing organizers haven’t announced their Covid-containment measures, though long quarantines and athlete bubbles are inevitable. Authorities also plan to limit international arrivals ahead of and during the events. 

Meanwhile, another mass athletic event will begin next week in Xi’an, showcasing measures Beijing might employ. Some 13,000 of the country’s top athletes will compete in the National Games, the biggest domestic sporting event since the pandemic began and widely considered a run-up to the Olympics, which begin Feb. 4. 

China Test-Drives Olympics Covid Restrictions at National Games

In preparation, local authorities closed more than 4,000 restaurants, bars and tourist hotspots in mid-August and began mandatory Covid testing among Xi’An’s 13 million residents. During the games period, Shaanxi province will require all incoming travelers to have a negative covid test result. 

Whether the Winter Olympics will allow spectators remains an open question. Fans from abroad are out of luck -- the government plans to cap international arrivals at 30,000, leaving little room for anyone beyond athletes, support personnel and official delegations. But Beijing could still decide to sell tickets to domestic fans. 

National Games athletes, some of whom will be fresh off a spectator-free Olympics in Tokyo, will have an audience in Xi’an. Ticket holders must be fully vaccinated for at least 14 days and have a negative Covid test within 72 hours of the event’s start. 

Athletes, along with officials and support personnel, also have to be vaccinated, and they’ll be confined to a bubble that includes the dorms and the venues. 

Some of these measures may not be practical or possible for Beijing, a city twice the size of Xi’An, or the Winter Olympics, which will feature thousands of athletes from all over the world. 

It’s not clear, for example, whether China can require international competitors to be vaccinated. It would be hard to restrict domestic travel to or from the capital, considering events start on the fifth day of the Chinese New Year holiday, peak travel season in the world’s most populous country.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg