Residential lockdowns of varying strictness — from checkpoints at building entrances to hard limits on going outdoors — now cover at least 760 million people in China, or more than half the country’s population, according to a New York Times analysis of government announcements in provinces and major cities. Many of these people live far from the city of Wuhan, where the virus was first reported and which the government sealed off last month. — The New York Times
The New York Times presents an eye-opening report detailing the varying degrees to which hundreds of millions of people in China are currently under some form of residential lockdown as the country attempts to stop the spread of the deadly SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus.
Chinese authorities have deployed a mix of high and low tech approaches for instituting this population-level quasi-quarantine state, a mix that includes forcing people to share geolocation data from their cellphones as they travel, having people scan QR codes at businesses they visit, and using hundreds of thousands of local inspectors to create a “supercharged version of a neighborhood watch.”
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