Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

VIRUS DIARY: In Beijing, finally, a tentative spring blooms

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2020 05:07 PM

    BEIJING — The coronavirus came first in the depths of winter. As with so many places afterward, the change seeped in gradually.

    Cold winds drove ice and snow between skyscrapers as Beijing's people waddled out into a scarier and scarier world to buy the basics. Before the outbreak, residents in the city of 21.5 million already ran on ecommerce delivery, residents wore masks year-round for smog and surveillance ran rampant. To bundle up then and silently drift on an electric scooter across the frozen, empty streets was eerie.

    Everyone hired more security guards and equipped them with temperature guns. Initially, they were pointed at foreheads before someone figured out a wrist scan sufficed. Cinemas and shopping malls closed. Breweries and restaurants pivoted to delivery. Online pleas began circulating for pet adoption or fostering, because some foreigners who left had abandoned their pets. Remaining pet parents began enforcing canine social distancing: No playing at the dog park.

    Neighbourhoods sealed themselves off with makeshift barriers. My apartment block issued identification cards. Staff at a nearby grocer donned goggles and rubber gloves over custom grey hazmat suits that were hooded, booted, and emblazoned with their corporate logo. Office buildings deployed thermal cameras so guards could monitor, in real time, every visitor’s temperature.

    Authorities issued new orders, gradually limiting travel into and out of China. Then the Communist Party expelled more than a dozen American foreign correspondents, some of them my good friends. Flights were cancelled. Friends and colleagues began bolting for Africa and Europe; not being able to escape, it turns out, is deeply unsettling.

    Then, at some point, the sun shone through the grey. Spring slowly warmed the city.

    Now, everyone still wears masks, submits to constant temperature checks and frequently washes hands, door handles, laptops and hands. We’re all COVID-OCD now. Beijing has started granting “green cards” if applicants’ phone-location data shows they haven’t left the city in 14 days.

    Two weekends ago, a former imperial garden called Fragrant Hills boasted a full parking lot, lines for the snack cart and a few tiny poodles smuggled through security in handbags. A lone monk walked the roof of a monastery above crowds hiking through blossoming cherry and almond trees. Couples whipped off their masks fleetingly for photos in front of an arresting view of Beijing’s skyline.

    Beijingers knew the government was watching before, but now there’s green-card proof. Beijingers wore masks before, but now it’s to protect from a deadly virus instead of the relatively slow agony of industrial particulates.

    While the pandemic ravages communities from Boston to Basra, family and friends have asked me if it’s “getting better over there.” It is — sort of. While the mortal fear has ebbed, the virus lingers in the form of a “new normal” of increased surveillance, economic woes, and travel restrictions.

    Old men still fly kites in the parks, but offices and apartments remain empty. Businesses have folded, the government has boosted data harvesting and the ubiquitous biosecurity checkpoints remain staffed.

    Cautiously, I have begun running along Beijing’s underrated canals. I’ve given wide berth while jogging past men on folded chairs fishing in turbid waters, children fighting with water pistols, elderly ping pong players crowding public tables and — once — a bespectacled man practicing vocal scales next to a dumpster. On weekends, families crowd the canals.

    Yet it is empty enough for me to start teaching my young dog how to jog. And even he, I think, is starting to enjoy getting out of the house.

    ___

    “Virus Diary,” an occasional feature, will showcase the coronavirus saga through the eyes of Associated Press journalists around the world. Sam McNeil is a Beijing-based journalist for the AP, on assignment this week in Wuhan. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/stmcneil

    Sam McNeil, The Associated Press

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NDP Health Tax Leaves People Paying More: BC LIBERALS

    NDP Health Tax Leaves People Paying More: BC LIBERALS
    As the NDP continue trying to convince people they’re making life more affordable, stories keep piling up of local restaurants, cafes and shops across the province struggling to pay the Employer Health Tax (EHT).

    NDP Health Tax Leaves People Paying More: BC LIBERALS

    Surrey Serial Rapist Earon Wayne Giles Arrested In Coquitlam For Violating Release Conditions

    A 46-year-old Surrey man who was the subject of a public interest notification last year has been arrested and charged in Coquitlam.    

    Surrey Serial Rapist Earon Wayne Giles Arrested In Coquitlam For Violating Release Conditions

    Public Advised Of Indecent Acts In North Delta Community Park

    Public Advised Of Indecent Acts In North Delta Community Park
    In the second instance on January 31 a woman reported that an indecent act had occurred at approximately 6:30 pm at North Delta Park.

    Public Advised Of Indecent Acts In North Delta Community Park

    Numbers Of Impaired Drivers Up, But Break And Enters Down In 2019

    Delta Police saw fairly steady numbers in most crime areas in 2019, though there was a notable decline in break and enters to both residential and commercial properties.

    Numbers Of Impaired Drivers Up, But Break And Enters Down In 2019

    Flair Airlines Touts Unlimited Travel Pass For $700 As Competition Heats Up

    KELOWNA, B.C. - Flair Airlines Ltd. is offering passengers an unlimited travel pass for three months amid rising competition between budget carriers.    

    Flair Airlines Touts Unlimited Travel Pass For $700 As Competition Heats Up

    More Than 100 Military Procurements Facing Delays: Defence Department

    More Than 100 Military Procurements Facing Delays: Defence Department
    OTTAWA - The Department of National Defence has identified delays in more than 100 planned military purchases and facility upgrades, most of which have flown under the radar as attention has focused on the government's problems buying new fighter jets and warships.

    More Than 100 Military Procurements Facing Delays: Defence Department