- Canada's Dabrowski reveals cancer treatment amid run to Olympic bronze
- Milan says no to all outdoor smoking in Italy's toughest ban
- Zverev out of United Cup with injury as Australian Open looms
- FBI makes its largest bomb bust on Virginia farm
- Rain break helps Osaka overcome nerves to reach Auckland quarters
- Ex-India coach Shastri wants two-tier Test system after MCG blockbuster
- New year hope and joy reign in a Damascus freed from Assad
- End of Russian gas via Ukraine sparks unease in eastern Europe
- Zelensky vows Ukraine will do everything in 2025 to stop Russia
- Island-wide blackout hits Puerto Rico on New Year's Eve
- Serbia enters New Year with student protests over train station tragedy
- Romania, Bulgaria join borderless Schengen zone
- US Capitol riot fugitive seeks asylum in Canada
- Musk flummoxes internet with 'Kekius Maximus' persona
- US stocks slip as European markets ring out year with gains
- Olmo's Barcelona future in air over registration race
- Venezuela opposition urges protests against Maduro's inauguration
- Syria's de facto leader meets minority Christians
- Suriname ex-dictator Bouterse to be cremated on Saturday
- £1.5 mn reward offered after 'brazen' London gem raid
- Zimbabwe abolishes the death penalty
- Barcelona race against clock to register Olmo
- Arteta wants Arsenal to hammer away in title race
- Panama marks canal handover anniversary in shadow of Trump threat
- Gaza hospital chief held by Israel becomes face of crumbling healthcare
- Russian advances in Ukraine grew seven-fold in 2024, data shows
- US, European stock markets look to ring out year with gains
- US farmers fret over Trump's deportation plans
- BBC celebrates 100 years of 'poetic' shipping forecast
- West Ham's Bowen sidelined with foot fracture
- Global markets rode AI, interest rate roller coaster in 2024
- Ocalan: PKK chief held in solitary on Turkish prison island
- European stock markets end year with gains
- Yemen's Huthis a 'menace' for Israel despite weakened Iran: analysts
- Rooney exit extends managerial struggles for England's 'golden generation'
- Gaza healthcare nearing 'total collapse' due to Israeli strikes: UN
- German leaders hit back at Musk's support for far right
- Southgate won't be 'Sir' at home after knighthood
- Rooney leaves Plymouth after just seven months in charge
- Kyrgios needs 'miracle' after return from long injury layoff
- Raducanu pulls out of Australian Open warm-up with back problem
- Celebrated S.African contemporary dancer Dada Masilo dies aged 39
- Five talking points at the midway point of the Premier League season
- Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt reach divorce settlement
- Djokovic, Sabalenka win season-openers but Kyrgios loses on return
- Taiwan says 2024 was hottest year on record
- China says shared Covid information 'without holding anything back'
- Kyrgios goes down fighting on return, Sabalenka wins season-opener
- Xi says China must apply 'more proactive' macroeconomic policies in 2025
- Gauff, Paolini on fire as USA, Italy surge into United Cup quarters
Chinese jubilant, plan trips abroad as inbound Covid quarantine set to end
Chinese reacted with joy and rushed to book flights overseas Tuesday after Beijing said it would scrap mandatory Covid quarantine for overseas arrivals, ending almost three years of self-imposed isolation.
In a snap move late Monday, China said from January 8 inbound travellers would no longer be required to quarantine upon arrival, in a further unwinding of hardline Covid-19 controls that had torpedoed its economy and sparked nationwide protests.
Chinese social media users reacted with joy to the end of restrictions that have kept the country largely closed off to the outside world since March 2020.
"It's over... spring is coming," said one top-voted comment on the Twitter-like Weibo social media site.
Online searches for flights abroad surged on the news, state media reported, with the travel platform Tongcheng seeing an 850 percent jump in searches and a tenfold jump in inquiries about visas.
"Preparing for my trip abroad!" one Weibo user wrote.
"I hope the price of the return ticket doesn't rise again!" another said.
The new rules follow China's decision this month to roll back much of a zero-Covid regime that had mandated mass testing, strict lockdowns and long quarantines in government-run facilities.
Cases have surged nationwide following that easing, in an outbreak that authorities have admitted is now "impossible" to track.
And in the face of mounting concerns that the country's wave of infections is not being accurately reflected in official statistics, Beijing's National Health Commission (NHC) Saturday said it would no longer publish daily tallies of the number of cases.
That followed a decision last week to narrow the criteria by which Covid-19 fatalities were counted -- a move experts said would suppress the number of deaths attributable to the virus.
- 'Protect themselves' -
The winter surge comes ahead of two major public holidays next month, in which millions of people are expected to travel to their hometowns to reunite with relatives.
Hospitals and crematoriums across the country have been overflowing with Covid patients and victims, with studies estimating around one million people could die over the next few months.
Major cities are now grappling with shortages of medicine, while emergency medical facilities are strained by an influx of undervaccinated elderly patients.
Beijing has insisted throughout the wave of infections that the country is prepared to weather the storm -- and urged people to take responsibility for their own health.
"We need the public to properly protect themselves, continue to cooperate with the implementation of relevant prevention and control measures," Liang Wannian, an epidemiologist and the head of an expert group at the NHC tasked with responding to the Covid-19 pandemic, told state news agency Xinhua.
"We need to shift the focus of our work from infection prevention and control to medical treatment."
Th.Berger--AMWN