- 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
- Patients brave mental health desert in Mauritania
- Hart triple-double sparks Knicks to eighth straight NBA win
- Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt reach divorce settlement: report
- Sabalenka opens season with 'tricky' win in Brisbane
China Covid pivot sparks jitters worldwide
Beijing's sudden pivot away from containing Covid-19 has caused jitters around the world, with the United States saying it may restrict travel from China following its decision to end mandatory quarantine for overseas arrivals.
China late Monday scrapped quarantine for inbound travellers from January 8 onwards, dismantling the last remaining piece of its stringent zero-Covid policy and ending some of the world's harshest border restrictions.
The move was greeted with jubilation by Chinese citizens, who rushed to book international flights, triggering a surge in ticket prices.
But other countries have expressed concerns about the potential for new variants as China battles the world's biggest surge in infections.
US officials said late Tuesday they were considering Covid entry restrictions on travellers from China, after countries including Japan and India introduced PCR testing on arrival for Chinese passengers.
"There are mounting concerns in the international community on the ongoing Covid-19 surges in China and the lack of transparent data, including viral genomic sequence data, being reported from the PRC," the US officials said, referring to the People's Republic of China.
The United States is "considering taking similar steps" to countries such as Japan and Malaysia, they added.
Taiwan, a self-ruled island that China claims as its own, said Wednesday that it would also screen travellers from the mainland for the virus.
China's loosening of measures effectively brought the curtain down on a zero-Covid regime of mass testing, lockdowns and long quarantines that has roiled supply chains and buffeted business engagement with the world's second-largest economy.
Hospitals and crematoriums across China have been overwhelmed with undervaccinated elderly patients, while residents report widespread shortages of fever medicine as the virus spreads largely unchecked among the population of 1.4 billion.
Asked about Japan's entry restrictions, Beijing's foreign ministry Tuesday said that countries should uphold "scientific and appropriate" disease controls that "should not affect normal personnel exchanges".
All passengers arriving in China have had to undergo mandatory centralised quarantine since March 2020. The period of isolation fell from three weeks to one week in June, and to five days last month.
The end of that rule in January will also see Covid-19 downgraded to a Class B infectious disease, allowing authorities to adopt looser controls.
On Tuesday, Chinese immigration authorities announced the gradual resumption from January 8 of passport issuance for "tourism" or "overseas visits of friends".
- Tracking cases -
The winter surge comes ahead of major public holidays next month in which hundreds of millions of people are expected to travel to their hometowns to reunite with relatives.
Chinese authorities have admitted the scale of the outbreak is now "impossible" to track and narrowed the criteria for defining Covid deaths.
China's Center for Disease Prevention and Control reported 5,231 new Covid cases and three deaths nationwide Wednesday -- likely a drastic undercount since people are no longer required to declare infections to authorities.
Authorities are using data from online surveys, hospital visits, demand for fever medicines and emergency calls to "make up for shortcomings in (officially) reported figures", disease control official Yin Wenwu said at a press briefing Tuesday.
And as the country faces shortages of basic medicines, Beijing city authorities plan to distribute the oral Covid drug Paxlovid at local hospitals and community clinics, but it remains extremely difficult to obtain for ordinary people.
The US-developed treatment was briefly available on e-commerce platform JD.com and delivery platform Meituan in the past few days before both ran out of stock.
Ch.Havering--AMWN