• China Bans Use of Word "Lockdown" After Shanghai Opens Up: Report

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    China Bans Use of Word "Lockdown" After Shanghai Opens Up: Report

    However, there is a leaked directive telling media outlets in the country not to use the phrase "ending the lockdown". 


    Digital Desk: color:#0E101A"> Chinese authorities in Shanghai have told the media to
    refrain from using the term "lockdown" when reporting the end of the
    two-month-long lockdown, according to a report in 
    the
    Chinese Digital Times



     



    color:#0E101A">Shanghai recently opened up with people being allowed to leave
    their homes, use public transport and work from the office. However, there is a
    leaked directive telling media outlets in the country not to use the phrase
    "ending the lockdown". 



     



    color:#0E101A">The leaked document, carried by China Digital Times, states:
    "Do not use the phrase "ending the lockdown." Unlike Wuhan,
    Shanghai never declared a lockdown, so there is no "ending the
    lockdown." All parts of Shanghai underwent static management-style
    suppression and suspensions, but the city's core functions kept operating
    throughout this period. The resumption on June 1 will also be conditional: it
    is by no means the case that every person in every district across the whole
    city will not be able to head out at once freely, nor that this is a uniform
    relaxation.



     



    color:#0E101A">The outlet advises its readers, saying, "Since directives
    are sometimes communicated orally to journalists and editors, who then leak
    them online, the wording published here may not be exact. Some instructions are
    issued by local authorities or specific sectors and may not apply universally
    across China." 



     



    color:#0E101A">Shanghai eased a range of Covid-19 restrictions on Wednesday to
    return to normalcy after a two-month lockdown that confined residents of the
    megacity to their homes and battered China's economy. 



     



    color:#0E101A">The commercial hub of 25 million people was closed in sections
    from late March when the Omicron virus variant fueled China's worst outbreak
    since Covid first took hold in 2020. 

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