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Shanghai starts China's biggest Covid-19 lockdown in 2 years

  China began its most extensive lockdown in two years on Monday to conduct mass testing and control the growing outbreak in Shanghai as questions are raised about the economic toll of the nation's “zero-COVID” strategy.
China's financial capital and largest city with 26 million people, Shanghai had managed its smaller, past outbreaks with limited lockdowns of housing compounds and workplaces where the virus was spreading.
But the citywide lockdown that will be conducted in two phases will be China's most extensive since the central city of Wuhan, where the virus first detected in late 2019, confined its 11 million people to their homes for 76 days in early 2020.
Shanghai's financial district Pudong and nearby areas will be locked down from Monday to Friday as mass testing gets underway, the local government said.
In the second phase of the lockdown, the vast downtown area west of the Huangpu River that divides the city will start its own five-day lockdown on Friday.
Residents will be required to stay home and deliveries will be left at checkpoints to ensure there is no contact with the outside world. Offices and all businesses not considered essential will be closed and public transport suspended.
Shanghai's Disneyland theme park is among the businesses that closed earlier.
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