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It's a dark night in Shanghai.

The streets are empty.

The houses, full.

The confinement of the largest city in the world's most populous country is in its second week

.

The neighbors are pissed off.

Some lean out of windows and balconies to protest that their pantries are emptying and no more supplies are coming.

"We want to eat, we want to go to work, we want to have the right to know," they shout.

Suddenly, out of the darkness

a drone appears with a speaker attached and approaches the residences

where the screams can be heard.

"Please abide by the Covid restrictions. Control his soul's desire for freedom. Don't open the window or sing," says the drone.

The more than 25 million residents have been told that

the quarantine is indefinite

for now .

The planned opening dates have been diluted.

More than 130,000 infections since March 1 in a land that was practically virgin for the virus, they are to blame.

Public outrage, hitherto contained in China, is growing.

The weariness for the running of the bulls is accompanied by controversial images of children separated from their parents because they have tested positive

.

Even babies in cribs taken to isolation centers.

The controversy has been such that on Wednesday an official had to back down -halfway- and say that guardians will be able to accompany children "with special needs" who have tested positive, as long as the parents are also infected.

The anger spreads when news arrives such as the death of a nurse from an asthma attack who was denied admission to her own hospital due to restrictions.

Or the patient who was undergoing chemotherapy in a hospital and died while in quarantine.

Or the sick grandparents who

are not treated at medical centers because they live in communities where a positive case has been reported

.

Neighbors

are unloading their complaints on social networks

.

Although many of them circulate on

Weibo

, the

Chinese Twitter

, almost at the same speed as

the Chinese cyberspace slander system then censors them

.

A common complaint is that authorities follow unclear guidance on what to do if a person tests positive.

Following the perennial zero Covid strategy, now cracked by the omicron variant, home quarantine is not allowed in China.

Hence the

long queues to enter the improvised isolation centers

such as exhibition halls, hotels and stadiums.

In total there are more than 47,700 beds available for patients with mild or no symptoms.

Another shared complaint is the lack of food.

Many residents have been protesting for days because they are running out of food.

Strict rules force confined people to shop online using a mobile app.

But the extended lockdown has brought delivery services and grocery store websites to a standstill.

It has even slowed down the distribution of the baskets with water, vegetables and eggs that the local authorities promised to distribute in each neighborhood.

"

It is true that there are some difficulties in ensuring the supply of daily necessities

," said Liu Min, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Commerce.

On Thursday, Shanghai reported nearly 20,000 new Covid-19 infections, setting a daily record for the seventh day in a row since China's economic hub closed its doors last week.

The vast majority of those positive during the latest outbreak, more than 95%, are asymptomatic

.

Since the beginning of the outbreak,

the number of people infected with symptoms has barely exceeded 3,000

.

Fu Chen, director of the Shanghai Center for Disease Prevention and Control, explained that this is due to high vaccination rates, the less aggressive traits of the omicron variant virus, and the fact that cases are detected early due to the massive tests.

The other positive note is that

in this wave of infections the death rate is not skyrocketing

.

At least according to official figures.

After more than a year without reporting any deaths, two weeks ago the authorities reported two new deaths.

In China, where more than 1.4 billion people live,

4,638 have officially died from Covid.

While

China's vaccination rate hovers around 90%

, Chinese inactivated virus sera are considered weaker than mRNA vaccines, such as those produced by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, that are used in the West.

This point makes

some foreign experts doubt that the numbers of deaths reported in China are in line with reality

, especially when vaccination rates among the elderly are much lower than those of the general population, with only about half of those over 80 fully vaccinated.

In Chinese territory, in addition to the situation in

Hong Kong

, whose fifth wave this year

has already left more than 8,000 dead in the former British colony

, the current epicenter of infections is in

Shanghai,

which has put aside its first closure approach gradual because it has not worked.

Around 20,000 sample collection points have been installed in the city.

All residents are going through several rounds of PCR tests.

From other parts of China, more than 10,000 health workers have arrived to lend a hand in the mass testing, including 2,000 military medical personnel from the army.

The Hong Kong newspaper

South China Morning Post

warns that

a prolonged closure could not only damage the city's economy

, but also affect the supply chain around the Yangtze River Delta, which includes the provinces of Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Anhui, the most prosperous region of China with a total population of 235 million people.

Delays are also

increasing in the port of Shanghai

, one of the most important in the world, where more containers are piling up every day.

This is another direct blow to the already depleted global supply chain.

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