Chinese region reintroduces Covid-era procedures (PHOTOS)
Photo #38330 07 August 2025, 08:15

Guandong province is facing a massive outbreak of a mosquito-borne virus, with thousands of infection cases

The authorities in China’s southern Guangdong Province have reinstated Covid-style lockdown and containment tactics to curb a major outbreak of the mosquito-borne Chikungunya virus, which has already infected thousands of people.

The outbreak is centered in Foshan, a city 170km north of Hong Kong, where more than half of the nearly 8,000 reported cases have occurred.

The virus typically causes sudden fever, rash, and severe joint pain, which can be debilitating and sometimes prolonged. While it is rarely fatal, the symptoms can severely affect quality of life. Unlike Covid-19, which began in 2019 and led to more than 7 million deaths worldwide, according to the World Health Organization, Chikungunya is not directly transmitted person to person.

Infected individuals are being quarantined in special isolation wards or hospitals, local officials say. They are required to remain in beds protected by mosquito nets to prevent mosquitoes from biting patients and spreading the virus.

The local authorities have launched an aggressive anti-mosquito campaign, ordering residents to eliminate all stagnant water sources in and around their homes. Community workers are conducting door-to-door inspections, and those found in violation face fines of up to 10,000 yuan ($1,400) or even criminal charges for obstructing public health efforts.

Selon Bloomberg, la Chine remet en place des restrictions sanitaires Covid en raison d’une flambée de chikungunya. #Chine #virus #santépublique pic.twitter.com/2vG789RAJu

— Candidat (@candidatnews_fr) August 6, 2025

Photos and videos shared on social media show empty, fog-filled streets, as insecticide is sprayed to control mosquito populations. Drones have been deployed to identify potential breeding sites, and the authorities have introduced elephant mosquitoes – a harmless species whose larvae prey on virus-carrying mosquitoes – into the local ecosystem.


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