-
Sierra Leone chases rare repeat in Breeders' Cup Classic
-
King Charles strips Andrew of royal titles, Windsor home
-
Sales of 'services' help Apple beat earnings forecasts
-
Beyond words: '67' crowned 'Word of the Year'
-
Amazon shares surge as AI boom drives cloud growth
-
Brazil boasts drop in deforestation ahead of UN climate talks
-
Russians marking Stalin's repression warn against return to past
-
Stocks mostly fall as investors digest Trump-Xi talks, earnings
-
Turkey says Pakistan-Afghanistan talks to resume
-
Record-breaking India upset Australia to reach World Cup final
-
US to limit refugees to record low 7,500, mostly white South Africans
-
King Charles to strip Andrew of royal titles, residence: palace
-
Sinner marches into Paris Masters quarters, Bublik downs Fritz
-
Devastated Caribbean assesses damage as hurricane eyes Bermuda
-
Trump stirs tensions with surprise nuclear test order
-
100 US local leaders will attend COP30 in 'show of force'
-
UN warns of 'atrocities,' 'horror' in Sudan as RSF advances
-
Rodrigues hits ton as India stun Australia to reach Women's World Cup final
-
Trump's order on nuclear testing: what we know
-
Spalletti returns to football with Juventus after Italy flop
-
Rodrigues hits ton as India chase 339 to stun Australia in World Cup semis
-
Saudi chases AI ambitions with homegrown firm pitched to global investors
-
Russia batters Ukraine energy sites with deadly aerial strikes
-
Stocks diverge as investors digest Trump-Xi talks, earnings
-
'Better to go to prison': Israeli ultra-Orthodox rally against army service
-
Bublik downs fourth seed Fritz to reach Paris Masters quarters
-
UN climate fund posts record year as chief defends loans
-
Man Utd must ignore outside noise to go in 'right direction', says Wilcox
-
G7 to launch 'alliance' countering China's critical mineral dominance
-
Wallaby boss Schmidt wary of Ford's 'triple threat'
-
Swedish hate-crime trial shines light on far-right 'fitness clubs'
-
Trump call for nuclear tests sows confusion
-
Chinese EV giant BYD says Q3 profit down 33%
-
ECB holds rates steady with eurozone more resilient
-
Independent Macau media outlet says it will close by December
-
Shares in Jeep-maker Stellantis slump despite rising sales
-
Shelton beats Rublev to reach Paris Masters last eight
-
Trump stirs tensions with surprise order to test nuclear weapons
-
S.Africa court rules ANC leader Luthuli was killed in apartheid 'assault'
-
Stocks slide as investors digest Trump-Xi talks, earnings
-
No GDP data released as US shutdown bites
-
PSG's injured Doue to miss Bayern match, out for several weeks
-
Litchfield ton guides Australia to 338 in World Cup semis
-
S.Africa court rules ANC leader Luthuli killed in apartheid 'assault'
-
With inflation under control, ECB holds rates steady again
-
Nigerian designer embraces 'clashes' and 'chaos' at Lagos Fashion Week
-
Nissan says expects $1.8 bn operational loss in 2025-26
-
Italy court stalls Sicily bridge, triggers PM fury
-
Marseille midfielder Nadir stable after on-pitch collapse
-
Saudis turned down Messi stint ahead of 2026 World Cup, says official
Nearly 30 million under lockdown in China as virus surges
Nearly 30 million people were under lockdown across China on Tuesday, as surging virus cases returned mass tests and hazmat suited health officials to city streets on a scale not seen since the start of the pandemic.
China reported 5,280 new Covid-19 cases on Tuesday, more than double the previous day's tally as the highly-transmissible Omicron variant spreads across a country which has tethered tightly to a 'zero-Covid' strategy.
That approach, which pivots on hard localised lockdowns and has left China virtually cut off from the outside world for two years, appears to be on the line as Omicron finds its way into communities.
At least 13 cities nationwide were fully locked down on Tuesday, while various other cities had partial lockdowns.
The northeastern province of Jilin was the worst-hit, with over 3,000 new cases on Tuesday, according to the National Health Commission.
Residents of several cities there including the provincial capital of Changchun -- home to nine million people -- are under stay-at-home orders.
Shenzhen -- the southern tech hub of 17.5 million people -- is three days into a lockdown with many factories closed and supermarket shelves emptying, while China's largest city Shanghai is under a lattice of restrictions -- which fall short of a citywide shutdown.
But scenes of closed neighbourhoods, panic buying and police cordons cast back to the early phase of the pandemic, which first emerged in China in late 2019 but has eased in much of the rest of the world.
Tuesday was the sixth day in a row that more than 1,000 new cases were recorded in the world's second-biggest economy, with experts forecasting a dent to growth as the virus billows out.
"The recent Covid outbreak and renewed restrictions, notably the lockdown in Shenzhen, will weigh on consumption and cause supply disruptions in the near term," Tommy Wu, of Oxford Economics said in a briefing note.
He added it will be "challenging" for China to meet its official GDP growth target for the year of around 5.5 percent.
Hong Kong stocks plunged by more than three per cent Tuesday, extending the previous day's tech-fuelled rout.
Dozens of domestic flights at airports in Beijing and Shanghai were cancelled Tuesday morning, flight tracking data showed.
An outbreak at Volkswagen Group factories in the Jilin city of Changchun also prompted three sites to shut Monday for at least three days, according to a spokesman.
Various other cities including Shanghai have sealed off certain neighbourhoods and buildings, as authorities have sought to minimise disruption to daily life.
A top Chinese medical expert Zhang Wenhong has raised the prospect of softening the "zero-Covid" strategy in the face of the Omicron variant. But in the short term, he warned any relaxation of mass testing and lockdowns was impossible.
Jilin's governor vowed to go all-out to "achieve community zero-Covid in a week" during an emergency meeting Monday night, state media reported.
Residents of Jilin, which is on the border with North Korea, were banned from travelling out of and around the province Monday.
F.Pavlenko--BTB