Beijing: The Indian Consulate in Shanghai has announced the suspension of in-person consular services as China's gleaming business hub with 26 million people struggled amidst mounting COVID-19 cases, putting the country's dynamic zero-case policy to the test. Indian citizens in Eastern China Region may apply at the Embassy of India, Beijing for availing urgent consular services, the Consulate said in a notice issued on Tuesday. "As the City of Shanghai continues to remain sealed and controlled in different degrees by the Shanghai Municipal People's Government, the Consulate General of India will remain inaccessible and will not be in a position to provide consular services in person, said the notice posted on the Mission's official website.
During the period, the Consulate will remain operational in remote mode and may be reached for any consular emergency, it said, providing the mobile and phone numbers to contact the staff. In-person services refer to extension of passports, attestation of documents, among other such works. The Consulate's notice came as Shanghai, China's biggest city, continues to reel under the massive spread of the Omicron variant, prompting officials to continue the lockdown. China's National Health Commission (NHC) on Wednesday said Shanghai city has reported 1,189 positive and 25,141 new asymptomatic cases, a consecutive 11th day record high cases with the number of infections once again crossing 26,000, putting extreme pressure on the city's health system. China's other provinces too have reported an increasing number of cases. Jilin province reported 233 cases, followed by 22 in Guangdong, 14 in Hainan and 12 in Zhejiang, it said. In all, 26,525 asymptomatic cases have been reported in the country with the majority of them from Shanghai, the Commission said.
New cases have not peaked yet, and it will still be some time before a dynamic zero-Covid goal can be achieved, Meng Tianying, a senior executive at Shanghai-based consultancy Domo Medical said. The central government and local authorities will have to re-examine the strategy used to contain the outbreak, after more than a week of citywide lockdown and mass testing exercises, Meng told the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post. Though the Indian Consulate in Shanghai has suspended in-person services, it is providing much needed help, including counselling to over 1,000 Indian nationals currently based in the city, Consul General D Nandakumar said.
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