Lhasa getting back to normal


More low-risk communities and villages in the downtown areas of Lhasa, Tibet autonomous region, began to gradually restart the economy and get people's lives back to normal on Tuesday, according to a statement from the city's leading group for the fight against COVID-19.
Lhasa has been making solid progress in curbing its most recent COVID-19 outbreak, which first emerged in early August, and most of the city's counties and districts had restrictions lifted at the beginning of last week.
The statement said the Chengguan district will gradually restore orderly production and life in the 494 residential compounds of 41 communities and villages.
The plateau city reported nine locally confirmed COVID-19 cases and 83 asymptomatic carriers on Sunday, health authorities said on Monday afternoon. All the those infected were in quarantine.
Starting on Tuesday, grocery stores, restaurants, drug stores, barbershops and businesses closely related to people's livelihoods in these low-risk areas are resuming operations under appropriate epidemic prevention and control measures.
People are required to wear masks, have body temperatures measured and present health QR code and travel code when entering these business sites.
Public venues and crowd gatherings remain suspended, including at cultural sites, entertainment venues, tourism spots and religious sites.
Children's welfare homes, nursing homes and prisons will be subject to closed-loop management.
In addition, the status of students at schools where online instruction is being delivered, as well as the reopening time for schools, will be determined by the local education bureaus based on their evaluations, it said.
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