16 Aug 2022

Shanghai Covid-19 case: Ikea shoppers flee attempt to lock down store

10:48 am on 16 August 2022

There were chaotic scenes at an Ikea store in Shanghai on Saturday, with shoppers trying to escape as authorities tried to quarantine them.

--FILE--Customers leave a furnishing store of IKEA in Shanghai, China, 18 April 2018.

IKEA has been ordered to pay 40,000 yuan ($5,970) in compensation in addition to a 3.9-yuan (59 cents) purchase refund to a Chinese woman who was injured when a glass cup she purchased from the home furnishing giant exploded while she drank from it. The woman, identified as Wang, bought a "Stelna" glass water cup from an IKEA store in Beijing in 2016, but the product exploded on May 20, 2017 when she was drinking "cooled boiled water." Wang was hospitalized after losing consciousness. She lost one of her front teeth, and her lips required four stitches. She took the Swedish company to court earlier this year, accusing it of selling faulty products and asking for one million yuan ($150,000) in compensation. (Photo by Yan daming / Imaginechina / Imaginechina via AFP)

Shoppers leave an Ikea store in Shanghai. File photo Photo: AFP

Health officials were attempting to lock the store in Xuhui district down as a customer had been in close contact with a positive Covid case.

Videos show the guards closing the doors at one point, but a crowd forced them open and made their escape.

Shanghai endured a severe two-month lockdown earlier this year.

Since then, in line with the country's strict "zero-Covid" strategy, the city of 20 million people has ordered flash lockdowns of areas where positive cases or their close contacts have been detected.

Many have been locked down in unusual locations - including hot pot restaurants, gyms and offices.

The Ikea store's sudden shutdown was ordered because a close contact of a six-year-old boy who tested positive after returning to Shanghai from Lhasa in Tibet had visited, Shanghai Health Commission deputy director Zhao Dandan said on Sunday.

He did not say when the close contact was believed to have been at the store.

Those who were at the Ikea store and related areas must quarantine for two days followed by five days of health monitoring, Zhao said.

By Sunday nearly 400 close contacts of the six-year-old boy - who is asymptomatic - had been traced while 80,000 people had been ordered to undergo PCR testing, according to Shanghai Daily.

Ikea's customer service said on Sunday that the store was shut due to Covid-19 curbs.

The flagship Xuhui store, which opened in 1998, was the Swedish furniture retailer's first outlet in China. It now has 35 outlets across the country.

China has stuck to its zero-Covid approach to slowing the spread of the coronavirus despite its huge impact on the economy and increasingly vocal objection from the public.

The scenes of panic at Ikea followed videos last week showing people in another part of Shanghai running out of a building over rumours of an abnormal Covid-19 test result.

Shanghai's citywide lockdown earlier this year saw widespread reports of food shortages and poor living conditions in quarantine centres.

Frustrated residents were filmed engaging in heated arguments with pandemic staff and screaming from windows in protest against the restrictions during this time.

- BBC

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