Crowds try to flee Shanghai Ikea store to avoid strict COVID-19 lockdown in China

Just two possible COVID-19 cases have sparked chaotic scenes in Shanghai, with crowds of people seen running out of a building and an Ikea store, trying to escape a lockdown under China's strict coronavirus rules.To get more news about shanghai covid cases, you can visit shine news official website.

The country's zero-COVID strategy involves snap lockdowns and quarantines, sometimes over just a handful of cases, and the measures have sparked anxiety and anger in some cities.

Videos widely shared on social media and verified by AFP news agency showed a small group of PPE-clad personnel trying to keep the main doors of a Shanghai building closed on Friday, after a worker there was identified as a close contact of a COVID case.

A large crowd is then seen bursting past the outnumbered staff, running away from the building as onlookers film the scene on their mobile phones.Some people were seen dragging what appeared to be a metal barricade several metres as they fled the mall.

Close contacts could face days of quarantine and monitoring under China's health rules.Similar scenes unfolded at an Ikea store in Shanghai's Xuhui district on Saturday, when health authorities tried to lock down customers in the store over an "abnormal" test result.Video clips shared online showed a large group of people trying to leave.

In one clip, screams are heard as personnel try to keep doors closed. The crowd eventually pushes its way through the door and people are seen running past to try to get out.The 25 million residents of Shanghai — China's biggest city — have grappled with harsh COVID rules since earlier this year, when the city was sealed off for two months to contain an outbreak of the virus.

The measures battered business activity and some residents reported trouble accessing food and non-COVID medical care.They also sparked protests by frustrated residents against the authorities.

China reported 2,526 new coronavirus cases on August 15, of which 591 were symptomatic and 1,935 were asymptomatic, the National Health Commission said.

That's compared with 2,478 new cases a day earlier — 770 symptomatic and 1,708 asymptomatic infections, which China counts separately.Anger spilled over in the southern island of Hainan, where more than 80,000 tourists were stranded in the resort city of Sanya earlier this month because of a COVID flare-up.

The holiday city is battling an outbreak and reported 3,596 symptomatic and 4,497 asymptomatic cases between August 1 and August 15.Travellers in Sanya have been protesting, with social media posts last weekend showing crowds on the street shouting for local leaders to meet with them.

Li Zefeng, 25, was looking forward to a long-awaited trip to Xinjiang after spending weeks locked up after Shanghai's coronavirus lockdown.

But he found out himself locked down again in a rental property in Sanya on August 5. A child living on the first floor has been confirmed positive, and residents living on the same floor have been taken to the quarantine centre. We were also asked to be quarantined at home as close contacts."

Now on day 12 of quarantine, Mr Li had to cancel his highly anticipated Xinjiang trip."I'm disappointed that I have to cancel the trip. I even quit my job in order to go to Xinjiang this March," he said.

In Tibet, authorities closed the Potala Palace, former home of the exiled Dalai Lama, on Tuesday last week after 22 COVID-19 cases were reported in the Himalayan region.

Tibet's economy is dependent on tourism and the Potala Palace is a key attraction, with hundreds of thousands of visitors each year.