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Central News Agency (Taiwan): SARS Strikes Beijing, Citizens Are In a Panic
(Clearwisdom.net) (Central News Agency in Taipei on April 17) Under the shadow of SARS
(Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome), May Day Golden Week holidays, which used to be full of business
opportunities, are suffering from an intense impact. Beijing's "May Day Golden Week" is
facing an embarrassing situation: people have no places to go for fun, and businessmen are not able
to make money. Hong Kong Sing Tao Daily is reporting that because of fear of the deadly SARS epidemic, in
addition to singers Zhao Chuan and Lin Yilian postponing their concerts, a large vocal concert for
the public by singers from Hong Kong and Taiwan, which included Zhou Lunjie and Sun Yanzi, may also
be canceled. During the Golden Week in early May, Beijingers truly "have no drama to
enjoy." The report points out that as May Day Golden Week draws near, SARS is showing no signs of
regressing. Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao has officially declared they will have a tough fight,
and the Chinese people have entered a state of "All people are soldiers;" yet SARS is
still having a great impact on Beijing. There is often news of someone being infected with SARS from
Beijing. After some customers and employees at Beijing Yingke Center caught the disease the other
day, people in a building near Zhichunli in Zhongguancun also became infected. At the same time,
students in primary schools, middle schools and high schools from the south to the north of the city
were successively found to be infected with SARS and classes had to be suspended. The Beijing Travel Bureau recently conducted an investigation of local hotels, and discovered
that since March, hotel occupancy rates have seriously declined. A large number of tour groups have
canceled their trips to Beijing. SARS has caused the country to "to stop all foreign
contact" and people are in a panic. Both international conferences and general mass activities
had to be canceled, causing a severe blow to the general development of the Chinese economy. Posting date: 4/19/2003 |