China sees 108 new coronavirus cases

China has recorded 108 new coronavirus cases, marking the highest daily tally for more than five weeks and fanning fears of a second wave. 

More than 90 per cent of these infected people have entered the country from abroad following the lift of travel restrictions. 

Having largely stamped out domestic transmission of the disease, China has been slowly easing curbs on movement as it tries to get its economy back on track.

But there are fears that a rise in imported cases could spark a second wave of COVID-19.

The northeastern border with Russia has quickly become a frontline in the fight against a resurgence of the coronavirus epidemic.   

China has recorded 108 new coronavirus cases, marking the highest daily tally for more than five weeks and fanning fears of a second wave. Pictured: Volunteers spraying disinfectant in the compounds of a school as it prepares to reopen in China

The 108 new cases reported on Sunday are up from 99 a day earlier, marking the highest daily tally since March 5.

Imported cases accounted for a record 98.

Half involved Chinese nationals returning from Russia’s Far Eastern Federal District, home to the city of Vladivostok, who re-entered China through border crossings in Heilongjiang province. 

The border is closed, except to Chinese nationals. The route has become one of few options available for people trying to return home after Russia stopped flights to China except for those evacuating people.    

The total number of confirmed cases in mainland China now stands at 82,160 as of Sunday, and at the peak of the first wave of the epidemic on Feb 12 there were over 15,000 new cases.

An under-construction field hospital in Suifenhe, Heilongjiang, on the border with Russia, which has gone into lockdown fearing a second wave of Covid-19

An under-construction field hospital in Suifenhe, Heilongjiang, on the border with Russia, which has gone into lockdown fearing a second wave of Covid-19

A hairdresser wearing a face mask gives a client a haircut at a barber shop in Vladivostok, Russia, on the border with China

A hairdresser wearing a face mask gives a client a haircut at a barber shop in Vladivostok, Russia, on the border with China

Though the number of daily infections across China has dropped sharply from that peak, China has seen the daily toll creep higher after hitting a trough on March 12 because of the rise in imported cases.

Chinese cities near the Russian frontier are tightening border controls and imposing stricter quarantines in response.

Suifenhe and Harbin, the capital of Heilongjiang, are now mandating 28 days of quarantine as well as nucleic acid and antibody tests for all arrivals from abroad.

‘Our little town here, we thought it was the safest place,’ said a resident of the border city of Suifenhe, who only gave his surname as Zhu.

‘Some Chinese citizens – they want to come back, but it’s not very sensible, what are you doing coming here for?’

Streets in Suifenhe were virtually empty on Sunday evening due to restrictions of movement and gatherings announced last week.

Authorities took preventative measures similar to those imposed in Wuhan, the central Chinese city where the pandemic ripping round the world first emerged late last year.

In Shanghai, authorities found that 60 people who arrived on Aeroflot flight SU208 from Moscow on April 10 have the coronavirus, Zheng Jin, a spokeswoman for the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, told a press conference on Monday.

Residents in Suifenhe said a lot of people had left the city fearing contagion, but others put their trust in authorities’ containment measures.

‘I don’t need to worry,’ Zhao Wei, another Suifenhe resident, told Reuters. ‘If there’s a local transmission, I would, but there’s not a single one. They’re all from the border, but they’ve all been sent to quarantine.’ 

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