Xining moves to ensure food supply

BEIJING: The government of Xining, capital of Qinghai province, is working to increase the food supply for residents and to stabilize prices after placing the city under static management due to new cases of COVID-19, local authorities said.
The city’s Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Agricultural Products Distribution Center, a major supplier of fresh food, was closed after three cases were reported on Oct 20.
Xining reported 75 locally transmitted infections, including 70 asymptomatic carriers, on Wednesday.
The city, with a population of about 2.47 million, announced temporary static management on Oct 21, asking residents in its main urban areas to stay home to prevent the spread of the virus.
Locals have reportedly complained it was difficult to buy vegetables and meat, and that price gouging was taking place.
Chen Xiaoping, director of Xining’s commerce bureau, said at a news conference on Wednesday that the closure of the distribution center, where the latest outbreak started, has led to a lack of food.
The government has set up a temporary wholesale point in the west of the distribution center to deal with over 1,000 metric tons of vegetables daily, although the supply of fruit is still challenging, Chen said, addinDM Monitoring

MANILA: Philippine search and rescue teams pulled bodies from water and thick mud on Friday, bringing to 42 the death toll from flooding and landslides triggered by a storm, with dozens more feared buried.
Eleven bodies were retrieved in the southern province of Maguindanao, which was hit hard by approaching tropical storm Nalgae, said Naguib Sinarimbo, interior minister of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Mindanao (BARMM).
Rescue and retrieval operations are temporarily suspended overnight and will resume Saturday morning, Sinarimbo said, as more people were feared still trapped under mud and flood waters, particularly in the town of Datu Odin.
“Based on the assessment on the ground, at that specific site, there were many (who got buried). The number might hit 80, but we are hoping it won’t reach that number,” Sinarimbo said via phone.
Authorities have evacuated thousands of people out of the path of Nalgae, which could possibly make landfall Friday night in Samar province in central Philippines, disaster officials said. Sinarimbo said the rainfall in Maguindanao province had exceeded expectations.
“There were preparations made but unfortunately, the rainfall was more than what people had expected,” Sinarimbo said. In another southern province, Sultan Kudarat, rescue workers used rubber boats to get to residents trapped in chest-deep waters, images shared by the coast guard showed.
Landslides and floods are frequent in the Philippines, due in part to the growing intensity of tropical cyclones that regularly batter the country. The Philippines sees an average 20 typhoons a year.
Tropical storm Nalgae, packing winds of 75 km (47 miles) per hour, forced flight cancellations just as thousands of people were planning to travel to their home towns to observe All Souls Day.
Schools were also shut down and some ports saw operations paralysed. The storm could intensify further while moving over the Philippine Sea, the weather bureau said.wholesale markets have been newly built.
–The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item