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Shanghai Disneyland is shut down, and 30,000 people are tested, after one COVID case

Medical personnel test visitors for the coronavirus at Shanghai Disneyland on Sunday after a single COVID-19 case was detected at the amusement park over the weekend.
AFP via Getty Images
Medical personnel test visitors for the coronavirus at Shanghai Disneyland on Sunday after a single COVID-19 case was detected at the amusement park over the weekend.

Shanghai health authorities say they have tested nearly 34,000 people for the coronavirus in a single night at Shanghai's Disneyland.

On Sunday evening, the city suddenly closed Shanghai Disneyland and banned anyone inside from leaving. It also shut down the metro station that services the theme park. The park said it did so to cooperate with a contact-tracing investigation after a woman who visited the park Saturday later tested positive for the coronavirus in neighboring Jiangxi province.

Shanghai announced on Monday that all of the guests who had been tested over the weekend came back negative for the coronavirus, according to The Associated Press. Authorities said they will have to be tested again, the outlet reported.

Chinese media say an estimated 100,000 people visited the park Saturday and Sunday, all of whom will now need to be tested.

On Chinese social media, frustrated parkgoers posted short videos showing thousands of people waiting outside overnight as health workers wearing hazmat suits conducted coronavirus tests. One showed fireworks exploding in the night sky above throngs of police, public health workers and park guests.

Shanghai Disneyland and Disneytown remained closed on Monday and Tuesday, and officials promised to provide refunds or exchanges to any attendees impacted by the closure.

"We will notify guests as soon as we have a confirmed date to resume operations," Shanghai Disney Resort said in a notice on its website. "Thank you for your understanding and cooperation!"

China closed its borders early in the COVID-19 pandemic to stem the spread of the disease, and it has since imposed citywide lockdowns and other strict public health measures to keep the country's infection rate low.


An earlier version of this story originally appeared on the Morning Edition live blog.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Emily Feng is NPR's Beijing correspondent.