BEIJING — The first batch of 866 people stranded in virus-hit Wuhan, capital of Central China's Hubei province, has arrived in Beijing by a train on April 8 after Wuhan lifted its outbound travel restrictions on the same day.
Beijing residents who were stranded in Wuhan are required to apply for a return through a mini-program on instant messaging app WeChat. Statistics showed that more than 11,000 people asked for a return to the national capital, said Chen Bei, deputy secretary-general of the Beijing municipal government, at a press conference on April 8.
Starting on April 8, around 1,000 stranded people are expected to return to Beijing from Wuhan each day via train or car. They should undergo nucleic acid testing (NAT) in Wuhan within seven days before departure, Chen said.
The transport of the people will be carried out in a well-organized and spot-to-spot way, and all returned personnel will be brought under closed-loop management, with a two-week mandatory quarantine, either at home or at a designated venue. Another round of NAT is required after the quarantine, Chen noted.
More than 61,000 people who work or live in Beijing have returned from Hubei province since March 25.