Forbidden No More: Beijing's Top Attraction Reopens
"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("
"); });
2020-04-29 HKT 23:23
Beijing's Forbidden City will reopen on Friday, three months after it closed due to the coronavirus crisis – the latest signal that the country has brought the disease under control.
The sprawling imperial palace sitting across Tiananmen Square was shut down on January 25 as authorities closed tourist attractions and took other extraordinary measures to contain the virus, including locking down an entire province.
The Palace Museum, which manages the Forbidden City, announced on Wednesday that it will reopen from May 1, with a daily limit of 5,000 visitors – down from 80,000 before the pandemic.
Authorities have implemented other measures to reduce risks of infections at the cultural site, which in normal times attracted huge crowds.
Visitors will have to wear masks and show health codes on a special mobile phone app that indicates if they are an infection risk before entering.
Temperatures will be taken at the entrance and anyone coughing or showing a fever will be turned away. Visitors will have to stand one metre from each other.
Within half an hour of the announcement, around 2,500 tickets for May 1 were booked, according to the ticketing website.
While much of the rest of the world is still enforcing confinement measures, China has been resuming work, reopening schools and lifting restrictions on movement as the number of domestic infections have plunged and no new deaths have been reported in two weeks.
The capital announced earlier that Beijing's museums would progressively reopen from May 1.
Beijing also lowered its emergency alert from the highest level and lifted a strict quarantine requirement for domestic travellers from "low-risk" areas, which it had kept in place long after many other regions in the country eased travel restrictions.
Arrivals in Beijing from the virus epicentre of Hubei province as well as travellers coming from abroad are still required to complete a 14-day quarantine, state broadcaster CCTV reported. (AFP)
Tycoon Sits China's University Exams For 27th Time
Among the millions of fresh-faced high schoolers sitting the nation's dreaded "gaokao" college entrance exam on Wednesda... Read more
China's First Home-grown Large Cruise Liner Undocks
The first large cruise liner developed by China completed its undocking in Shanghai on Tuesday, marking its complete tra... Read more
Chinese, US Diplomats Hold 'frank' Talks In Beijing
Meetings between senior mainland and US officials in China this week struck an upbeat chord, with both sides agreeing to... Read more
China's Cruise Industry Set To Make Waves Again
China's cruise industry, suspended for more than three years due to the pandemic, is expected to resume operations in th... Read more
Toll From Deadly Landslide Rises To 19
All 19 people caught in a landslide in Sichuan province on Sunday have been confirmed dead, state media reported, announ... Read more
'Nato-like Alliance Disastrous For Asia-Pacific'
Defence Minister Li Shangfu on Sunday told the Shangri-La Dialogue security summit in Singapore that any moves to establ... Read more