-
'Unfair election': young voters absent from Myanmar polls
-
Master Lock Comanche wins Sydney-Hobart ocean race for fifth time
-
Bulgaria adopts euro amid fear and uncertainty
-
Giannis triumphant in NBA return as Spurs win streak ends
-
How company bets on bitcoin can backfire
-
Touadera on path to third presidential term as Central African Republic votes
-
'Acoustic hazard': Noise complaints spark Vietnam pickleball wars
-
Iraqis cover soil with clay to curb sandstorms
-
Australia's Head backs struggling opening partner Weatherald
-
'Make emitters responsible': Thailand's clean air activists
-
Zelensky looks to close out Ukraine peace deal at Trump meet
-
MCG curator in 'state of shock' after Ashes Test carnage
-
Texans edge Chargers to reach NFL playoffs
-
Osimhen and Mane score as Nigeria win to qualify, Senegal draw
-
Osimhen stars as Nigeria survive Tunisia rally to reach second round
-
How Myanmar's junta-run vote works, and why it might not
-
Watkins wants to sicken Arsenal-supporting family
-
Arsenal hold off surging Man City, Villa as Wirtz ends drought
-
Late penalty miss denies Uganda AFCON win against Tanzania
-
Watkins stretches Villa's winning streak at Chelsea
-
Zelensky stops in Canada en route to US as Russia pummels Ukraine
-
Arteta salutes injury-hit Arsenal's survival spirit
-
Wirtz scores first Liverpool goal as Anfield remembers Jota
-
Mane rescues AFCON draw for Senegal against DR Congo
-
Arsenal hold off surging Man City, Wirtz breaks Liverpool duck
-
Arsenal ignore injury woes to retain top spot with win over Brighton
-
Sealed with a kiss: Guardiola revels in Cherki starring role
-
UK launches paid military gap-year scheme amid recruitment struggles
-
Jota's children join tributes as Liverpool, Wolves pay respects
-
'Tired' Inoue beats Picasso by unanimous decision to end gruelling year
-
Thailand and Cambodia declare truce after weeks of clashes
-
Netanyahu to meet Trump in US on Monday
-
US strikes targeted IS militants, Lakurawa jihadists, Nigeria says
-
Cherki stars in Man City win at Forest
-
Schwarz records maiden super-G success, Odermatt fourth
-
Russia pummels Kyiv ahead of Zelensky's US visit
-
Smith laments lack of runs after first Ashes home Test loss for 15 years
-
Russian barrage on Kyiv kills one, leaves hundreds of thousands without power
-
Stokes, Smith agree two-day Tests not a good look after MCG carnage
-
Stokes hails under-fire England's courage in 'really special' Test win
-
What they said as England win 4th Ashes Test - reaction
-
Hong Kongers bid farewell to 'king of umbrellas'
-
England snap 15-year losing streak to win chaotic 4th Ashes Test
-
Thailand and Cambodia agree to 'immediate' ceasefire
-
Closing 10-0 run lifts Bulls over 76ers while Pistons fall
-
England 77-2 at tea, need 98 more to win chaotic 4th Ashes Test
-
Somalia, African nations denounce Israeli recognition of Somaliland
-
England need 175 to win chaotic 4th Ashes Test
-
Cricket Australia boss says short Tests 'bad for business' after MCG carnage
-
Russia lashes out at Zelensky ahead of new Trump talks on Ukraine plan
Elderly patients fill hospitals in Shanghai Covid surge
Coughing, groaning, and gasping for breath, elderly Covid patients crammed hospital corridors in Shanghai on Tuesday as a wave of Covid-19 cases raged through the Chinese megacity.
At two hospitals in the city, AFP journalists saw hundreds of mostly elderly patients lying on gurneys in public areas as emergency wards filled beyond capacity.
Swaddled in blankets, coats and woollen hats, many were attached to intravenous drips, heart monitors or oxygen tanks, and were visibly struggling to breathe. A few appeared not fully responsive.
In one hospital, AFP witnessed an exchange between a woman and an older man, both jostling for a drip.
"I was here first," she said. "I'm here to get a needle too."
Beijing last month rapidly demolished key pillars of its zero-Covid policy, doing away with snap lockdowns, mass testing and state quarantines in a matter of days.
The reversal of three years of hardline curbs sparked relief nationwide, but has unleashed a torrent of infections on the country's patchy healthcare system and overloaded funeral homes and crematoriums.
Even in Shanghai, one of China's richest cities, the crisis is acute. Around 70 percent of the megacity's population -- equivalent to around 18 million people -- may have caught Covid since last month, according to state media reports.
- Suffering in public -
In a waiting area at Huashan Hospital -- located a stone's throw from the site of anti-lockdown protests in November -- a woman bent over a sickened man of around 80, a profusion of tubes springing from his emaciated hand.
Nearby, a young man stood sentry beside the bed of another elderly patient, shielding him from the crowds of people walking past.
At Tongren Hospital in the west of the city, a middle-aged woman in a facial mask gently lifted a flask to the parched lips of a man hooked up to an oxygen cylinder.
Nearby, a medical worker wearing blue scrubs and a face visor attended to a grey-haired woman in a red jumper as she shivered under a thick blanket.
Doctors and nurses at hospitals in multiple cities have told AFP they have continued to treat patients despite testing positive for the virus themselves.
In Shanghai, many also soldiered on, letting out the occasional dry cough as they flitted from patient to patient.
China's National Health Commission last month announced that it would no longer publish daily case figures, and a separate tally kept by the country's disease control body is widely considered inaccurate now that testing mandates have been scrapped.
The country has also narrowed the definition of what counts as a Covid death in a move that some experts say will underestimate the true number of fatalities due to the disease.
P.Silva--AMWN