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Ryu Hae-ran wins Women's PGA Championship
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South Korea's Ryu Hae-ran wins Women's PGA Championship
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Putin acknowledges fuel shortages after Ukraine strikes
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Canada reach World Cup last 16 as late strike sinks South Africa
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Perry stars as Australia knock India out of World Cup
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West Indies beat Sri Lanka in first Test
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Hamilton laments lack of power and poor tyre performance
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Raducanu hopes to feature at Wimbledon despite injury woe
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Iran warns ships not to bypass its chosen Hormuz route
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Russell holds off Verstappen to win Austrian Grand Prix
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Serena blasts drug test rules ahead of Wimbledon return
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England captain Stokes to retire from international cricket
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Ogier wins Acropolis Rally to close in on Evans
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South Africa maintain World Cup semi-final hopes with nervy win over Bangladesh
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South Korea president apologises after World Cup group-stage exit
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Bergs wins Eastbourne final to clinch first ATP title
'There's no why': Shanghai rages at endless Covid lockdown
Scuffles with officials, workers storming factory gates and households raging at being dragged into quarantine -- Shanghai's long fight against Covid-19 is unravelling into chaos and desperation.
China insists on sticking to its zero-Covid strategy, and that has left most of Shanghai's 25 million residents locked down for several weeks.
The city is the epicentre of China's worst Covid outbreak to date, with more than half a million infections and over 500 deaths, according to official figures.
Yet despite cases dwindling into the low thousands in recent days, authorities are still conjuring new control measures.
Those include relocating entire residential compounds to quarantine -- even including people with negative virus tests -- and denying some food deliveries in a bid to stop the spread of the virus.
Residents who were initially told they would be at home for a just few days are now entering their sixth or seventh week of lockdown and anger is boiling over across the city.
Images emerged over the weekend of a street fight between locals and officials clad in white hazmat suits in Shanghai's Minhang district.
District officials later said "troublemakers" clashed with health management staff on Saturday night, inciting neighbours to rush out of their barricaded building as other residents threw objects onto the street from their windows.
Videos circulating on social media and verified by AFP showed people in Minhang's Zhuanqiao neighbourhood pushing police as chants against "violent law enforcement" echoed around.
Workers at Apple supplier Quanta's Shanghai factory fought with guards and broke through barricades last week over fears that Covid rules on the campus could get stricter, according to Bloomberg.
The flashpoints add to a catalogue of protests since the early-April start of lockdown, in a country where unrest is normally swiftly squashed and rarely seen by the wider public.
- 'Stop asking why' -
Shanghai officials claim the city is winning its Covid fight, declaring in past weeks that millions have been released from the strictest levels of lockdown.
But the view from the ground is different. Large neighbourhoods given a brief semblance of freedom have quietly been put back into lockdown, Shanghai residents told AFP.
Many who were placed in low-risk areas have been told that they cannot leave their apartments except to get Covid tests.
Compounds are ordering "silent periods" or curfews of as long as seven days during which people are forbidden to even order deliveries of personal items, according to official notices seen by AFP.
Meanwhile residents of multiple buildings have told AFP they have been warned of forcible movement to quarantine facilities if their neighbours test positive.
"All of us will be taken to a quarantine centre and we'll have to hand over our keys so they can come in and spray everything with disinfectant," a British citizen living in Shanghai's Xuhui district said, declining to be named for fear of retaliation.
Videos showing arguments with officials are now common on Chinese social media, with new confrontations being shared at a speed outpacing the censors' race to scrub them out.
One video that went viral over the weekend showed hazmat-suited officials arguing with a family in a mix of Mandarin and Shanghainese dialect.
"You can't do whatever you want, unless you go to America. This is China," one official says in the video after informing the family that they must be quarantined as they are same-floor contacts of a Covid case.
"Stop asking why. There's no why. This is according to national regulations."
H.Gonzales--AT