China's local coronavirus cases rose for a fourth day, with the majority of infections reported by Xian, a northwestern city that has put its 13 million people under lockdown.
Xian reported 175 symptomatic cases for Monday (December 27), up from the previous day's 150. No Omicron infections have been announced yet from the more than 800 confirmed cases in Xian since Dec 9.
Case numbers in Xian are small compared with many clusters in other countries, but Chinese officials have imposed tough curbs on travel within the city and on leaving it, in line with national guidelines to immediately contain any COVID-19 outbreak.
Some residents in Xian were anxious to know when they could next stock up on daily necessities such as vegetables, as officials had barred people from going out to shop during a new round of mass testing that started on Monday.
Officials had said shopping could resume for people in less risky areas once test results came back negative, but did not say exactly when the suspension would be lifted. Prior to the restriction, each household had been allowed to send only one person out to shop for essentials every two days.
"It feels like a long time," said a 22-year-old resident surnamed Jin.
"The fact that I haven't yet been told when I could shop again makes me a bit anxious," Jin, who ran out of fresh greens by Tuesday and couldn't make orders online without waiting for nearly a week before delivery, told Reuters.
Since last week, Xian residents have not been allowed to leave the city without clearance from their employer or community authorities. Officials have also banned non-essential vehicles.
Zhang Boli, who advised the Chinese government in formulating early COVID-19 response and treatment strategies, told state media earlier this month that Xian may contain the outbreak by around mid-January.