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Photos REUTERS
“After experiencing the first wave of the Wuhan epidemic and then liberation, I feel like I’m living a second life,” said 29-year-old Zhang, who works in a textile store in the city where the new coronavirus first appeared. .
Without masks, people go outside, smoke, and play various games with fake guns and balloons.
Wuhan’s nightlife has returned to normal, about seven months after the strict lockdown was lifted, and young people enjoy this sense of “cleanliness.”
In images that are now unthinkable for many cities around the world currently facing a new pandemic outbreak, young Wuhan residents are rushing to make up for lost quarantine time.
The resurgence of the hit economy overnight in Wuhan, which has been hit hard, offers a glimpse of what life might look like after the pandemic, something many hope will become a reality in 2021, after the global launch of vaccines. .
It should be noted that Wuhan has not registered any local cases of the disease since May 10, following the end of one of the strictest closures in the world.
Source: Reuters