Swimming fans in Beijing are expected to make a splash this weekend as the
city reopens its first pools Friday.
The move is the latest respite for millions of residents in the capital,
emerging from the shadow of SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome).
A worker uses an electric
broom to disinfect the deck of a swimming pool in Beijing June 19, 2003.
[Reuters] |
More and more facilities are springing
to life following the reopening of indoor sport and fitness facilities earlier
this month.
Sources with the Beijing Sports Bureau said Thursday that swimming pools
in the city that meet the required hygiene standards will be allowed to reopen.
"People keep on calling to inquire the date of the reopening of the swimming
pools,'' said Fan Zheng, a division chief with the city sports bureau.
Explaining the longer closure, Fan said: "In the swimming pools people may have
closer contact with others and that's why we postponed the reopening date to
today.''
Stadiums and swimming pools have to strictly implement SARS prevention
measures and only those licenced by the health authorities can resume
operations, said Fan.
Every swimming pool must be equipped with a temperature-checking instrument
at the entrance, in addition to other disinfection measures.
There are a total of 503 swimming pools in the city, but only some of them
have been given the go-ahead by the relevant authority to open to the public
today. The rest of the pools are implementing the necessary measures and will
reopen in due course.
A total of 701 indoor sports venues, half of the capital's total, were
operating normally by Monday.
"More and more people are back in the gym,'' said a coach, called Chen at the
E-52 fitness centre in Beijing. "They were far more relaxed and high-spirited, a
sharp contrast to the fear and uncertainty in the initial days of the
outbreak.''
There were, however, still fewer people visiting the gym than in the days
before the SARS crisis struck, forcing the closure of all such facilities, she said.
"Things will be better if the city continues to report no SARS cases for a
few more days,'' Chen added confidently.
Beijing had reported no SARS cases for eight consecutive days as of
yesterday.
While gyms and swimming pools may have been hit hard, the badminton business
has been booming.
At the entrance to a badminton centre in Chaoyang District, people lined up
to have their temperature checked and register their names and telephone numbers.
The added precaution is to ensure that if anyone who visited the centre later
fell ill, all their contacts can be speedily traced.
"I haven't come here to play for a long time,'' said Cheng Yandan, 25, a
public servant in the city. "The SARS made me aware that it is important to
build a healthy physical body as well as a healthy willpower.''
But a 42-year-old resident surnamed Zhang said he never gave up doing
exercise during the SARS period.
"I did some outdoor activities instead at that critical time, but it's nice
to be back at the indoor sports centre.''
Around 1,800 indoor venues were closed in late April and it was not until
last week that they gradually began to reopen.