| China confirmed human-to-human transmission on Jan 20[1]. China shutdown Wuhan on 23 January[2] (notice this was after human-to-human transmission was confirmed). Wuhan airport was closed[2], and Chinese did stop all travel out of Wuhan[3]. There are many reports of people escaping the lockdown that night, but it doesn't seem this was some Chinese policy - more that events were moving fast. It's your country's responsibility who enters its borders. The Trump administration moved fairly quickly and closed borders to Wuhan by Feb 2, which was earlier than South Korea (but later than many countries). I don't think many would fault that part of the US response, but it isn't exactly clear what people think China was hiding in this period - remember this was the time when people were seeing pictures of the lockdown in Wuhan. Countries can make their own judgement about the severity. [1] https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jan/20/coronavirus-sp... [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_pandemic_lockdown_in_... [3] https://www.health.gov.au/news/chief-medical-officers-update... |
“It's your country's responsibility who enters its borders”
This is technically true according to a black and white definition of ‘responsibility’.
But the decision you make will be based a lot on information you get from other parties and how trustworthy they are.
The extent to which the Chinese system causes the severity to be downplayed matters a lot.