Red wine or white? At Olympic hotel, it comes in hazmat suit

The Chinese people working in hazmat suits inside the Beijing Olympics’ closed-loop “bubble” don’t hesitate to be photographed. In fact, they seem to welcome it, showing pride in carrying out a national mission of controlling COVID-19.

Associated Press photographer Jae C. Hong has spent time around Beijing’s Shangri-La Hotel, one of the city’s top destinations for out-of-town guests. It’s also a hotel inside the Olympic bubble, accessible to athletes, Olympic officials and reporters.

ALSO READ |Olympics: Beijing visitors go hi-tech to avoid getting lost in translation

Everyone seems approachable. The scenes are incongruous to outsiders who are enjoying an evening meal of Beijing’s renowned roasted duck.

https://images.indianexpress.com/2020/08/1×1.png winter Olympics, Olympics closed loop, Beijing Olympics covid 19winter Olympics, Olympics closed loop, Beijing Olympics covid 19 A hotel worker in protective gear helps a guest pay for his purchase at the Shangri-La Hotel at the 2022 Winter Olympics. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Waiters and waitress dress head to toe in puffy white suits — with blue, pinstripe trimming — hands covered with clingy plastic gloves, shoes encased inside the ensemble, and masks in place behind plastic face shields.

Everyday pleasures like a cup of coffee or a glass of wine turn exotic when the server arrives, seeming to have landed from the set of a disaster movie.

ALSO READ |A scramble for scarce Olympic souvenirs

The industrial-like focus on safety and sanitation contrasts markedly with the opulence of the hotel with its massive chandeliers and displays of Chinese art hanging above overstuffed sofas and lounge chairs.

winter Olympics, Olympics closed loop, Beijing Olympics covid 19winter Olympics, Olympics closed loop, Beijing Olympics covid 19 A hotel worker in protective gear watches a live broadcast of a men’s curling match between China and Switzerland in the lobby area of the Shangri-La Hotel at the 2022 Winter Olympics. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Apparently it takes only a few minutes to put on the suits, and none of the wearers seems the least bit uncomfortable in the safety gear. Several staff members said they are not supposed to speak to reporters, and they were good to their word.

But they all offered thumps-up signs when approached, and one flashed five fingers when asked how long it took to put on the suit.

A woman in a hazmat suit watching curling on a large television screen had this to say when she was asked if she understood the rules: “No.”

Asked why she was watching, she laughed and replied: “China is playing.”

📣

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Next Post

Brazil mudslides kill at least 94, with dozens still missing

Fri Feb 18 , 2022
Rio de Janeiro state’s government has confirmed 94 deaths from floods and mudslides that swept away homes and cars in the city of Petropolis. But even as families prepared to bury their dead, it was unclear Thursday how many bodies remained trapped in the mud. Rubens Bomtempo, mayor of the […]

You May Like