China's Chengdu exits full citywide COVID lockdown on Thursday

People wearing face masks walk on Jinli Ancient Street in Chengdu

BEIJING (Reuters) -The Chinese city of Chengdu will on Thursday lift a full COVID-19 lockdown in all districts still facing strict movement curbs as a recent outbreak comes under control, local authorities said.

Chengdu, the capital of southwestern China's Sichuan province, was locked down on Sept. 1 after COVID cases were detected, becoming the largest Chinese metropolis hit with curbs since Shanghai's lockdown in April and May.

Some districts in Chengdu, a city of more than 21 million people, have already started to exit from a full lockdown since Sept. 8.

According to the latest COVID guidelines released late on Wednesday, residents of districts still under a full lockdown will no longer face limits on how frequently they can leave their residential compounds, except for some areas that are still fighting community infections.

Public transportation will resume and workplaces will reopen in those districts, the authorities said.

"On Sept. 15, normal production and daily life will be gradually restored in an orderly manner, and the city's (COVID) prevention and control measures will be adjusted accordingly," Chengdu authorities said in an online statement.

Some public spaces such as schools, KTV lounges, internet cafes, gyms, swimming pools, museums and libraries will continue to be closed.

Five districts and a part of a sixth one will face stricter rules where residents are not allowed to travel to other Chengdu districts and people outside cannot enter.

The rest among Chengdu's 23 districts can gradually resume dine-in and normal cross-district travels, according to the Wednesday statement.

Nonessential travel out of Chengdu is also discouraged, and residents who need to leave the city must show negative COVID results from tests taken within 24 hours prior to departure.

China has been battling to contain the highly transmissible Omicron variant, imposing lockdowns of various degrees to stop its spread. Shanghai was locked down in April and May while Xian, Shenzhen and Guiyang have also undergone lockdowns and restrictions.

Chengdu reported 29 new locally transmitted COVID infections on Wednesday, down from 35 a day earlier, according to city government data on Thursday.

(Reporting by Ryan Woo and Roxanne Liu; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Michael Perry)