Southern China’s Guangzhou city announced more COVID-19 infections on June 7 even after over 60 percent of residents were vaccinated, with over 85 percent of residents tested over the past few days. On June 6, the city’s authorities ordered residents to stay in the city, with people who live in locked-down areas not allowed to leave their homes. On June 4, the regime announced that it would use drones and self-driving cars to deliver materials to these locked-down regions. Guangzhou city first reported the new outbreak on May 21, and said the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus, that caused the outbreak is the Indian variant. “The Indian variant spreads very quickly. The incubation period is between two to four days. And the viral load [of each COVID-19 patient] is large,” said Zhang Zhoubin, deputy director of the Guangzhou CDC at a May 31 press conference. …