China clashes morph into call for freedoms
Clashes broke out between police and protesters in a southern Chinese city, part of a wave of Covid lockdownsparked demonstrations across the country that have morphed into demands for political freedoms.
China’s top security body warned that authorities would “crack down” following the protests, which are the most widespread since pro-democracy rallies in 1989 that were crushed with deadly force.
The demonstrations erupted over the weekend across major cities, including Beijing and Shanghai, with China’s vast security apparatus moving swiftly to smother unrest.
But new clashes broke out in China’s southern city of Guangzhou on Tuesday night and into Wednesday (local time), according to witnesses and social media footage.
Security personnel in hazmat suits formed ranks shoulder-to-shoulder, taking cover under see-through riot shields, to make their way down a street in the southern city’s Haizhu district as glass smashed around them, videos posted on social media showed. In the footage people could be heard screaming and shouting, with orange and blue barricades strewn across the ground.
People are seen throwing objects at police, and later nearly a dozen men are filmed being taken away with their hands bound with cable ties.
One Guangzhou resident said he had seen around 100 police officers converge on Houjiao village in Haizhu district and arrest at least three men on Tuesday night. Some students at Guangzhou’s universities said they were forced out of their dormitories overnight on Wednesday, according to social media posts, as a growing number of universities nationwide ordered students home in the wake of campus demonstrations.
Multiple Guangzhou districts lifted restrictions on some or all locked-down neighbourhoods on Wednesday afternoon, according to government announcements.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, asked about the protests in an interview with NBC News, said that people in every country should be able to “make known their frustration” through peaceful protests.
“In any country where we see that happening and then we see the government take massive repressive action to stop it, that’s not a sign of strength, that’s a sign of weakness,” Mr Blinken said.
Anger over China’s zeroCovid policy – which involves lockdowns of huge numbers of people and has strangled the economy – has been the trigger for the protests.
A deadly fire last week in Urumqi, the capital of the northwestern region of Xinjiang, was the catalyst for the outrage, with people blaming Covid curbs for trapping victims inside the burning building. But demonstrators have also demanded wider political reforms, with some even calling for President Xi Jinping to stand down.
China’s strict control of information and continued travel curbs have made verifying protester numbers across the vast country challenging.