South China Morning Post

Protests continue as anger at zero-Covid boils over

- Mimi Lau mimi.lau@scmp.com Additional reporting by Kinling Lo > GATHERING IN HONG KONG A5

Citizens in a handful of Chinese cities have taken to the streets in a rare show of defiance to protest against the country’s strict Covid19 controls following the death of 10 people in a fire at a residentia­l block in Xinjiang last week.

In Beijing, several hundred people took to the streets in a protest that continued until after 3am last night. Other demonstrat­ions took place in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Wuhan and Chengdu over the weekend, according to media reports and social media posts. Some protesters were reportedly detained.

Some questioned whether a months-long Covid-19 lockdown in Xinjiang had been a factor in the deaths of 10 people in Urumqi, the capital of the far-western region, although the authoritie­s insist they did not hamper rescue efforts at the residentia­l block.

Some protesters chanted slogans calling for an end to the three year-old zero-Covid strategy, as well as calling for freedom of expression and rule of law.

In Shanghai, some chanted slogans criticisin­g the Communist Party while others held up blank sheets of paper – a symbol of anger against restrictio­ns on speech.

While the fire in Xinjiang was a trigger point for many, their frustratio­ns over China’s virus policies had been building well before it, according to protesters.

The deaths came two weeks after China rolled out fresh rules that sought to ease its restrictio­ns and minimise the impact on the economy.

A 30-year-old Shanghai protester said the “unconfirme­d facts” of the Urumqi fire were the final straw. “Chinese people have been too timid for far too long. After three years [of zero-Covid], they finally spoke out about basic human rights, what’s wrong with that?” said the protester.

“The [fire] was only a juncture, getting people to question why there isn’t freedom, why is the reality in contrast to what the authoritie­s have claimed, and why weren’t the media verifying murky facts?”

A 40-year-old Beijing freelancer who gave her name as Qingtong said she had attended a protest next to the Liangmahe River to hear the voices of the young.

“Young people who have paid the price for the Covid restrictio­ns should have room for expression,” she said. “Their employment is the basis of future stability and developmen­t. Without them, China would have no future.”

Zero-Covid policies have been blamed for a number of other deaths, with patients being denied hospital treatment, including a heavily pregnant woman who lost her baby after being turned away from a hospital in Xian in January.

In September, a coach carrying 47 people from Guiyang, the provincial capital of Guizhou, to a quarantine facility some 240km away overturned, killing 27 of those on board.

“The most striking thing is really how people across the country are motivated and united by pretty much a shared concern that spilled out onto the streets and university campuses which makes the scale of the protests much more substantia­l,” said Dali Yang, a political scientist at the University of Chicago.

He said the fire, and reports that residents had been unable to get out of the building had prompted people to realise “this really could happen to us”.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak condemned as “shocking and unacceptab­le” the detention of a British Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n journalist at a protest in Shanghai.

The spokesman said that Britain would raise concerns with China about its response to protests, while London would continue to seek constructi­ve relations with Beijing over other issues.

A 26-year-old business consultant who took part in the protest on Urumqi Middle Road in Shanghai on Sunday evening said his grievance started with seeing photos of a protest in Beijing in October, when a lone man hung banners protesting against the zero-Covid policy and the Communist Party.

“When I was outside, I felt people were there for a range of reasons. It was not coherent but a strong sentiment was that people desperatel­y needed a window to vent,” the person said.

Beijing continued to argue that its policies were designed to balance safeguardi­ng the population and protecting livelihood­s.

Sun Chunlan, the vicepremie­r who is leading the battle against Covid-19, said during an inspection tour of Chongqing that the authoritie­s were seeking to “cut off the path of transmissi­on” during a local outbreak while lifting any lockdown as quickly as possible.

“We wish to see a ‘scientific and accurate’ approach but it looks like they can’t achieve it. Implementa­tion of the 20 measures [recently announced by Beijing] should continue but whether the people are patient enough to wait for the outcome is another matter,” said Jin Dongyan, a virologist at the University of Hong Kong.

 ?? Photo: Reuters ?? Protesters hold blank sheets of paper as a symbol of restrictio­ns on free speech in Beijing, one of the cities seeing unrest.
Photo: Reuters Protesters hold blank sheets of paper as a symbol of restrictio­ns on free speech in Beijing, one of the cities seeing unrest.

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