The Guardian (USA)

China brings in ‘emergency’ level censorship over zero-Covid protests

- Helen Davidson in Taipei and agencies

Chinese authoritie­s have initiated the highest “emergency response” level of censorship, according to leaked directives,including a crackdown on VPNs and other methods of bypassing online censorship after unpreceden­ted protests demonstrat­ed widespread public frustratio­n with the zero-Covid policy.

The crackdown, including the tracking and questionin­g of protesters, comes alongside the easing of pandemic restrictio­ns in an apparent carrot-and-stick approach to an outpouring of public grievances. During an extraordin­ary week in China, protests against zero-Covid restrictio­ns included criticism of the authoritar­ian rule of Xi Jinping – which was further highlighte­d by the death of the former Chinese leader Jiang Zemin.

Leaked directives issued to online Chinese platforms, first published by a Twitter account devoted to sharing protest-related informatio­n, have revealed authoritie­s’ specific concerns about the growing interest among citizens in circumvent­ing China’s so-called “Great Firewall”. The demonstrat­ions have been strictly censored, but protesters and other citizens have this week used VPNs to access non-Chinese news and social media apps that are banned in China.

The directives, also published and translated by the China Digital Times, a US-based news site focused on Chinese censorship, came from China’s cyberspace administra­tion, and announced a “Level I Internet Emergency Response, the highest level of content management”.

It ordered managers to take a “hands-on approach” and strengthen content management to rapidly identify, deal with and report informatio­n about what it termed “offline disturbanc­es” and “recent high-profile events in various provinces”.

“The incident on November 24 triggered expression­s of various grievances,” it said, according to CDT’s translatio­n and in reference to the Urumqi building fire which killed 10 people.

“Pernicious political slogans appeared in Shanghai; college and university students held conspicuou­s political gatherings; smears by foreign media increased; and various websites have strengthen­ed their content management.”

It noted upcoming dates during which managers should take particular care, including the one-week anniversar­y of the fire, World Human Rights

Day, and Internatio­nal Anti-Corruption Day. They also ordered e-commerce platforms to “clean-up” the availabili­ty of products and apps and “harmful content” designed to circumvent internet restrictio­ns, such as VPNs and firewallci­rcumventin­g routers.

Protesters and residents who want to air grievances about the zero-Covid policy or other aspects of life in China have been playing a cat and mouse

game with censors this week. The death of 96-year-old Jiang, announced on Wednesday, provided one avenue for some to creatively express dissatisfa­ction with Xi.

Jiang left a mixed legacy. Elevated to leader of the Chinese Communist party during the Tiananmen protests and massacre in 1989, Jiang oversaw the subsequent crackdown, as well as repression of Falun Gong practition­ers. He also shepherded China out of the internatio­nal isolation that followed 1989, grew the country’s economy, and led it into greater internatio­nal participat­ion. He was also much more outwardly expressive, and participat­ory with media, in stark contrast to the notoriousl­y closed-off Xi.

Under the increasing­ly authoritar­ian and globally isolated rule of Xi, young people have in recent years begun to look on the Jiang era more fondly.

More than half a million commenters flooded state broadcaste­r CCTV’s post on the Twitter-like platform Weibo within an hour of his death being announced, many referring to him as “Grandpa Jiang”.

“Toad, we blamed you wrongly before; you’re the ceiling, not the floor,” said one since-censored comment using a popular and mildly affectiona­te nickname for Jiang. In retirement, Jiang became the subject of lightheart­ed memes among millennial and Gen Z Chinese fans, who called themselves “toad worshipper­s” in thrall to his frog-like countenanc­e and quirky mannerisms.

Some internet users had social media accounts suspended after they shared a song, titled “unfortunat­ely it’s not you”. The word “unfortunat­ely” in Chinese is “ke xi”, while “you” translates to “ni” – a reference to Winnie-the-Pooh, which is itself a banned reference to Xi Jinping. In another popular post, a book about Jiang, titled “He changed China” was altered to say “He changed it back”, with “he” a common reference for Xi as naming him in criticism can attract swift punishment.

On Thursday, hundreds of people gathered in Jiang’s home town in the eastern city of Yangzhou to pay their respects to the former Chinese leader on Thursday evening, leaving a thick pile of bouquets around the perimeter of his former residence.

A roadside flower seller said she had “lost count” of the number of chrysanthe­mums – Chinese funeral flowers – she had sold on Thursday. Reporters with Agence France-Presse witnessed people queueing to lay them against the grey stone wall of the traditiona­l house, with some bowing and saying brief prayers.

“He was a great, patriotic and positive leader,” Li Yaling, a woman in her late 60s, told AFP in Yangzhou. “We admired him greatly, and feel loss and nostalgia now he’s gone.”

Security personnel at the site politely but firmly moved groups of mourners quickly down the narrow alley past the historic building in an apparent attempt to avoid people gathering. There is a tradition in China of using public mourning gatherings for past leaders to express discontent with the current regime.

Lockdowns have lifted in major cities this week, even where relatively high case numbers are still being reported. Testing and quarantine requiremen­ts have also been relaxed in some areas, amid some expectatio­n of a shift in national virus policies. Some communitie­s in Beijing and elsewhere have already allowed close contacts of people carrying the virus to quarantine at home, and several testing booths in the area have stopped operating. In Chengdu, in Sichuan province, passengers no longer needed negative test results to take the bus or subway. In Jincheng, which is halfway from Beijing to Shanghai, people can now enter karaoke venues, but still cannot dine inside restaurant­s.

However, the haphazard relaxation of restrictio­ns appears to have fuelled some confusion and concern, with residents suddenly feeling more exposed to a virus that, until this week, authoritie­s were describing as deadly.

In recent days, there has been a distinct shift in messaging from officials and state media, regrading the pandemic. Officials appear to have stopped or at least reduced referencin­g the “dynamic zero Covid” policy by name. The lower severity of Omicron compared with previous virus strains is being publicly discussed and emphasised for the first time.

Commentari­es in the official state news outlet, Xinhua, on Friday urged greater individual responsibi­lity around mask-wearing, hand washing, ventilatio­n, and reduced gatherings. They also emphasised the need to protect vulnerable groups, and for local authoritie­s to be faster at re-opening targeted lockdowns.

“Given that risks can be managed, what should be managed must be managed well, and there should also be relaxation when appropriat­e,” it said according to a translatio­n by the China analyst Bill Bishop.

 ?? Thomas Peter/Reuters ?? China has been rocked by protests this week against its zero-Covid policy Photograph:
Thomas Peter/Reuters China has been rocked by protests this week against its zero-Covid policy Photograph:
 ?? ?? Flower bouquets placed by mourners seen outside Zemin’s former home in the eastern city of Yangzhou. Photograph: AFP/ Getty Images
Flower bouquets placed by mourners seen outside Zemin’s former home in the eastern city of Yangzhou. Photograph: AFP/ Getty Images

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