The Guardian Australia

The Guardian view on China’s protests: zero Covid, maximum frustratio­n

- Editorial

The extraordin­ary outbreak of unrest that spread through China at the weekend is of a kind that has not been seen for decades. Protests are not uncommon, given the limited means for people to express their views, but are usually local incidents based on specific grievances. While there have been larger individual protests in the recent past, these have rapidly sprung up across major cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Wuhan and Chengdu, and now Hong Kong. They have taken place in prestigiou­s universiti­es too.

They challenge a zero-Covid policy that comes from the very top. And though many protesters are cautious or silent – holding up blank sheets of paper to express their dissent – some have called for human rights, press freedom and even the departure of Xi Jinping and the Communist party, only weeks after Mr Xi embarked upon a norm-breaking third term and thus indefinite leadership. Such calls were an incredible act of defiance given the country’s increasing­ly tight political control.

At first, China’s coronaviru­s strategy allowed most people to get on with life as usual, while other countries struggled with repeated lockdowns or high death tolls, or both. But it has long been clear that eliminatio­n is not feasible, and a policy now in its third year is causing increasing frustratio­n and economic damage, leading to a growing number of local Covid-related protests.

Chinese audiences watching the World Cup noted unmasked crowds celebratin­g and realised that plenty of places – not just the reckless US – were living happily without such stringent controls. Then came reports that 10 people, including children, had been killed in a blaze while under lockdown in Urumqi, Xinjiang. Video showed a fire engine vainly trying to spray the building from a distance. Despite the tight security controls in Xinjiang, residents gathered to protest. Surprising­ly, the unrest spread to Shanghai, and then onwards, with the case becoming emblematic of other deaths related to the policy and inhumane enforcemen­t.

Officials initially took a relatively hands-off approach, with a few detentions rather than a sweeping crackdown. Extensive surveillan­ce makes later retributio­n straightfo­rward. But if increased censorship and police presence don’t see these protests off, worse may follow. The response in Xinjiang is likely to be harder than in prosperous Shanghai. Those calling for looser controls can expect more lenience than those shouting “Oppose dictatorsh­ip”. At the local level, especially, there may be piecemeal concession­s. The party does not rely solely on repression and propaganda – as potent as they are – but also on recognisin­g people’s needs and interests, and meeting some of them, even if belatedly and partially. Yet it has increasing­ly relied on toughness in recent years.

Many citizens still back zero-Covid measures, regarding them as necessary. The lacklustre vaccinatio­n campaign, and refusal to use more effective foreign vaccines, has left elderly people vulnerable. Infections are already rising steeply; further relaxation could see a wave of deaths. The best hope would probably be to declare zero Covid a life-saving triumph, which will allow the country to move to an intensive vaccinatio­n programme using imported doses and mitigation measures including masking, testing and isolation, while investing heavily in healthcare. But while authoritie­s recently seemed to be trying to ease some aspects of the zero-Covid policy, shortening quarantine and telling local officials not to “over-enforce” policies, that could, if anything, be put in reverse by these protests. Beijing will not want to appear to bow to pressure.

Whatever the solution, China’s people should be free to discuss the decisions being made and the leaders who impose them, and to protest against them. The party does not recognise those rights, of course. But these events should remind it that relying on repression has its limits.

 ?? Photograph: Kanis Leung /AP ?? Protesters hold up blank sheets of paper to express their dissent at the Chinese University of Hong Kong on Monday.
Photograph: Kanis Leung /AP Protesters hold up blank sheets of paper to express their dissent at the Chinese University of Hong Kong on Monday.

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