Is PM’S support of COVID protests in China suspect?
Asian nation’s approach far more grim
This week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wholeheartedly endorsed a wave of disruptive anti-lockdown protests roiling the People’s Republic of China. “Everyone in China should be allowed to express themselves,” he said. “We’ll stand with people who are expressing themselves.”
It’s the job of any Canadian leader to support dissident movements in Communist China, but the sentiment quickly inspired eyerolls among the world’s more anti-trudeau quarters.
To many observers, both foreign and domestic, one of Trudeau’s signature actions as prime minister was the suspension of Canada’s usual safeguards on civil liberties in order to evict an intransigent anti-mandate protest in the nation’s capital.
But is Trudeau a hypocrite for supporting Chinese protesters while crushing those at home? We’ll let you decide.
THE CHINESE GOVERNMENT IS UNELECTED. THAT’S IMPORTANT.
Like it or not, Trudeau was Canada’s elected leader at the time he invoked the Emergencies Act to clear the Freedom Convoy from downtown Ottawa. Not only was the move backed by a clear majority of Canadians who were polled on the issue, but it was even approved by a House of Commons vote. And, of course, the invocation sparked a mandatory government inquiry in which Trudeau himself was called to testify.
The same goes for many of the more extreme lockdown measures that sparked Freedom Convoy in the first place. Time after time, Canadian polls showed that a majority were on board with vaccine mandates, and many of the country’s most lockdown-happy governments were able to handily win re-election. (Quebec and Ontario are good examples.)
Naturally, not one of these checks exist in China. COVID strictures (like everything else) are imposed by authorities who are not elected, are not subject to oversight, and face no political opposition. For Chinese people, illegal protests and civil disobedience are literally their only way of registering political dissent.
THE CHINESE LOCKDOWNS ARE WAY HARDER THAN THEY EVER WERE IN CANADA
Earlier this year, it could be said that Canada had some of the harshest COVID strictures in the Western world. In January, we were only one of the only democracies still locking down schools and gyms, and we maintained uncompromising vaccine passports on aircraft and at our border for months after much of Europe abandoned the measure.
And yet, we were still a freewheeling land of liberty compared to what China’s been doing in recent months. China is pursuing a strategy of “ZERO-COVID,” and is using the full force of history’s most pervasive surveillance apparatus in order to do it.
Chinese citizens are forced to test for COVID several times a week in some cases, and face automatic isolation from civil society if they’ve been so much as exposed to a potential COVID patient. Entire metropolises have been subject to “hard” lockdowns in which more than 10 million people are effectively imprisoned in their apartments, without consideration of their ability to access food or essentials. The current wave of protests, in fact, began after 10 people were killed in an apartment fire in the Xinjiang region; they had been unable to escape as authorities had locked the doors to enforce a quarantine order.
EVEN TRUDEAU’S HARD-HANDED CRACKDOWN ON PROTESTS WAS POSITIVELY KID-GLOVED COMPARED TO CHINA
The Emergencies Act was basically used for three things: It enabled law enforcement to freeze the bank accounts of protesters without judicial oversight and it was used to mark off “no-go” areas in which anyone present was subject to immediate arrest. Finally, it was used to forcibly conscript tow truck drivers into government service.
It’s Canada’s single greatest encroachment on civil liberties since the 1970 October Crisis. And yet, by Chinese standards it would barely raise eyebrows among their usual tool kit of measures to crush dissent.
Protesters are routinely carted off to parts unknown for days on end; and face potential execution if charged.
The latest protests have seen Chinese police marshalled to do forced street checks of smartphones in order to screen for VPN software — a potential sign that the owner is accessing internet content unapproved by the government. Chinese citizens even face criminal penalties for “liking” a social media post that authorities have deemed to be subversive.
SCREW BEIJING
China, by most metrics, is Canada’s No. 1 geopolitical enemy right now. According to a poll in November, more than 84 per cent of Canadians think the People’s Republic of China has a negative influence on the world.
There’s good evidence that Beijing is actively trying to tweak the outcomes of our federal elections. Chinese cities are apparently opening police stations on Canadian soil in order to supervise their expats. Chinese authorities routinely threaten Canadian politicians if they so much as plan a trip to Taiwan.
Chinese President Xi Jinping feels fine publicly dressing down our guy at international summits. And, of course, there’s good evidence that the whole COVID pandemic, which has killed more than 50,000 Canadian, is owed in large part to Chinese coverup efforts.
Turnabout is fair play. China has proved itself extremely willing to prescribe actions for Canada that it absolutely wouldn’t tolerate on its home soil. So what’s Trudeau supposed to do? Not express his government’s support for a once-in-a-generation domestic threat to China’s autocracy?