China anti-govt protests spread to more cities over ‘Zero Covid’
BEIJING: The Chinese government on Monday tightened security in several cities including Beijing and Shanghai where several hundred people took part in protests over the weekend against harsh Covid-19 curbs and heavy-handed treatment of citizens caught in lockdowns.
Some protesters called for President Xi Jinping to resign, saying “we don’t want an emperor”, and demanded democracy and accountability.
The Chinese foreign ministry also dismissed questions on the exceptionally rare demonstrations, saying they do not reflect “what actually happened”, glossing over the widespread resentment among citizens, which prompted them to gather on the streets and voice their anger.
There was no official word on how many people were detained after police used pepper spray, according to the Associated Press, against protesters in Shanghai and struggled to suppress demonstrations in other cities including Beijing.
The protests were triggered by a tragic fire in a Covid-restricted high-rise in the northwestern city of Urumqi, which killed at least 10 people, and another incident of a resident being assaulted in the same city.
Between 1.3 and 2.1 million lives could be at risk in China if it relaxes its lockdowns, a new analysis said on Monday, underscoring how Beijing may have painted itself into a corner with its zero-covid policy and underwhelming vaccine rollout.
Science analytics company Airfinity used trends from Hong Kong’s Omicron (BA.1) wave as a proxy for how an outbreak could play out in China, where protests have erupted across the country over its stifling Covid-19 containment strategy.
“It is essential for China to ramp up vaccinations to raise immunity in order to lift its zero-covid policy, especially given how large its elderly population is,” said Louise Blair, Airfinity’s head of vaccines and epidemiology.
The findings are similar to what researchers from China said in a study published earlier this year in the journal Nature. They predicted 1.6 million deaths could take place over a six-month period if the country were to lift its policy of hard lockdown.
“Should an Omicron variant epidemic be allowed to spread uncontrolled in mainland China, we project 1.10 deaths per 1,000 inhabitants over a 6-month period. By comparison, 187,372 deaths have been reported in the US (that is, 0.57 deaths per 1,000 inhabitants) over the period from December 15, 2021 to April 15, 2022, roughly corresponding to the Omicron wave,” the study said.
The Airfinity assessment attributed the threat to the lack of immunity by either adequate vaccination or prior infection and found that China would need hybrid immunity to allow for the country to brace future waves with minimal impact.
“This has proven effective in other countries and regions; for example, while Hong Kong efforts to vaccinate the vulnerable prior to opening likely only dampened the impact of its first wave, its protection has been enhanced by hybrid immunity from mass infection leading to much less impactful and deadly Covid-19 waves,” Blair added.
The Nature study estimated that “around 77% of the death toll in China would occur in unvaccinated individuals, with most deaths occurring among unvaccinated individuals aged 60 years or more”.