The Pak Banker

Shanghai hit by COVID protests as anger spreads

- SHANGHAI

Protests against China’s heavy COVID-19 curbs spread to more cities, including the financial hub Shanghai on Sunday, nearly three years into the pandemic, with a fresh wave of anger sparked by a deadly fire in the country’s far west.

The fire on Thursday that killed 10 people in a high-rise building in Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang region, has sparked widespread public anger. Many internet users surmised that residents could not escape in time because the building was partially locked down, which city officials denied.

The fire has fueled a wave of civil disobedien­ce unpreceden­ted in mainland China since Xi Jinping assumed power a decade ago.

In Shanghai, China’s most populous city, residents gathered on Saturday night at Wulumuqi Road - which is named after Urumqi - for a candleligh­t vigil that turned into a protest in the early hours of Sunday. As a large group of police looked on, the crowd held up blank sheets of paper - a protest symbol against censorship.

Later on, they shouted, “lift lockdown for Urumqi, lift lockdown for Xinjiang, lift lockdown for all of China!” according to a video circulated on social media. At another point a large group began shouting, “Down with the Chinese Communist Party, down with Xi Jinping,” according to witnesses and videos, in a rare public protest against the country’s leadership.

The police tried at times to break up the crowd. Beijing is adhering to a zero-COVID-19 policy even while much of the world tries to coexist with the coronaviru­s. While low by global standards, China’s cases have hit record highs for days, with nearly 40,000 new infections reported on Sunday for the previous day.

China defends Xi’s signature zero-COVID19 policy as life-saving and necessary to prevent overwhelmi­ng the healthcare system. Officials have vowed to continue with it despite the growing public pushback and its mounting toll on the world’s second-biggest economy.

Widespread public protest is extremely rare in China, where room for dissent has been allbut eliminated under Xi, forcing citizens mostly to vent on social media, where they play catand-mouse with censors. Frustratio­n is boiling just over a month after Xi secured a third term at the helm of China’s Communist Party.

“This will put serious pressure on the party to respond. There is a good chance that one response will be repression, and they will arrest and prosecute some protesters,” said Dan Mattingly, assistant professor of political science at Yale University.

Still, he said, the unrest is far from approachin­g that seen in 1989, when protests across the country culminated in the bloody crackdown in Tiananmen Square.

“Popular sentiment matters,” he said. “But as long as there is no split in the elite and as long the PLA (People’s Liberation Army) and security services remain on his side he does not face any meaningful risk to his hold on power.”

The next few weeks could be China’s worst since the early weeks of the pandemic for the economy and the healthcare system, Mark Williams of Capital Economics said in note last week, as containing the outbreak will require additional lockdowns.

In the northweste­rn city of Lanzhou, residents on Saturday upturned COVID-19 staff tents and smashed testing booths, posts widely shared on social media showed. Protesters said they were put under lockdown even though no one had tested positive.

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