Philippine Daily Inquirer

Biden watching China unrest

US official says people should be allowed the right to assemble and peacefully protest policies or laws

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WASHINGTON—US President Joe Biden is monitoring unrest in China as protesters demand an end to COVID-19 lockdowns and greater political freedoms, Washington said, as smaller rallies popped up in the United States. National Security Council spokespers­on John Kirby stressed US support for the rights of demonstrat­ors bewailing harsh pandemic curbs, which the United States earlier described as excessive.

WASHINGTON—US President Joe Biden is monitoring unrest in China by protesters demanding an end to COVID lockdowns and greater political freedoms, the White House said Monday, as smaller rallies popped up in the United States.

The comments came after hundreds of people took to the streets in China’s major cities over the weekend, in a rare outpouring of public frustratio­n that has spread to internatio­nal Chinese-speaking communitie­s.

“He’s monitoring this. We all are,” National Security Council spokespers­on John Kirby told reporters Monday.

Kirby would not describe Biden’s reaction to the demonstrat­ors’ demands, saying: “The president’s not going to speak for protesters around the world. They’re speaking for themselves.”

But he stressed the US support for the demonstrat­ors’ rights. “People should be allowed the right to assemble and to peacefully protest policies or laws or dictates that that they take issue with,” Kirby said.

Earlier Monday, the State Department suggested that the United States viewed Beijing’s COVID lockdown policies as excessive.

Total cases

China’s zero-COVID policy has kept infections low compared to those of other countries like the United States.

According to a tally by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), China’s COVID cases from January 2020 to November 2022 was 9,626,714 with 30,166 deaths.

For the same period, US COVID cases numbered 97,030,505 with 1,067,123 deaths, the WHO tally showed.

Discontent has been brewing for months in China over its harsh coronaviru­s control measures, with relentless testing, lockdowns and travel restrictio­ns pushing many to the brink.

Around the United States, Chinese-speaking communitie­s came together in vigils to mark lives lost to zero-COVID—with the latest gatherings sparked by a deadly fire in Urumqi city.

Around 100 people, many of them students, gathered in Washington Monday to call for greater freedoms and mourn those who died when a blaze tore through a building in northweste­rn Xinjiang’s capital Urumqi last week.

Officials said 10 people were killed, and many blamed COVID lockdowns in the city for hampering rescue efforts.

“(Officials) are borrowing the pretext of COVID, but using excessivel­y strict lockdowns to control China’s population. They disregarde­d human lives,” said a Chinese student surnamed Chen.

“I came here to grieve,” the 21-year-old added.

Referring to protests across China, another student Zhou, 22, said: “My friends and I never imagined things would develop so rapidly.”

‘Leaderless movement’

Attendees held white sheets of paper symbolizin­g censorship and chanted slogans including “Freedom of speech! Freedom of assembly! Tear down the firewall!”

Members of the Uyghur community were also present, expressing anger over the casualties.

“The fire that caused the deaths awakened us,” said Tahir Imin, an activist and academic.

A similar gathering took place on the US west coast as well.

In Los Angeles, over 100 people gathered outside the Chinese Consulate General on Sunday night with candles and fresh flowers, attendees told AFP.

“The atmosphere was mostly filled with anger, sadness and a little frustratio­n, in solidarity with protesters in mainland China,” said Michael Luo, a 25-year-old graduate student.

He described the event as peaceful, and a “leaderless movement.”

In Washington, around 25 members of the Uyghur community gathered Monday outside the State Department as well, to call on the United States and other democracie­s to apply further pressure on Beijing.

“We want them to issue a formal statement condemning the loss of lives, Uyghur lives, and to call for full transparen­cy on the real number of deaths that occurred,” said Salih Hudayar, a Uyghur American who campaigns for Xinjiang independen­ce.

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 ?? —AFP ?? SYMPATHY A man holds a candle as people gather at New York’s Columbia University in support of protests in China calling for an end to COVID-19 lockdowns.
—AFP SYMPATHY A man holds a candle as people gather at New York’s Columbia University in support of protests in China calling for an end to COVID-19 lockdowns.
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