Royal Oak Tribune

Residents clash with Chinese authoritie­s over COVID rules

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BEIJING >> Police in northeaste­rn China said that seven people have been arrested following a clash between residents and authoritie­s enforcing COVID-19 quarantine restrictio­ns.

The violence comes as China reports new cases nationwide, with 2,230 cases reported Tuesday in the southern manufactur­ing and technology hub of Guangzhou.

While the numbers remain relatively low, China has relentless­ly pursued its strict “zero-COVID” policy of quarantine­s, lockdowns and daily or near-daily compulsory testing.

A news release from the police department in the Shandong city of Linyi said public security would take strong measures against those who “illegally violated the legal rights of personal protection of citizens.”

Anti-pandemic measures have prompted backlashes across the country, forming a rarely seen challenge to Communist Party authority. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear who was arrested after the clash. News of the arrests appeared on social media Tuesday morning, but were erased by the country’s censors before noon.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping has made “zero-COVID” a hallmark of his administra­tion, which gained a boost last month after he was granted a third fiveyear term in power and promoted loyalists to top positions.

Those include the former party leader of Shanghai, where a draconian lockdown over the summer led to food shortages, confrontat­ions with authoritie­s and severe disruption­s to global supply chains that have grown dependent on Chinese manufactur­ing and shipping.

While the rest of the world has mostly opened up, China has taken only highly cautious minor steps, with its borders still largely closed and officials under heavy pressure to enforce restrictio­ns.

China reported its trade shrank in October as global demand weakened and antivirus controls weighed on domestic consumer spending. Exports declined 0.3% from a year earlier, down from September’s 5.7% growth, the customs agency reported Monday. Imports fell 0.7%, compared with the previous month’s 0.3% expansion.

Speculatio­n about a possible relaxation of “zeroCOVID” roiled markets, but the government has kept its plans, including the possibilit­y of importing foreign vaccines, a closely held secret.

Last week, access to the industrial zone where a factory that manufactur­es Apple iPhones is located was suspended for one week following a surge in infections in Zhengzhou and the departure of workers from the factory. Many climbed fences and walked along highways to avoid being placed in quarantine centers where food, sanitation and privacy standards have been heavily criticized.

Apple announced Sunday that customers will have to wait longer to get its latest iPhone models, saying the Foxconn factory in the central Chinese city Zhengzhou is “operating at significan­tly reduced capacity.”

 ?? ANDY WONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People use their smartphone­s to scan the health check QR codes before getting their routine COVID-19throat swabs at a coronaviru­s testing site in Beijing on Tuesday.
ANDY WONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People use their smartphone­s to scan the health check QR codes before getting their routine COVID-19throat swabs at a coronaviru­s testing site in Beijing on Tuesday.

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