Beijing's Zero-COVID Protests
"[It is necessary] to strengthen the management and service guarantee [of quarantine centres and field hospitals where people who test positive for COVID-19 or ha.cve been in close contact with an infected person are taken by police].""[Authorities must] further accelerate [their construction and] coordinate the allocation of space, facilities, materials, personnel and other resources."Beijing city government spokesperson Xu Hejian
People sing slogans while gathering on a street in Shanghai. (Photo by Hector RETAMAL / AFP) |
"On the second night of protests, 2,000 miles northwest of the Foxconn factory, a fire broke out in a residential compound in Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang region. Ten died. Neighbours videoed the inferno on their phones, triggering yet another wave of anger online. Some pointed out that the youngest victim was only three and had lived almost his entire life under zero Covid. Others speculated that doors had been sealed in the block as part of the lockdown, meaning victims couldn’t escape.""Late on Friday night, the Urumqi authorities made things worse with a press conference which seemed to blame the victims for their ‘lack of survival know-how’. Fury, and protests, ensued.""Whether the fire was made worse by lockdown or not, the tragedy and the callous official response confirmed what many already suspected: their lives are cheap in the name of pandemic control."Cindy Yu, Assistant Editor, The Spectator, U.K.
In
some parts of China's capital, residents began sweeping items off
supermarket shelves, while the urgency of their demands were
overwhelming delivery apps on Friday. The city government had ordered an
urgent need to speed up construction of COVID-19 quarantine centres and
field hospitals. China's Zero-COVID policy is not to be relaxed, its
government has made it quite clear that it will not tolerate the spread
of the pathogen, and a recent upsurge in cases has only increased its
resolve.
Chinese
citizens, beyond weary with the constant lockdowns and stern conditions
that have compromised their quality of life for too long, are desperate
to see an end to these unlivable conditions and the constant threat of
isolation, impairing their ability to work, to attend school, to buy
food, to acquire needed medications, in short, the ruination of normal
life, being forced to live under abysmally unnatural circumstances.
Deprived of normalcy.
The
uncertainty and fear surrounding unconfirmed reports of lockdowns in
some select districts in the capital fuelled a demand for food and other
basic living supplies fuelling unusually large turnouts of shoppers in
the northern suburbs of the city, resulting in market shelves emptying
of products in quick order, in a city of 21 million people.
Across
the country daily cases of COVID are reaching record numbers with
Friday alone notching up 32,695 new cases, almost half of which were in
Beijing, mostly asymptomatic. Field hospitals along with improvised
quarantine centres have been thrown together in gymnasiums, exhibition
centres, where large open indoor spaces have become synonymous with poor
sanitation, scarce food supplies, overcrowding and lighting that
remains bright for 24 hours a day.
Instructions
not to leave compounds have gone out to most residents, watching
themselves being fenced in, where workers in white hazmat suits stop
unauthorized people to ensure residents have recent negative test
results on cellphone health apps before they can gain entry. University
campuses are closed, students shifted to online classes. Grocery
delivery service is at full capacity. Some delivery personnel are
unable to appear for work at grocery deliveries, with their own
compounds locked down.
The
World Health Organization has called for a change in operations from
the zero-COVID strategy, a recommendation that the Chinese Communist
Party rejects. Cases and death counts in China remain low in comparison
to other parts of the world, yet Beijing insists on isolating every case
to entirely eliminate the virus. Where other governments eased
antivirus controls, relying on vaccinations and immunity from past
infections to aid in death prevention and serious illness, China's
President Xi Jinping is immovable in his conviction that China can tame
Nature.
Confronting authorities in Shanghai, some protesters called for Chinese leader Xi |
Labels: Chinese Communist Party, President Xi Jinping, Protests, Zero COVID
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