The Obdurate Autocratic Failings of the Chinese Communist Party on Zero-COVID
"The party and the people are trying to seek a new equilibrium.""There will be some intsability in the process.""Without the clear signal of party leader divisions -- I would expect this kind of protest might not last very log.""[It is] unimaginable [that Xi would back down, and the party is experienced in handling protests]."Hung Ho-fung, Johns Hopkins University"[The West's vaccines offer] a major solution [to China's COVID problems.""[According to health experts zero-COVID is unlikely to be achieved until vaccine uptake among China's elderly sees an improvement].""[Efforts are underway to increase coverage but] it's unlikely things will get better for the next half of the new year."Xi Chen, associate professor, Yale University
A protester is arrested by police in Shanghai on Sunday night. HECTOR RETAMAL/AFP/AFP via Getty Image |
Local
authorities in China, making no allusion to credit the mass protests
springing up all over China against the crude lockup methods being
employed to stem the rising tide of COVID-19 outbreaks, have begun to
ease imposed restrictions reflecting the state's zero-COVID mandate. In
Beijing, the city government announced it plans to phase out gating to
block access to apartment compounds where infections are diagnosed.
Manufacturing
and trade centre Guangzhou, the current hot-spot in the latest wave of
infections, announced that selected residents no longer will be required
to undergo mass testing. The stringent measures originally in place to
minimize deaths at the same time that other countries suffered
magnitudes of infections and deaths no longer has the silent consent of
the Chinese population.
According
to the Chinese Communist Party ruling China, anti-coronavirus measures
must continue "targeted and precise", while at the same time the least
possible disruption should be caused to people's lives; local officials
threatened with their jobs or similar punishments should outbreaks
occur, codify their own strategies to match the central government's
zero-COVID command-and-control demands.
Their
response has been the imposition of quarantines and allied restrictions
exceeding what the central government recommends. Hardships imposed on
the population appear to be of no concern to the Xi administration,
beyond the anodyne recommendations that lockdowns not cause community
unrest. Millions of people in Shanghai were placed under strict lockdown
in the spring, resulting in food scarcity and access to medical care
being restricted.
Despite
the ensuing turmoil, Xi loyalist, the city's party secretary, saw
appointment to the No.2 position of the Communist Party. On the past
weekend, protests were so sweeping in numbers and inclusivity many from
among the educated urban middle class of the ethnic Han majority were in
full vocal attendance. This is the group the ruling party relies upon
to recognize a post-Tiananmen agreement that a better quality of life
would accompany autocratic rule.
Following
a fire on Thursday that killed at least ten people living in an
apartment building in the city of Urumqi, where residents have been
locked into their homes for four months, furious protests erupted
particularly when the city council suggested those that died were
insufficiently motivated to save themselves, prompting an avalanche of
angry online questions whether firefighters or people attempting to
escape the fire were blocked by locked doors or similar pandemic
restrictions.
Foreign
governments have suggested to Beijing that it use vaccines developed in
the West to improve protection for its people, and once more effective
vaccines are widely used the government could reconsider and ratchet
back the draconian restrictions of the current zero-COVID policy.
Beijing has consistently refused to import the mRNA-based more highly
successful vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, insisting
its own home-grown vaccines are effective.
They
are not, however. Moreover, the most vulnerable in the population, the
elderly, have not received vaccinations in numbers that should satisfy
any responsible government. Analysis indicates that millions of
unprotected people could perish under current circumstances should
zero-COVID be abandoned. The acceptance of Western vaccinations could
turn that scenario around.
"Europe and Germany have had very good experience with administering mRNA vaccinations", stated Steffen Hebestreit, adding that Olaf Scholz had "made this clear"
to Chinese officials during a visit by the German chancellor to China.
China is steadfast in its reliance on its own vaccines based on older
technology, failing to offer the same protection as the West's vaccines
against severe disease and death.
"'Zero COVID' [was] supposed to demonstrate the superiority of the 'Chinese model', but ended up demonstrating the risk that when authoritarian regimes make mistakes, those mistakes can be colossal.""But I think the regime has backed itself into a corner and has no way to yield. It has lots of force, and if necessary, it will use it."Andrew Nathan, Chinese politics specialist, Columbia University
Protesters are fed up with lockdowns, but their government is not budging |
Labels: Communist Party of China, Lockdowns, Mass Protests, President Xi Jinping, Vaccines, Zero-COVID
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