China
Hundreds of people took to the streets in Xinjiang province in the north-west of the country to protest once morest the Chinese government’s strict Covid-19 measures. In Chinese online media on Saturday, several videos from the city of Ürümqi showed people breaking through lockdown metal fences and protesting. There were also protests in Beijing.
26.11.2022 18.46
Online since yesterday, 6.46 p.m
In the videos from Ürümqi, some shout: “End the lockdown!” Large parts of the Xinjiang region and the local capital Ürümqi have been cordoned off for more than 100 days. But there were also protests in the capital Beijing, where a number of residential complexes are also in lockdown, as videos show. In several neighborhoods, residents broke through the fences of their settlement.
There, too, the local authorities were asked to lift the strict measures once morest the further spread of the pandemic. Such open protests are unusual in the communist-ruled People’s Republic of more than 1.4 billion inhabitants.
China: criticism of CoV measures
There have been violent protests once morest CoV lockdowns in the western Chinese province of Xinjiang. The protests were triggered by a fire in a high-rise building that killed ten people. The escape routes are said to have been blocked and the rescue measures delayed by the CoV barriers.
House fire as a trigger
The trigger was an apartment fire in Ürümqi on Thursday evening. At least ten people were killed and nine others injured. A number of residents criticized on social networks that the rigid measures had made the fight once morest the fire more difficult. Residents had been made more difficult to escape to the outside by locked apartment doors. In addition, some fled their homes too late or not at all for fear of violating curfews. The fire brigade arrived too late because of lattice fences and cars standing in the way. Ürümqi has more than 3.5 million inhabitants.
In the past few months, there have already been isolated unrest in China once morest the rigid CoV policy. The exit restrictions are an existential threat, especially for migrant workers who do not have large savings. China is currently suffering from the highest CoV numbers since the beginning of the pandemic. On Saturday, the Health Commission in Beijing reported a record number of almost 35,000 new cases. Extensive restrictions on movement apply in cities with over a million inhabitants such as Beijing, the hard-hit southern Chinese city of Guangzhou or Chongqing.
There had already been resentment and protests in the metropolis of Zhengzhou. In the city of Foxconn’s largest iPhone factory, the majority of residents are in lockdown due to only a small number of CoV cases. There have recently been repeated protests and clashes on the factory premises because the employees resisted the extreme conditions – and poor pay – that applied there.
Insisting on zero covid strategy
While the rest of the world has long been living with the virus, China is sticking to its strict zero-Covid strategy. Residential areas are cordoned off in individual cases. Contact persons come to quarantine camps. Infected people are isolated in the hospital. Even following almost three years of the pandemic, China’s international borders are largely closed.