From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A series of
ongoing protests against COVID-19 lockdowns began in mainland China in
November 2022. Colloquially referred to
as the White Paper Protests (Chinese: 白纸抗议;
pinyin: Bái zhǐ kàngyì) or the A4 Revolution (Chinese: 白纸革命;
pinyin: Bái zhǐ gémìng), the demonstrations started in response to measures
taken by the Chinese government to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in the
country, including implementing a zero-COVID policy. Discontent towards the
policy has grown since the beginning of the pandemic, which confined many
people to their homes without work and left some unable to purchase or receive
daily necessities.
The demonstrations had
been preceded by the Beijing Sitong Bridge protest on 13 October, wherein
pro-democracy banners were displayed by an unnamed individual and later seized
by local authorities. The incident was subsequently censored by state media and
led to a widespread crackdown on the Chinese internet. Further small-scale protests inspired by the
Sitong Bridge incident ensued in early November, before widespread civil unrest
erupted following a building fire in Ürümqi that killed ten people, three
months into a lockdown in Xinjiang. Protesters
across the nation have since demanded the end of the government's zero-COVID
policy and lockdowns.
The subjects in protest
have evolved throughout the course of the unrest, ranging from discontent with
the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its general secretary Xi
Jinping, to inhumane working conditions brought on by the lockdowns, and the human
rights abuses against ethnic Uyghurs in Xinjiang. Many of these peaceful demonstrations have
been suppressed by police, with reported instances of protestors being tackled,
beaten with metal rods and showered with pepper spray before detainment.
Background
COVID-19 lockdowns in
China
Further
information: COVID-19 lockdown in China and Chinese government response to
COVID-19
Since the beginning of
the COVID-19 pandemic in mainland China, the Chinese government has made
extensive use of lockdowns to manage COVID outbreaks, in an effort to implement
a zero-COVID policy. These lockdowns began with the lockdown of Wuhan in
January 2020, and soon spread to other cities and municipalities, including
Shanghai and Xinjiang. As these lockdowns became more widespread, they became
lengthier and increasingly disruptive, precipitating increasing concern and
dissent. In April 2022, the Chinese government imposed a lockdown in Shanghai,
generating outrage on social media sites, such as Sina Weibo and WeChat;
citizens were displeased with the economic effects of the lockdown, such as
food shortages and the inability to work. This discontentment was exacerbated
by reports of poor conditions in makeshift hospitals and harsh enforcement of
quarantines. These complaints were
difficult to suppress, despite the strict censorship of social media in China.
The spread of more
infectious subvariants of the Omicron variant intensified these grievances. As
these subvariants spread, public trust was eroded in the Chinese government's
zero-COVID policy, indicating that lockdown strategies had become ineffective
and unsustainable for the Chinese economy.
Concessions and vacillation generated a further lack of confidence and
support for the policy; on 11 November, the Chinese government announced new
and detailed guidelines on COVID measures in an attempt to ease the zero-COVID
policy. Enforcement by local governments
varied widely: Shijiazhuang temporarily
lifted most restrictions following the announcement, while other cities
continued with strict restrictions, fearing consequences of easing lockdowns. Following the rollout of the new guidelines,
an outbreak of COVID-19 occurred in multiple regions of China.
Democracy movements of
China
See also:Democracy
movements of China and Protest and dissent in China
Various political
movements for democracy have sprung up in opposition to the (CCP)'s one-party
rule. The growing discontent with the Chinese
government's response to COVID-19 has precipitated discussions of freedom and democracy
in China and some calls for the resignation of Xi Jinping, who was endorsed for
an unprecedented third term as CCP general secretary (top position in China)
weeks before the beginning of the widespread protests.
Sitong Bridge protest
Main article: Beijing
Sitong Bridge protest
On 13 October 2022, on
the eve of the 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party, a man
hung two anti-lockdown and pro-democracy banners on the parapet of the Sitong
Bridge [zh] in Beijing. The banners were swiftly removed by the local police,
and mentions of it were censored from the Chinese internet. Despite this, the
news became widespread among the Chinese public. It later inspired the principal goals of the
upcoming protests. By 26 November, the banners' slogans had been re-echoed by
nationwide protesters.
Early protests
Lanzhou
On 2 November, the
death of a 3-year-old boy to a gas leak in Lanzhou, reportedly after delay in
receiving treatment due to movement restriction has triggered a wave of public
anger. Videos on social media show residents taking to the streets demanding
answer from authorities and buses containing SWAT teams arriving at the scene. Local authorities issued apologised the next
day.
Guangzhou
As lockdowns returned
to Guangzhou starting on 5 November, residents of Haizhu District marched in
the streets on 15 November night, breaking through metal barriers and demanding
an end to the lockdown. The Haizhu
district is home to many migrant workers (Mingong) from outside the province,
who were unable to find work and unable to have sustainable incomes during
lockdowns. In videos spread online, residents also criticized hour-long queues
for COVID testing, an inability to purchase fresh and affordable produce, and a
lack of local government support.
Zhengzhou Foxconn
clashes
Since late October, the
Foxconn (a Taiwanese company) mega-factory in Zhengzhou, Central China, which
produced the iPhone for Apple, has prevented workers from leaving the factory
as part of a national policy that demands zero-COVID, while also trying to keep
factories open and the economy running. Nevertheless,
workers have managed to scale through barriers and flee home, threatening the
continued operation of the plant. In
early November, videos spread of workers leaving the city by foot to return
home in defiance of lockdown measures. In
response, in mid-November, local governments around the country urged veterans
and retired civil servants to sign up as replacement labor, promising bonuses. State media claims that more than 100,000
people signed up by 18 November.
On the night of 22–23
November, workers at a Foxconn factory clashed with security forces and police
over poor pay and haphazard COVID restrictions.
Workers articulated their demands in videos spread across Chinese social
media, claiming that Foxconn had failed to provide promised bonuses and salary
packages. According to one worker, new recruits were told by Foxconn that they
would receive the bonuses in March and May 2023, long after the Chinese Lunar
New Year when money was needed the most. Protesters also accused Foxconn of
neglecting to separate workers who had tested positive from others, all while
preventing them from leaving the factory campus because of quarantine measures.
Law enforcement was filmed beating workers with batons and metal rods, while
workers threw objects back and overturned police vehicles. In response, Foxconn offered 10,000 yuan (approximately
USD1,400) and a free ride home to workers who agreed to quit their jobs and
leave the factory.
Chongqing
In Chongqing, a man was
filmed giving a speech in his residential compound on 24 November, loudly
proclaiming in Chinese, "Give me liberty, or give me death!" to the
cheers and applause of the crowd. When law enforcement attempted to arrest him,
the crowd fought off the police and pulled him away, although he was ultimately
still detained. The man was dubbed the
"Chongqing superman-brother" (重庆超人哥) online. Quotes by him from the video were widely
circulated despite censorship, such as, "there is only one disease in the
world and that is being both poor and not having freedom [...] we have now got
both", referring to both the lockdown and high food prices.
Escalation: Ürümqi fire
and reaction
Further information:2022
Ürümqi fire
On 24 November, a fire
in a building in Ürümqi killed 10 people and wounded 9 in a residential area
under lockdown. The Xinjiang region had
already been in strict lockdown for three months at that point. During this
time, videos and images circulated on Chinese social media showed people unable
to purchase basic necessities such as food and medicine. People accused the lockdown measures around
the building on fire for preventing firefighters from being able to reach the
building in time, while others expressed anger at the government's response,
which seemed to victim blame those who managed to escape the fire. All 10 of the dead were Uyghur people, with 5
living in the same household.
On 25 November, a
protest started in the Han-dominant Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps 104th
Regiment [zh] as residents took to the streets in direct response to a public
beating committed by disease control personnel.
A wave of protests soon started across the city, demanding an end to the
harsh lockdown measures, with a crowd outside the city government building. The
secretary-general was forced to make a public speech, promising an end to lockdown
in "low-risk" areas by the next day.
26 November
By 26 November,
protests and memorials in solidarity with the victims of the Ürümqi fire had
spread to large Chinese cities such as Nanjing, Xi'an, and Shanghai.
Nanjing
On 26 November, in
Nanjing, satirical posters against the zero-COVID policy were removed, and in
protest, a student stood on the steps of the Communication University of China,
Nanjing, holding a blank sheet of paper, until it was snatched from her.
Subsequently, hundreds of students gathered on the steps with blank sheets of
paper to hold a candlelight vigil for victims of the fire, using phone
flashlights as stand-ins for candles and held up blank pieces of paper in
reference to the censorship surrounding the event. A student participating in the rally, who
stated he was from Xinjiang, spoke: "Before I felt I was a coward, but now
at this moment I feel I can stand up. I speak for my home region, speak for
those friends who lost relatives and kin in the fire disaster, and for the
deceased". An unidentified man
arrived to rebuke the protesting crowd, saying that "one day you'll pay
for everything you did today", with students replying that "the state
will also have to pay the price for what it has done".
Lanzhou
On 26 November, videos
filmed protesters in Lanzhou destroying tents and booths for COVID-19 testing. Protesters alleged that they were put under
lockdown despite there being zero positive cases in the area. Earlier in November, a case in Lanzhou had
circulated on social media where a 3-year-old boy died before he could be taken
to the hospital in time due to lockdown measures, sparking backlash and anger
online.
Shanghai
The largest protest on
26 November appeared in Shanghai, as young people gathered on Ürümqi Road (乌鲁木齐中路,
officially "Wulumuqi Rd (M)"), in reference to the city where the
fire took place. They lit candles and
laid flowers in mourning for the victims of the fire. They also held pieces of blank paper over
their faces or heads; white is the traditional colour of mourning in China. Videos showed chants openly criticizing CCP
general secretary Xi Jinping's administration, with hundreds chanting
"Step down, Xi Jinping! Step down, Communist Party!" Videos circulating on social media also show
the crowd facing police chanting slogans such as "serve the people",
"we want freedom" and "we don't want the Health Code". Some people sang the national anthem, "March
of the Volunteers", during the protest.
In the early morning hours, police suddenly surrounded the crowd and
arrested several people. Police also
used pepper spray to disperse the protesters and made arrests, and beat some
protestors.
Chengdu
In Chengdu, crowds
gathered in the streets and chanted "We don't want lifelong rulers. We
don't want emperors."
Xi'an
A mobile-lit vigil was
also held at the Xi'an Academy of Fine Arts [zh], which attracted hundreds of
demonstrators, according to posts circulated on social media.
Korla
A video emerged of
hundreds gathered in the prefecture's government office in Korla, calling
"Lift the lockdown!". Like the protestors in Ürümqi, many of those
protesting in Korla seemed to be of Han ethnicity. An official came out and
promised that lockdowns would be eased; he was welcomed by the crowd.
27 November
Shanghai
In Shanghai, the Associated
Press saw some bystanders charged and tackled by police near an intersection
where there had previously been protests, although the bystanders were not
visibly expressing dissent. A protestor
said police had tried to arrest him, but the crowd around him had pulled him
free so he could escape.
On 27 November, BBC
News journalist Edward Lawrence was assaulted by Shanghai police, and detained
for several hours. Footage circulated on
social media showed Lawrence being dragged to the ground in handcuffs. The responding authorities stated that they
arrested him "for his own good" so that he would not catch COVID-19
from the crowd. The BBC News press team
rebuked those claims as not a credible explanation.
Beijing
At least 1,000 people
gathered along Beijing's third ring road on 27 November to protest COVID
restrictions. The Beijing people chanted
"We are all Shanghai people! We are all Xinjiang people!". Potentially due to proximity to political
power in the nation's capital city, demonstrators in Beijing debated the use of
explicitly political slogans, such as calling for Xi to step down, versus more
narrowly opposing severe COVID controls, as well as whether to call it a
protest or a simply a vigil. Participants discussed demands that the movement
could agree upon, such as an apology for the Ürümqi fire, while others worried
about police infiltration of marches, since some demonstrators had already
received calls from local police.
On 27 November,
students held a memorial at Tsinghua University in Beijing, contributing to student
demonstrations taking place at over 50 university campuses throughout China. The protest began at 11:30 when some students
held up signs outside the canteen and some hundreds joined them. They chanted "freedom will prevail"
and sang "The Internationale".
A female student from Tsinghua University said over a loudspeaker:
"If because we are afraid of being arrested, we don't speak, I believe our
people would be disappointed in us. As a Tsinghua student, I would regret this
my whole life!"
At Peking University,
graffiti and banners echoed those of the Sitong bridge protest, but
demonstrators did not gather until midnight local time. By 02:00, there were
between one and two hundred. They sang "The Internationale" and
chanted hesitantly. "No to COVID tests, yes to freedom!" was one of
the slogans.
Later that evening,
some Beijing protesters gathered on both banks of the Liangma River, also
singing "The Internationale" and "March of the Volunteers".
One remarked "do not forget those who died in the Guizhou bus crash... do
not forget freedom", referring to a September incident in which a bus
taking locals to a COVID-19 quarantine center crashed, killing 27 people. In a confrontation between protesters and
their opponents in Beijing, protesters were told not to be manipulated by
foreign influences, with one protester replying "by foreign influence do
you mean Marx and Engels?" and "We can't even go on foreign websites!" Others in Beijing chanted slogans echoing the
banners of the October Beijing Sitong Bridge protest, such as "Remove the
traitor-dictator Xi Jinping!"
At around 01:00 local
time on 28 November, an official came to talk to the riverside protesters. At
around 02:00, police marched in, and the protesters were dispersed. Police
presence continued through 28 November.
Wuhan
Hundreds of people
protested in Wuhan on 27 November, with many destroying metal barricades that
surrounded locked-down communities, overturning COVID testing tents and
demanding an end to lockdowns, while some demanded Xi to resign.
Hong Kong
Small-scale
demonstrations took place in Hong Kong in solidarity with the protests in
mainland China. On 27 November, at the University of Hong Kong, two students
from the mainland distributed leaflets relating to the Ürümqi fire, prompting
campus security to call in the police for assistance, but ultimately no arrests
were made. Also on the university's campus the same day, a group of students
held up blank pieces of paper.
28 November
At the start of the
school week, university students in Beijing and Guangzhou were sent home, with
classes and final exams being moved online. Universities said they were
protecting students from COVID-19, yet on the same day, China had also reported
its first day-over-day decline in cases since 19 November.
Shanghai
After two days of
protests in Shanghai, police erected barricades in Ürümqi Road on 28 November. Later that evening, police were out checking
the phones of pedestrians in Shanghai, in which they were specifically
instructed to look for VPNs, Telegram, and Twitter. Protestors had planned to gather in the People's
Square, but a large police presence prevented it. An attempt to change location
was prevented when police also got there first.
Hong Kong
Over two dozen people
took part in a demonstration in central Hong Kong, also holding up blank
placards.
Hangzhou
On the evening of 28
November in Hangzhou, hundreds of citizens held a demonstration at the
intersection of Hubin Yintai in77, demanding the authorities to release the
detained protesters. Around the same time, a driver played the song "Do
You Hear the People Sing?" in the background while waiting for the traffic
lights at the intersection near the in 77 shopping district and was cheered on
by passersby.
Beijing
As universities began
to shutter across Beijing, nine Tsinghua University dorms were closed, with
positive COVID-19 cases as the reason given. Meanwhile, as the Beijing Forestry
University closed, the administration noted that no students or faculty had
tested positive. Heavy police presence
in the capital prevented demonstrators from gathering.
29 November
As on the previous day,
there were crowds of police at the sites of past protests. In Shanghai, the
sidewalks of Ürümqi Road were barricaded along the full length with
two-meter-tall solid blue barricades. The People's Square in central Shanghai,
where a protest had been planned for the night, was also heavily patrolled,
with police stopping people, checking mobile phones, and asking if they had
installed virtual private networks; all but one exit of the subway station
there was closed off. Surveillance
techniques previously used in Xinjiang were implemented in several cities. University administrations responded to the
rallies held the previous days by telling students that they could leave early
for winter break, offering free rail and air travel to take them home.
By midday, there had
been at least 43 small-scale protests in 22 cities.
Videos showed
small-scale protests inside locked-down developments, with residents demanding
to be freed.
On social networks
outside of the Chinese government's control, protesters planned how to track
the police, use multiple mobile phones, and form small clusters in order to
continue protesting.
In a press conference
live-streamed to a state media account on Sina Weibo, Chinese health
authorities pledged a rectification of anti-COVID-19 measures. Live audience
comments included “We’ve cooperated with you for three years, now it’s time to
give our freedom back" and "Can you stop filtering our comments?
Listen to the people, the sky won’t fall".
Jinan
Video footage obtained
by Reuters showed protesters struggling against police and barricades in the Lixia
District of Jinan, the capital city of Shandong province. Protestors joined together in chanting
"lift the lockdown" as they attempted to push their way through
barricades erected to enforce local lockdowns.
Guangzhou
Fresh protests arose in
the Haizhu District of Guangzhou late in the evening of 29 November. Witnesses
said that roughly 100 police officers converged on the district's Houjiao
village and arrested at least three of the protestors. Police were wearing
hazmat suits and held riot shields to protect themselves from debris as they
attempted to contain the demonstration. Barriers
were torn down, the crowd threw objects, possibly glass bottles, and tear gas
was used. Local authorities later stated that businesses would be allowed to
re-open and the lockdown would be lightened. Other city districts of Guangzhou
also cancelled mass testing and lightened lockdowns.
30 November
Hundreds of government
vans, SUVs, and armoured vehicles were parked along city streets; police and
paramilitary forces continued to randomly check citizens' IDs and mobile
phones, looking for foreign apps, photos of the protests, or other evidence
that people had taken part. Online mentions of the protests continued to be
deleted.
Upon the death of
former CCP general secretary Jiang Zemin on the same day at 12:13 local time,
censors moved to restrict Weibo comments related to his death, as some Weibo
users had begun to compare his presidency to the current administration, in
thinly veiled criticisms of current CCP general secretary Xi Jinping. Some protesters on Telegram groups mentioned
his death as an opportunity to gather in his honour and vent anger against the
government's policies.
4 December
Wuhan
On 4 December, renewed
protests broke out at Wuhan University, with students asking to be allowed
to freely return home due to lockdown hardships which included frequent virus
testing, reduced access to food, and insufficient hot water supply in some
dormitory buildings. Students felt that these problems made remaining at the
university untenable and protestors further demanded openness and transparency
regarding the school's processes going forward. Protest organizers asked students
not to hold up white papers or chant anti-government slogans in order to
increase the odds of success and the university relented, allowing students to
take classes in person or return home to attend classes remotely.
5 December
Nanjing
Students at Nanjing
Tech University protested against a COVID-19 lockdown after just one positive
case was found at the university. The students were displeased with poor
communication from the university and worried about not being able to travel
home for the winter holidays. Videos of the protest were posted on Twitter,
showing students shouting "We want to go home!" and "Leaders,
step down!" as a police car arrived on the scene.
Abroad
A vigil attended by
around 80 to 100 people was held on 27 November at Liberty Square in Taipei,
Taiwan, in solidarity with the protests in China. Speakers included Wang Dan and
Zhou Fengsuo, activists who participated in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.
Protests and vigils
have also taken place in other cities, including Tokyo, London, Brisbane,
Paris, and Amsterdam. A member of
esports organization Alliance was placed under investigation after she staged a
solo protest outside the Chinese embassy in Tanglin, Singapore.
In the United States,
the largest recipient of Chinese overseas students, vigils have taken place at
a variety of universities, including Yale University, Stanford University, Harvard
University, and Carnegie Mellon University. On 29 November, vigils also took place outside
Chinese diplomatic missions in the US, with approximately 400 people attending
a vigil outside the Chinese consulate in New York City and roughly 200 outside
the Chinese consulate in Chicago. One
day earlier, during a 28 November vigil at Columbia University, a 21-year-old
protestor was beaten unconscious and hospitalized, though some witnesses
claimed that the assailant had mistakenly attacked the wrong person and had
intended to attack a female counterprotestor who had just spoken to the crowd.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_COVID-19_protests_in_China
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