Mass Protests After Xinjiang Apartment Fire Deaths Sees Chinese Authorities Lift Some Lockdowns

Alex Wu
By Alex Wu
November 28, 2022China News
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Mass Protests After Xinjiang Apartment Fire Deaths Sees Chinese Authorities Lift Some Lockdowns
Protesters hold up a white piece of paper against censorship as they march during a protest against China's strict zero COVID-19 measures in Beijing, China, on Nov. 27, 2022. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

Rare mass protests against COVID-19 lockdowns have broken out across China, including in major cities, following the horrific deaths of at least 10 people in Xinjiang’s capital city of Urumqi in north-western China, when first responders were unable to reach an apartment fire that was left to burn for hours due to COVID-19 blockades and locks throughout the residential compound.

Video footage of the incident went viral on Chinese social media before internet censors could remove news of the tragedy, sparking outrage as more districts around China announced their own lockdowns in response to surging numbers of COVID-19 infections.

Protests broke out in many places across Urumqi city on Nov. 25, with angry residents demanding that the city-wide lockdown, which had lasted for three to four months, be lifted.

A resident of Lianxing community in Urumqi told The Epoch Times on Nov. 26 that many residents rushed out of their residences on the night of Nov. 25. “People came out to protest in all communities in Urumqi, all of them came out.”

Angry residents have broke blockades and pushed down fences, shouting slogans of “down with the Communist Party” and “Xi Jinping should resign.”

Facing the protests, city authorities on Nov. 26 announced they were loosening Urumqi’s COVID-19 restrictions.

Citizens were told they can leave home as long as they have been isolated for three days and that shops were allowed to reopen. High-risk areas that have not reported new infections for five consecutive days would also be reclassified as low-risk areas, allowing residents to leave their residential compounds.

A resident who has a restaurant in Midong District told The Epoch Times: “This time, the protest was quite fierce, so it worked,” referring to the authority’s response.

Protests against COVID-19 measures in Xinjiang
Protests against COVID-19 measures in Urumqi city, Xinjiang Uygur, China, in this screen grab obtained from a video released on Nov. 25, 2022. (Video obtained by Reuters)

“Quite a lot of people in other communities also come out,” he said. “We have been sealed in for too long … Everyone is so suffocated [by the lockdowns] that they are about to explode, and restaurants should be allowed to open now after the protest.”

A supermarket owner in Shuimu Shangcheng, Urumqi, confirmed to The Epoch Times that her store was allowed to reopen on Nov. 26.

Meanwhile, following the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) national congress, the regime is releasing new epidemic prevention regulations aimed at preventing excessive use of control measures by local authorities. However, the updated policies still adhere to the restrictive “zero-COVID” approach, leaving local authorities without much room to make any policy changes.

With a rapidly rising number of infections this month, more Chinese cities have announced more lockdowns in new areas, causing growing public anger.

After the protest erupted in Xinjiang, large-scale protests have also been seen in Beijing, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Zhengzhou, and other cities against the CCP’s unsustainable “zero-COVID” control measures.

Beijing Residents Stand Together to Disregard Lockdown Orders

At the beginning of November, the official number of new infections in Beijing exceeded 10,000. Despite forcing 20 new areas into lockdown, Beijing authorities did not dare announce a city-wide lockdown, although most parts of the city were under lockdown.

However, following the Xinjiang protests on Nov. 25, many residents in Beijing, unable to bear the lockdowns anymore, broke through their own blockades and freed themselves into the streets in violation of government lockdown orders.

Ms. Li from Beijing’s Daxing District told The Epoch Times on Nov. 27 that the residential community she lives in had been in lockdown and joined in the protest.

“Everyone in our community pushed their sealed doors open and went outside. In the communities behind us and next to us, residents also pushed down the blockade and went out.”

She also revealed that shops are now open for business despite verbal lockdown orders from the local authorities.

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Students take part in a protest against COVID-19 curbs at Tsinghua University in Beijing, in a still from video released on Nov. 27, 2022. (Video obtained by Reuters)
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Protesters shout slogans during a protest against the Chinese Communist Party’s strict zero COVID measures in Beijing, China, on Nov. 28, 2022. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

The residential communities in Beijing were frequently sealed off due to individual residents testing positive for COVID. The residents have started to take collective actions to support their neighbors who test positive and don’t want to be forcefully taken away to centralized quarantine by authorities.

According to a report by the Chinese regime-controlled media ifeng.com, in Beijing’s large residential area Wangjing, residents in many communities posted public letters on Chinese social media, stating: “If the infected neighbors encounter any form of coercion, such as quarantine and re-examination and other related measures, I am willing to assist them in safeguarding their individual rights in accordance with the law.

“We do not blame or discriminate the innocent infected neighbors. This is to maintain the most basic moral respect for human beings in a civilized society! And we provide them with help as much as possible.”

China observer Zhou Xiaohui wrote in his column for The Epoch Times: “This action of the Beijing residents is self-organized help against the regime’s strict COVID control, and it shows their awakening.”

Guangzhou Residents Fight with Police

A video that has been circulating on social media shows residents in Haizhu district of Guangzhou city fighting with police on Nov. 25. They tore down iron fences and threw away stools and other objects from the authorities’ epidemic prevention tents in their neighborhood.

Mr. Meng (pseudonym), a villager in Houjiao Village in a district where many residents are migrant workers in the city, confirmed with The Epoch Times that the video footage is true. “It’s too chaotic now, the outbreak is everywhere, and Haizhu District is completely locked down.”

Mr. Meng said that the direct cause of the conflict was that the community store sold highly-priced cigarettes during the lockdown, and that local residents started a fight with the store owner.

Meng said, “Our area has been shut down for a month. Some people are unable to buy food, and many people have nothing to eat.” The people took the opportunity to revolt, he said.

Another resident, Mr. Shen (pseudonym), told The Epoch Times that the authorities only distributed supplies once on Nov. 16, and at other times, residents were left to buy highly-priced vegetables and supplies.

Meng said that after the incident with the store owner, police came in a few vehicles and started a violent conflict with the residents. After that, vegetable sellers were unable to enter the area, and officials did not let residents go out to buy food.

“There is no food to eat, and everyone vents their anger through the fights and quarrels. They [the authorities] locked all the migrant workers inside and they have no food to eat. Of course [the residents] pushed down all the iron sheets that blockaded the area.”

“The fight lasted from morning to night,” Meng said. “Four or five cars of policemen came. It ended at 7 or 8 in the evening. In the end, thousands of villagers came out including those who watched from the sidelines. The police carried weapons and batons, and arrested a few people. The riot police beat some unarmed residents.”

Chinese People Can No Longer Bear It

Zheng Xuguang, a U.S.-based economist, told The Epoch Times that the CCP can no longer justify its strict epidemic prevention measures as so many people are angry, and the restrictions have reached an unbearable level. After almost three years living under the zero-COVID policy, more and more people are joining in the protests.

Current affairs commentator Hui Huyu told The Epoch Times on Nov. 27 that the recent rise of people in Shanghai, Beijing, Xinjiang, Guangzhou, and other places shows that the tolerance of the general public in China for the “zero-COVID” policy has reached a critical point—the people are unwilling to bear it any longer, and they want to revolt.

If the government does not take the initiative to lift the lockdowns, then the people will rise up to overthrow this policy. “Ninety percent of the people clearly shout the resounding slogan of an era, ‘Down with the communist party. I think it’s very difficult for the CCP to survive this time.”

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Police and people are seen during some clashes in Shanghai on Nov. 27, 2022. (Hector Retamal/AFP via Getty Images)
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A man is arrested while people gathering on a street in Shanghai on Nov. 27, 2022. (Hector Retamal/AFP via Getty Images)

Columnist Zhou also said that what the CCP has done to China and the Chinese people during the three years of the pandemic has not only caused the economy to wither and the people to live in dire circumstances, but it has also caused social chaos and various tragedies.

He questioned why the CCP has spent so much money, manpower, and effort to send COVID-positive people to places for centralized quarantine.

“No matter what it is, the CCP disregards public opinion and sentiment, and continues to go down the way that only ends by killing itself.”

Gu Xiaohua, Xiao Lusheng, Hong Ning, and Luo Ya contributed to this report.

From The Epoch Times

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