China cracks down on protesters calling for an end to harsh Covid-19 measures
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People protesting against Covid-19 curbs in Beijing on Nov 27.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
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BEIJING - The police have cracked down on protesters who took to the streets in major cities in China over the weekend,
At least three people were taken from their homes in Beijing on Monday after attending a peaceful protest by Beijing’s Liangma River on Sunday night,
In Shanghai, protesters were also detained at the scene on Sunday night.
Protests involving hundreds, even thousands, have erupted in cities including Urumqi, Shanghai, Chengdu, Guangzhou, Nanjing and Beijing since last Friday, sparked by a deadly blaze in the Xinjiang capital city that killed 10 people.
Parts of Xinjiang had been in lockdown for more than 100 days,
Demonstrations have also taken place on university campuses in Beijing, Nanjing and other cities, and in communities ordered into lockdowns. China has not seen this scale of civil disobedience across the country for years.
Hundreds gathered along Beijing’s Liangma River on Sunday night, chanting “We don’t want Covid-19 testing, we want freedom!” They held up pieces of blank white paper, a symbol of protest against the rampant censorship in recent days as public dissent swelled.
Among them was a Chengdu native who said: “If there are people who are brave enough to do this, we will lend our support and be there for them.
“Chinese people are scared (of getting into trouble), so the fact that they dare come out and stand together is already an achievement,” said the 24-year-old, who works in the media industry. She declined to be named for fear of reprisal.
A planned protest march in another part of the capital city on Monday night was called off, after policemen poured into the area, standing guard at every street junction for more than 1km.
Hundreds more were on standby in police trucks in Haidian Huangzhuang, home to the city’s tech start-ups and elite universities such as Peking University and Tsinghua University.
Organisers had asked protesters to meet outside a subway station and to walk south, but decided not to go ahead because of the heavy police presence.
An ST reporter at the scene was questioned by three separate groups of police officers, who took down his particulars each time.
In Shanghai, city authorities tightened security on Monday by barricading the area
In Shanghai, city authorities tightened security on Monday by barricading the area where mass protests took place.
PHOTO: AFP
Protests have also spread to cities in Europe, North America and Asia.
Dozens of people in Hong Kong rallied in the city’s Central Business District on Monday night, some holding blank pieces of paper as protesters have done in the mainland.
People protesting in Hong Kong against China’s Covid-19 curbs on Nov 28.
PHOTO: REUTERS
On Monday, the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China said it was “extremely disturbed” by how journalists covering the protests in Shanghai and Beijing were physically harassed by police. At least two were detained.
This included a journalist from British broadcaster BBC
The United Nations on Monday urged China not to detain people simply for taking part in peaceful protests.
“We call on the authorities to respond to protests in line with international human rights laws and standards. No one should be arbitrarily detained for peacefully expressing their opinions,” UN Human Rights Office spokesman Jeremy Laurence told reporters.
China says its zero-Covid-19 policy protects its people, and abandoning it would inundate its healthcare system and result in more than a million deaths. Its strict protocols of reacting to an outbreak with swift lockdowns and mass testing have kept the death toll to the thousands, but also pummelled its economy.
Oil prices on Monday fell to their lowest since December,
The country reported a new high of 40,347 new infections on Sunday,

