After her building was placed under lockdown, a young woman stands on her balcony crying out in despair.
She cries and shouts abuse at the workers below wearing hazmat-suits. This video has been viralized on Weibo. It seems to reflect the growing frustration of the Chinese public with their government’s zero-Covid policy.
The woman shouts at workers that she has been in quarantine for half a years since her return from university. They stare back, seeming unmoved.
Although most Asian economies are now abandoning pandemic-era restrictions – even those that were previously hardline zero-Covid stances, authorities in China insist on theirs. This week, they repeatedly stated in state-run media articles, that the fight against the virus is still possible.
This claim is made even though new strains of infection are circulating and infected. It comes just days before China’s most important political event, The Communist Party Congress in Beijing on Sunday. Xi Jinping will be establishing his position as the country’s most powerful leader in decades.
Rare protest against China’s Xi Jinping days prior to the Communist Party congress
Observers around the world will be monitoring the two-a-decade meeting to see if there are any indications of the party’s priorities regarding its zero-Covid position. This has been blamed for exacerbating the economic problems, from stagnant growth to a collapsed housing market.
China’s capital is buzzing with nerves. Online photos posted Thursday showed a rare public protest against Xi. “Say no Covid test, say yes to food. No to lockdown, no to freedom. No to lies, no to dignity. No to cultural revolution, no to reform. No to great leaders, yes to voting. One banner, “Don’t be a slave. Be a citizen,” was displayed above an overpass in spite of the increased security surrounding the Congress.
All signs point to Xi and his party intending to continue with the zero-Covid approach even in the face rising public discontent. The state media articles this week are helping to dampen any speculation that the country might change its stance post-Congress.
CNN estimates that more than 300 million people in China were affected by partial or full lockdowns at least once last month.
However, even though the restrictions have been lifted in response to local Covid outbreaks the virus continues to reemerge.
New outbreaks in China this week suggest that more misery could be on their way – as the woman in the Weibo Video shows – who have become exhausted by an almost endless cycle of lockdowns.
China’s Health Commission reported Thursday 1,476 locally transmitted Covid-19 infections. This is a significant number in a country that even one infection can cause a lockdown across a large city.
After a single case was discovered, 900,000 residents of Hegang city in northeastern Heilongjiang were taken into custody.
Shanghai is home to 25 million people who have been subject to the strictest lockdown in the world for two months. Residents are now anxious about any sign of a repeat, as authorities tighten their security measures.
On Thursday, 47 Covid-19 cases were reported by the city. This comes one day after authorities closed six of 13 districts’ entertainment venues, including internet cafes, cinemas, and bars. Since Sunday, Shanghai’s Disney resort has been suspending some of its attractions as well as live performances.
Some residents have been reported to have been hoarding water, fearful of unannounced and unpredictable snap lockdowns.
This panic buying was made worse by the announcement that Shanghai’s water authorities took action to ensure water quality following the discovery of saltwater inflows into two reservoirs at Yangtze River’s mouth in September.
Although it is unclear what is driving the rise in infections, authorities are trying to stop the spread of the BF.7 coronavirus virus strain. It was first detected in China in September, in Hohhot, the capital of Inner Mongolia.
The last Covid shackles in Asia are now open to travel, except for China
The country has also seen an increase in cases in domestic tourist destinations despite the fact that China’s strict restrictions have discouraged people from travelling or spending during China’s Golden Week holiday in October.
According to the National Health Commission (NHC), Hohhot had 329 cases Thursday. The NHC now considers the remote region a high risk hotspot.
According to Zhang Xiaoying (deputy director of the regional Department of Education), more than 240,000 students from Inner Mongolia have been detained on campuses because of the latest outbreak. The outbreak on campus led to punitive measures, with one university Communist Party boss being fired after 39 students tested positive.
There is also the situation in western Xinjiang where 22 million people are prohibited from leaving the region and forced to stay at home. According to an official count, Xinjiang had 403 new cases Thursday.
But Beijing seems unwilling to change its hardline stance despite all this. Three days in a row, People’s Daily, the mouthpiece of the Communist Party state-run government, published comments reiterating China’s determination to not relax.
It said, “Living flat is not advisable,” in its third commentary on Wednesday. This was referring to a Chinese phrase that denotes complacency.
It argued that the fight against Covid was possible. It said that other countries had reopened restrictions and eased them because they couldn’t choose, as they failed to “effectively combat the epidemic in a timely fashion.”