Solar Energy News
EPIDEMICS
'Still suffocated': Mourning China's zero-Covid protests a year on
'Still suffocated': Mourning China's zero-Covid protests a year on
By Rebecca BAILEY
Shanghai (AFP) Nov 26, 2023

A year after historic protests broke out on Shanghai's bustling Wulumuqi Road, only a subtly increased police presence on main junctions betrays anything out of the ordinary.

But for many involved in what became China's most widespread demonstrations in decades, it's impossible to erase the memory of the events of last autumn.

In the early hours of November 27, 2022, vigils for victims of a fire in Xinjiang's capital Urumqi morphed into multi-city calls to end zero-Covid measures, and even in some cases topple the ruling Communist Party and leader Xi Jinping.

Authorities responded by cracking down. But in early December they abruptly lifted the strict health restrictions that had dominated people's lives for almost three years.

"Shortly after zero-Covid lifted, everyone just got back to their normal daily life. Everyone just seems to have moved on, no one's talking about it," said Li, a protester in their twenties whose name has been changed for security reasons.

For people like Li, there is another reason for the silence: police visited her last month and warned her not to demonstrate.

"When I think about (what happened last year) I still feel I'm suffocated by it," Li told AFP.

Like many, she believed the country's harsh Covid rules had hampered rescue efforts when she joined the vigil on Wulumuqi Road to grieve the 10 people killed in the fire.

Wulumuqi is the Mandarin name for the city of Urumqi.

"When I saw so many people on that street, although I was mourning, in another way I felt safe," she said, recalling the first night of the protests.

"The atmosphere was sad, but also empowering."

- Taking on the regime -

Protests continued in Shanghai the next day, and ignited in other major cities including Beijing, Guangzhou and Chengdu, with protesters holding aloft blank sheets of A4 paper to symbolise China's lack of free speech.

"It was not surprising that protests would break out in response to the anti-Covid lockdowns," the University of Toronto's Diana Fu told AFP, noting "bread-and-butter issues" were common flashpoints in China.

"What was surprising was the blunt anti-regime rhetoric."

Overt political protest is rare in China, a sophisticated surveillance state that punishes dissent harshly.

Li said she had been concerned about freedom of expression before, but "thought I could live with it, because it didn't affect my everyday life".

Covid changed everything -- especially after being "trapped... like a prisoner" in the two-month Shanghai lockdown.

"People are only going to protest for their rights when it affects them. That's why there were so many people," she said.

At the time, Durham University's Chenchen Zhang had suggested "there may not be overarching demand for political reform beyond ending zero-Covid".

Fu noted the protests involved "a minority of Gen-Z and millennials" and therefore had not heralded a mass political awakening.

For those who did join though, it was "a watershed moment", she added.

Huang Yicheng, a 27-year-old who was briefly detained on Wulumuqi Road and later fled to Germany, said those who wanted more had "shouldered a lot of pressure to change the policy of the country".

"The social movement tide was very big -- but we were stranded like fish on a sand beach" when people went back to normal after zero-Covid ended, he said.

- 'So violent' -

China's security apparatus sprang into action to quash the nascent movement, from scrubbing all online mention of the protests to blanketing cities with officers.

On the second night of protests in Shanghai, Li said, police were more prepared to use force.

"They were dragging a girl into a police car -- it was so violent, I keep thinking about that image," she said.

Huang said he was dragged upside down along the pavement, losing his glasses and shoes.

In the chaos, during which he said he saw numerous women being beaten, he managed to escape without his name being taken.

Li was called to a police station a week later, and confronted with a picture of herself at the protest.

"They asked me to describe what I did and why I was there... in a lot of detail," she said.

William Nee, analyst for NGO Chinese Human Rights Defenders, said he estimated more than 100 people had been taken in or detained across the country after the protests.

He told AFP he believed most had now been released, except for 19-year-old Uyghur student Kamile Wayit.

Human Rights Watch recently called for her release, along with that of Peng Lifa, who in October 2022 unfurled an anti-government banner across a Beijing bridge.

The Ministry of State Security did not respond to AFP queries about the protests, including about those still detained.

- 'Breaking the norm' -

Huang and Li both attributed zero-Covid's end to the demonstrations, though the extent to which they were responsible for the U-turn is unclear.

"The longer-term impact is in breaking the norm of protest rhetoric," said Fu.

"Previously, protesters would cloak their demands in economic terms and refrain from directly pointing the finger at Beijing."

The impact on individuals is more tangible.

Li said some of her friends had left China and planned on never coming back.

Huang, too, will not return until he considers it safe.

For those who have spoken out, he said, "we can never go back to normal as before".

Related Links
Epidemics on Earth - Bird Flu, HIV/AIDS, Ebola

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
EPIDEMICS
What we know so far about surging respiratory illnesses in China
Paris (AFP) Nov 24, 2023
Cases of respiratory illnesses have been surging in northern China, particularly among children, sparking speculation online of a new pandemic threat four years after Covid-19 first emerged in the country. However Chinese health authorities have said the rising infections are a mix of already known viruses and are linked to the country's first full cold season after strict Covid restrictions were lifted last December. And while emphasising that the full situation remains unclear, experts say th ... read more

EPIDEMICS
Nigerians look to biofuel as cost of cooking gas soars

Chinese company gives leftover hotpot oil second life as jet fuel

Cheap and efficient ethanol catalyst from laser-melted nanoparticles

UK permits 'world-first' flight powered by sustainable fuels

EPIDEMICS
After chaos, Microsoft wins observer seat at OpenAI

What does the future hold for generative AI?

A new optimization framework for robot motion planning

Big Tech in charge as ChatGPT turns one

EPIDEMICS
Wind and solar projects can profit from bitcoin mining

Winds of change? Bid to revive England's onshore sector

Drones to transport personnel and materials to offshore wind farms

Interior Secretary Haaland announces 15 clean energy projects in the West

EPIDEMICS
Giddy Musk unveils Cybertruck in Tesla's latest defiant bet

Honda to invest $3.4 bn on electric two-wheelers this decade

Musk's latest gamble: Tesla Cybertruck set for debut

SUV sales 'offset' carmakers' electric gains, Greenpeace says

EPIDEMICS
New study shows how universities are critical to emerging fusion industry

Glencore eyes options on battery recycling project

A novel approach to energy storage by University of Cordoba

Researchers aim to make cheaper fuel cells a reality

EPIDEMICS
Framatome to set up fuel fabrication facility in the UK

Europe's biggest nuclear reactor goes offline again

Framatome signs a services contract with EDF for Flamanville 3 Instrumentation and Control

Cernavoda set to become hub for Lutetium-177 production in Europe

EPIDEMICS
Banks could face rules on climate risk reporting

The big emitters: the United States

Brazil's Lula, man on a mission at COP28: take rich world to task

EU agreement on reducing industrial emissions

EPIDEMICS
'It destroys everything': Amazon community fights carbon credit project

Plants can absorb more CO2 from human activities than previously expected

Clearing mangroves makes 'muddification' worse

Kenyans brave heavy rain to plant trees

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.