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Protesters Risk Heavy Penalties, Openly Call On President Xi To Resign Over Covid Measures In China

protesters
November 27, 2022

Protests against the government's strict Covid measures have intensified, with thousands of protesters turning out in Shanghai. According to the BBC, some of the protesters were bundled into police cars.

Protesters in China have called on President Xi Jinping to step down over his government’s strict Covid measures.

Protests against the government's strict Covid measures have intensified, with thousands of protesters turning out in Shanghai. According to the BBC, some of the protesters were bundled into police cars.

Students have also demonstrated at universities in Beijing and Nanjing.

The latest unrest follows a protest in the remote north-west city of Urumqi, where lockdown rules were blamed after 10 people died in a tower block fire.

While Chinese authorities deny that Covid restrictions caused the deaths, officials in Urumqi did issue an unusual apology late on Friday, and pledged to "restore order" by phasing out restrictions.

During Saturday night's protest in Shanghai - China's biggest city and a global financial hub in the east of the country - people were heard openly shouting slogans such as "Xi Jinping, step down" and "Communist party, step down".

 

Some held blank while others lit candles and laid flowers for the victims in Urumqi.

 

Such demands are an unusual sight in China, where any direct criticism of the government and the president can result in harsh penalties.

 

But analysts say the government appears to have drastically underestimated growing discontent towards the zero-Covid approach, a policy inextricably linked to Xi Jinping who recently pledged there would be no swerving from it.

 

One protester in Shanghai told the BBC that he felt "shocked and a bit excited" to see people out on the streets, calling it the first time he'd seen such large-scale dissent in China.

 

He said lockdowns made him feel "sad, angry and hopeless", and had left him unable to see his unwell mother, who was undergoing cancer treatment.

 

A female demonstrator told the BBC that police officers were asked how they felt about the protests, and the answer was "the same as you". But, she said, "they wear their uniforms so they're doing their job."

 

Others gave accounts of violence, with one protester telling the Associated Press news agency one of his friends had been beaten by police at the scene, while two others had been pepper-sprayed.

 

People gathered again Sunday, laying flowers for the Urumqi fire victims in the area of Shanghai's Urumqi Road.

 

However, these tributes were gathered up by police, who also attended the protest site en masse.

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