Protests Erupting Across China

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    “Protesters clash with police as unrest rocks cities across China,” reads CNN’s headline. The Guardian calls it “the biggest wave of civil disobedience on the mainland since Xi Jinping assumed power a decade ago,” noting one crowd numbered over 1,000 protesters. “Crowdsourced lists on social media claim protests have been documented at as many as 50 Chinese universities over the weekend.” Looking back over the last 10 years, CNN’s correspondent in China calls it “an unprecedented level of public dissent”. During lockdowns people struggled to get emergency care, food, and necessities, but CNN’s correspondent warns now “what we’re seeing is this tipping point across the country, after years of suffering and deaths.” “What we’re seeing is people past their breaking point — it’s years of pent-up anger. This is three years of draconian lockdowns that have cost people’s lives, their livelihoods — but the trigger for this wave of protests was a deadly fire at Xinjiang that killed at least 10 people. Videos of the scene indicated that Covid restrictions prevented victims from getting help. “But these protesters — not just angry about Covid lockdowns. They’re also targetting their anger towards the supreme leader himself.” [CNN shows what they call “extraordinary” footage of people in Shanghai calling on Jinping to step down.] “Over and over again. Those chants go on for quite some time. They’re also calling for the Communist party to step down. I can’t overstate just how shocking it is to hear this, this crowd in Shanghai — China’s wealthiest and most cosmopolitan city. And that chanting happening in a central, upscale part of the city, to be directly calling out for Xi Jinping to resign — I mean, this is virtually unheard of. In China it is extremely dangerous to publicly criticize the party, especially Xi himself. You risk prison time, or even worse. “Some protesters also chanted they don’t want dictatorship, they want freedom and democracy. Witnesses told CNN as well that rows of police officers were making arrests, forcefully pushing protesters into police cars — but the next day on Sunday, hundreds of Shanghai residents returned, to continue protesting, despite heavy police presence and roadblocks. Videos also showed some protesters violently dragged away, and now that area has been mostly cordoned off. New videos now “showed hundreds of people at an intersection shouting ‘Release the people!’ in a demand for the police to free detained demonstrators,” reports CNN, in an article shared by Slashdot reader LionKimbro: By Sunday evening, mass demonstrations had spread to Beijing, Chengdu, Guangzhou and Wuhan, where thousands of residents called for not only an end to Covid restrictions, but more remarkably, political freedoms. In Beijing, hundreds of mostly young people demonstrated in the commercial heart of the city well into the small hours of Monday…. People chanted slogans against zero-Covid, voiced support for the detained protesters in Shanghai, and called for greater civil liberties. “We want freedom! We want freedom!” the crowd chanted under an overpass. Speaking to CNN’s Selina Wang at the protest, a demonstrator said he was shocked by the turnout…. In the southwestern metropolis of Chengdu, large crowds demonstrated along the bustling river banks in a popular food and shopping district, according to a protester interviewed by CNN and videos circulating online…. “Opposition to dictatorship!” the crowd chanted. “We don’t want lifelong rulers. We don’t want emperors!” they shouted in a thinly veiled reference to Xi, who last month began a norm-shattering third term in office. In the southern city of Guangzhou, hundreds gathered on a public square in Haizhu district — the epicenter of the city’s ongoing Covid outbreak that has been locked down for weeks. “We don’t want lockdowns, we want freedom! Freedom of expression, freedom of the press, freedom of arts, freedom of movement, personal freedoms. Give me back my freedom!” The crowd shouted. Across China, protests have also broken out on university campuses — which are particularly politically sensitive to the Communist Party, given the history of the student-led Tiananmen Square protests in 1989…. In one video, a university official could be heard warning the students: “You will pay for what you did today.” “You too, and so will the country,” a student shouted in reply. The campus protests continued on Sunday, CNN reports, with a crowd of hundreds of students at Tsinghua University, another top university in Beijing. “Videos and images circulating on social media show students holding up sheets of white paper and shouting: ‘Democracy and rule of law! Freedom of expression!'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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