China moves to curb protests after deadly fire in Xinjiang

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  • Demonstrators have demanded political freedoms and an end to the country’s strict Covid lockdowns and restrictions, which they blame for the deaths in Urumqi
  • In Hong Kong, which was hit by the Beijing-imposed national security law in 2020, dozens gathered at Chinese University and in Central to mourn the victims
Agence France-Presse |
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Protesters in Central, Hong Kong hold up blank white papers during a commemoration for victims of a recent deadly fire in Xinjiang on Monday. Photo: AP

Chinese security forces on Monday filled the streets of Beijing and Shanghai following online calls for another night of protests to demand political freedoms and an end to Covid lockdowns.

People have taken to the streets in major cities and gathered at university campuses across China in a wave of nationwide protests not seen since pro-democracy rallies in 1989 were crushed.

A deadly fire last week in Urumqi, the capital of northwest China’s Xinjiang region, was the catalyst for public anger, with many blaming Covid-19 lockdowns for hampering rescue efforts.

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Beijing has accused “forces with ulterior motives” for linking the fire to Covid measures.

At an area in the economic hub of Shanghai where demonstrators gathered at the weekend, Agence France-Presse (AFP) journalists witnessed police leading three people away. China’s online censorship machine also worked to scrub signs of the social media-driven rallies.

A planned protest in the capital Beijing later on Monday came to nothing as several dozen police officers and vans choked a crossroad near the assembly point in the western Haidian district.

Police vehicles lined the road to nearby Sitong Bridge, where a lone protester hung banners last month denouncing President Xi Jinping before being detained.

Residents at a Covid-19 testing station in Shanghai on Monday, November 28, 2022. Rising anger against China’s Covid curbs erupted in protests that risk triggering a government crackdown. Source: Bloomberg

Demonstrators had shared online a plan to march to the bridge following a successful rally the day before near the Liangma river.

In Hong Kong, where mass pro-democracy protests erupted in 2019, dozens gathered at the Chinese University to mourn the victims of the Urumqi fire, an AFP journalist said.

“Don’t look away. Don’t forget. We are not foreign forces. We are Chinese youth,” they shouted.

People also displayed banners and held flowers in the Central district of the financial hub, on which Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law after the 2019 protests.

Students light candles on the campus of the Chinese University of Hong Kong in solidarity with protests held in the mainland over Beijing’s Covid-19 restrictions on November 28, 2022. Photo: AFP/Getty Images/TNS

And in Hangzhou, just over 170 kilometres southwest of Shanghai, there was strict security and sporadic protests in the city’s downtown, footage circulating on social media and partly geolocated by AFP showed.

Protesters have notably used the rallies to call for greater freedoms, with some even demanding the resignation of President Xi, recently reappointed to a historic third term as China’s leader.

Large crowds gathered Sunday in Beijing and Shanghai, where police clashed with demonstrators as they tried to stop groups from converging at Wulumuqi street, named after the Mandarin for Urumqi.

The BBC said one of its journalists had been arrested and beaten by police while covering the Shanghai protests, although China’s foreign ministry insisted the reporter had not identified himself as such.

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In Washington DC, the White House said President Joe Biden is monitoring the unrest closely. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby would not describe Biden’s reaction to the protesters’ demands but said the president supported their rights.

“People should be allowed the right to assemble and to peacefully protest policies or laws or dictates that that they take issue with,” Kirby said.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak warned that China posed a “systemic challenge” to British values and interests, as his government condemned the reported beating of the BBC reporter.

Sunak said the so-called “golden era” of UK-China relations trumpeted by former prime minister David Cameron was “over, along with the naive idea that trade would automatically lead to social and political reform.”

A woman weeps while holding a photograph of Urumqi fire victims during a rally of Uygur and other Turkic people outside the State Department’s Harry S. Truman headquarters building on November 28, 2022 in Washington, DC. Photo: Getty Images/AFP

He said Britain would thus “need to evolve our approach to China.”

In Beijing on Monday, where at least 400 people gathered for several hours the previous night, a repeat rally took place, an AFP journalist said.

One protester told AFP that she and five of her friends who attended the protest received phone calls from Beijing police demanding information about their movements Monday evening.

In one case, she said, a police officer visited her friend’s home after they refused to answer their phone.

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“He said my name and asked me whether I went to the Liangma river last night … he asked very specifically how many people were there, what time I went, how I heard about it,” she said, asking to stay anonymous for safety reasons.

AFP journalists at the tense scene of the Shanghai protests on Monday also saw a heavy police presence, with temporary blue fences in place along the pavements to stop further gatherings.

Three people were then detained by police at the site, one AFP journalist saw, with law enforcement preventing passers-by from taking photos or video of the area.

Barricades erected along Wulumuqi Road, a site of earlier protests, in Shanghai, China. Source: Bloomberg

Shanghai police did not confirm to AFP how many people had been detained despite repeated enquiries.

An AFP journalist also filmed people being detained on Sunday.

China’s strict control of information and continued travel curbs tied to the zero-Covid policy make verifying the numbers of protesters across the vast country challenging.

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But such widespread rallies are exceptionally rare, with authorities harshly clamping down on all opposition to the central government.

At the scene of the Beijing riverside rally, where rows of police vehicles were in place on Monday, a jogger in her twenties told AFP she had seen the protests on social media and that she supported them.

“This protest was a good thing, it sent the signal that people were fed up with too strong restrictions,” said the jogger, who asked not to be identified.

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