A rare protest banner hangs off a bridge in Beijing

Politics & Current Affairs

โ€œWe donโ€™t want COVID tests. We want to eat,โ€ was one of the sentences scrawled in red on a banner hung off a bridge in Beijing just days before the Party Congress. The act of protest is rare in China, a country that is notorious for its censorship, and this lonely act of defiance will probably not be repeated any time soon.

Image via Jingzhou Tao on Twitter.

A rare act of defiance criticizing President Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ and Chinaโ€™s COVID-zero policy took place in Beijing, just days before the major Communist Party political reshuffle that begins on Sunday.

Images widely circulated on social media on Thursday showed two protest banners hanging off Sitong Bridge in Haidian District in Beijing near the prestigious Renmin University, while a plume of smoke from an unknown source rose nearby (see videos here and here). Scrawled in red lettering, the protest banner reads:

We donโ€™t want COVID tests. We want to eat.

We donโ€™t want Cultural Revolution. We want reforms.

We donโ€™t want lockdowns. We want freedom.

We donโ€™t want leaders. We want votes.

We donโ€™t want lies. We want dignity.

We arenโ€™t slaves. We are citizens.

ไธ่ฆๆ ธ้…ธ่ฆๅƒ้ฅญ๏ผŒไธ่ฆๆ–‡้ฉ่ฆๆ”น้ฉ

ไธ่ฆๅฐๅŸŽ่ฆ่‡ช็”ฑ๏ผŒไธ่ฆ้ข†่ข–่ฆ้€‰็ฅจ

ไธ่ฆ่ฐŽ่จ€่ฆๅฐŠไธฅ๏ผŒไธๅšๅฅดๆ‰ๅšๅ…ฌๆฐ‘

Go on strike. Remove dictator and national traitor Xi Jinping.

็ฝข่ฏพ็ฝขๅทฅ็ฝขๅ…็จ่ฃๅ›ฝ่ดผไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ

The act of dissent is extraordinary given how rare political protests are in China, and given that Beijingโ€™s security arm has also been on high alert leading up to the major 20th Party Congress that begins in the city on Sunday. But it is highly unlikely to lead to further unrest or acts of dissidence:

  • Criticisms or viewpoints about Xi or the Communist Party that donโ€™t align with state-run media are censored, not publicized.
  • Extra security personnel have been deployed from October 6 to 23, according to procurement tenders per Reuters.
  • โ€œChina’s political stability is solid, because the country is developing very well in general, and the vast majority of people support the CPCโ€™s leadership,โ€ the former editor-in-chief of the nationalist tabloid Global Times Hรบ Xฤซjรฌn ่ƒก้”ก่ฟ› wrote on Twitter, expressing a common viewpoint.

โ€œIf you weren’t at that bridge, you’re not talking about it or seeing it โ€” unless you have Twitter,” said Anthony Tao, the managing editor of The China Project, who is based in the Chinese capital. Twitter is, of course, blocked in China without circumvention tools, and Chinese internet regulators were quick to censor any trace of the protest on local social media platforms such as Weibo immediately after the incident, including mentions about Beijing, Haidian, and Sitong Bridge.

  • Some subtle messages of support for the protester have appeared on Weibo: โ€œMoved by this individual heroism, wish this land of ours doesnโ€™t betray his expectations, and pray for his safety,โ€ wrote one user.
  • The police presence grew more prominent around the intersection after the banners had been removed in the afternoon, per reports from the Wall Street Journal and Reuters.
  • โ€œUsually during the run-up to high-profile events, whether national congresses or international meetings or the Olympics, you’ll notice increased police presence on overpasses and major intersections. If there aren’t cops guarding that bridge tomorrow, I’d be shocked,โ€ Tao said.

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Meanwhile, more COVID-zero curbs are being rolled out in Shanghai and other major cities to control a surge in cases, much to the frustration and agitation of some people in China who have been in and out of lockdowns since the start of the pandemic.

  • Health Code pop-up windows, which notify people that they might be a COVID risk, have drawn ire and fear among residents.
  • Liรกng Wร nniรกn ๆขไธ‡ๅนด, the head of the National Health Commissionโ€™s COVID-19 response expert panel, said today that it was โ€œnecessaryโ€ for China to stick with its COVID-zero policy โ€” the first official response to the widespread speculation that Beijing may ease restrictions at the Party Congress.

Nadya Yeh