Li Wenliang, coronavirus whistleblower, dies of the virus
An image circulating on Chinese social media of โepidemic-fighting hero Li Wenliangโ (ๆ็ซ่ฑ้ๆๆไบฎ kร ngyรฌ yฤซngxiรณng Lว Wรฉnliร ng).
The Global Times and other state media reported that Lว Wรฉnliร ng ๆๆไบฎ, one of the doctors who was censured by Wuhan police after his December 30 warning of the coming epidemic, had died. Then they deleted those reports and tweets.
The Wuhan City Central Hospitalย posted to social media platform Weibo at 12:38 a.m. Beijing time on Friday a messageย (in Chinese) that said Li was in critical condition but still alive. Then at 3:48 a.m., the Wuhan City Central Hospital posted to Weiboย (in Chinese) that Li had died at 2:58 a.m.
The first reports of Liโs death crystallized popular resentment of the Chinese government, its handling of the epidemic, and its repression of free speech. For a short time today, the hashtag โWe want freedom of speechโ (ๆไปฌ่ฆ่จ่ฎบ่ช็ฑ wวmen yร o yรกnlรนn zรฌyรณu) trended on Weibo. Naturally, it was swiftly scrubbed from the Chinese internet, while the countryโs biggest internet companies have all been warned to practice strict censorshipย of virus-related news.
Whatโs behind the deleting of the original reports of his death?ย Who knows, but Foreign Policy saysย (porous paywall), โThere are claims that Liโs body was literally strapped back into life support when the extent of public anger online became clear.โ
Is this an existential crisis for Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ? โThe Partyโs social contract with the people โ ensuring the peopleโs well being and providing ever-increasing economic prosperity โ is being stressed on a nationwide level in ways I donโt recall in the past several decades,โ writesย China-watcher Bill Bishop. He continues: โLast Friday I wrote that โthis is as close to an existential crisis for Xi and the Party that I think we have seen since 1989,โ and I think it is even more so a week later.โ
China to investigate โissuesโ related to Li Wenliangโs death
See also:
- Chinese doctor who tried to warn of outbreak is dead from coronavirusย / NYT (porous paywall)
- The Chinese doctor who tried to warn others about coronavirusย / BBC
- Whistleblower Li Wenliang: Thereย should be more than one voice in a healthy societyย / Caixin (published February 6)
Further criticism of the Party
John Mackenzie, a member of the World Health Organizationโs emergency committee, โlabeled Chinaโs response โreprehensibleโ and said it defied logic that there was no increase in new cases at the same time that Chinese officials were holding local political meetings in January,โ the Financial Times reportsย (paywall).
โFor at least three weeks before [January 18], city authorities had been informed about the virus spreading in their midst but issued orders to suppress the news,โ the FT addsย in a separate reportย (paywall). We have previously linked to similar investigations in the New York Timesย and the Washington Post.
โThe mess in Hubei is only the tip of the icebergย and itโs the same with every province,โ reads one line from the scathing essay from Tsinghua University professor Xว Zhฤngrรนnย ่ฎธ็ซ ๆถฆ (in Chinese here), per the SCMP. โAll chances of public discussions have been smothered, and so was the original alarm mechanism in society,โ Xu adds.
No peak in sight, but reassuring signs
It is โtoo early to say that Chinaโs coronavirus outbreak was peaking,โ according to the World Health Organization, per Reuters.
โChina is considering delaying the annual meetingย of its top legislative bodyโ because of the uncertainty, another Reuters report indicates. The National Peopleโs Congress (NPC) typically meets for 10 days beginning on March 5, and if it were delayed this year, it would be the โfirst since China adopted the current March schedule in 1995 for the meeting of parliament.โ
There are, however, two reassuring reports today:
โRelatively few childrenย appear to have developed severe symptoms so far,โ the New York Times reports, noting that the 2019-nCoV coronavirus appears to be following a similar infection and symptom age-related pattern as SARS.
The true fatality rate may be below 1%, multiple epidemiologists told Reuters. Cate Cadell, the reporter for this piece, explained in a Twitter thread: โIt’s likely there are many more cases in Wuhan than are being reported, [and] a crunch on resources means people with milder cases aren’t getting tested and counted in the numbers. More cases = bad, but it also points to a much lower fatality rate than what we seeโ from official data.
Other coronavirus updates
โThere arenโt enough beds in designated hospitals for many confirmed or suspected coronavirus patients, a top official from the city at the epicenter of the outbreak said Wednesday at a press conference on the epidemic,โย Caixin reports.
Parts of Xinjiang are under lockdown.ย โAuthorities in Atushโฆhave fenced off the city’s roads, leaving residents confined to their homes and running out of supplies,โ reports Radio Free Asia. There has been no news from the vast network of internment camps: If the virus is spreading there, the government will try to cover it up.
At least four cities in Zhejiang Provinceย have โintroduced measures that mirror the draconian rules established by Hubei Province โ epicenter of the outbreak โ to keep the virus from spreading,โ the SCMP says. Reuters has a thorough list of โcountries evacuating nationals from China virus areas.โ
โTwo Communist Party officialsย in central Hubei Province were sacked after the death of a disabled teenager who was left without adequate care for six days while his relatives were in coronavirus quarantine,โ per the SCMP.
โLucas Niewenhuis and Jeremy Goldkorn