Kamis, 01 Desember 2022

China softens tone on COVID-19 severity after protests - CNA

Despite near-record case numbers, Chinese Vice Premier Sun Chunlan, who oversees COVID-19 efforts, said the virus's ability to cause disease was weakening, state media reported.

"The country is facing a new situation and new tasks in epidemic prevention and control as the pathogenicity of the Omicron virus weakens, more people are vaccinated and experience in containing the virus is accumulated," Sun said in comments reported in state media.

Sun also urged further "optimisation" of testing, treatment and quarantine policies.

The mention of a weakening pathogenicity contrasts with earlier messages from authorities about the deadliness of the virus.

CHANGING RULES

Less than 24 hours after violent protests in Guangzhou, authorities in at least seven districts of the sprawling manufacturing hub north of Hong Kong, said they were lifting temporary lockdowns. One district said it would allow in-person classes in schools to resume and would reopen restaurants and other businesses including cinemas.

Some changes are being implemented with little fanfare.

A community of thousands in east Beijing is allowing infected people with mild symptoms to isolate at home, according to new rules issued by the neighbourhood committee and seen by Reuters.

Neighbours on the same floor and three stories above and below the home of a positive case should also quarantine at home, a committee member said.

That is a far cry from quarantine protocols earlier in the year when entire communities were locked down, sometimes for weeks, after even just one positive case was found.

Another community nearby is holding an online poll this week on the possibility of positive cases isolating at home, residents said.

"I certainly welcome the decision by our residential community to run this vote regardless of the outcome," said resident Tom Simpson, managing director for China at the China-Britain Business Council.

He said his main concern was being forced to go into a quarantine facility, where "conditions can be grim to say the least".

Prominent nationalist commentator Hu Xijin said in a social media post on Wednesday that many asymptomatic carriers of coronavirus in Beijing were already quarantining at home.

The southwestern city of Chongqing will allow close contacts of people with COVID-19, who meet certain conditions, to quarantine at home, while Zhengzhou in central China announced the "orderly" resumption of businesses, including supermarkets, gyms and restaurants.

National health officials said this week authorities would respond to "urgent concerns" raised by the public and that COVID-19 rules should be implemented more flexibly, according to a region's conditions.

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2022-12-01 05:54:18Z
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Rabu, 30 November 2022

Two Chinese cities ease COVID-19 curbs after protests spread - CNA

EASING CURBS

As well as the easing of curbs in Guangzhou and Chongqing, officials in Zhengzhou, the site of a big Foxconn factory making Apple iPhones that has been the scene of worker unrest over COVID-19, announced the "orderly" resumption of businesses, including supermarkets, gyms and restaurants.

Earlier national health officials said China would respond to "urgent concerns" raised by the public and that COVID-19 rules should be implemented more flexibly, according to a region's conditions.

But while the easing of some measures appears to be an attempt to appease the public, authorities have also begun to seek out those who have been at the protests.

"Police came to my front door to ask me about it all and get me to complete a written record," a Beijing resident who declined to be identified told Reuters on Wednesday.

Another resident said some friends who posted videos of protests on social media were taken to a police station and asked to sign a promise they "would not do that again".

Several people gave similar accounts to Reuters on Tuesday.

It was not clear how authorities identified the people they wanted to question, nor how many such people authorities contacted.

Beijing's Public Security Bureau did not comment.

In a statement that did not refer to the protests, the Communist Party's top body in charge of law enforcement agencies said on Tuesday that China would crack down on "the infiltration and sabotage activities of hostile forces".

The Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission also said "illegal and criminal acts that disrupt social order" would not be tolerated.

The foreign ministry has said rights and freedoms must be exercised lawfully.

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2022-12-01 00:55:00Z
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Chinese leadership mourns ‘insurmountable loss’ as Jiang Zemin dies aged 96 - South China Morning Post

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  1. Chinese leadership mourns ‘insurmountable loss’ as Jiang Zemin dies aged 96  South China Morning Post
  2. Former China president Jiang Zemin dies aged 96  CNA
  3. Jiang Zemin dies: Sino-S'pore economic ties flourished under ex-China president's leadership  The Straits Times
  4. China Protests: With Jiang Zemin's Death, Xi Can't Risk a Repeat of the Past  Bloomberg
  5. Jiang Zemin, Former China President, Dies at 96: Leader During Economic Boom  Bloomberg
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2022-11-30 14:06:31Z
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Covid-19 protests escalate in Guangzhou as China lockdown anger boils - The Straits Times

SHANGHAI - People in the Chinese manufacturing hub of Guangzhou clashed with white hazmat-suited riot police on Tuesday night, videos on social media showed, as frustration with stringent Covid-19 rules boiled over, three years into the pandemic.

The clashes in the southern city marked an escalation from protests in the commercial hub of Shanghai, capital Beijing and other cities over the weekend in mainland China’s biggest wave of civil disobedience since President Xi Jinping took power a decade ago.

Resentment is growing as China’s Covid-19-hit economy sputters after decades of breakneck growth, which formed the basis of an unwritten social contract between the ruling Communist Party and a population whose freedoms have been dramatically curtailed.

In one video posted on Twitter, dozens of riot police in all-white pandemic gear, holding shields over their heads, advanced in formation over what appeared to be torn down lockdown barriers as objects fly at them.

Police were later seen escorting a row of people in handcuffs to an unknown location.

Another video clip showed people throwing objects at the police, while a third showed a tear gas canister landing in the middle of a small crowd on a narrow street, with people then running to escape the fumes.

Reuters verified that the videos were filmed in Guangzhou’s Haizhu district, the scene of Covid-19-related unrest two weeks ago, but could not determine when the clips were taken or the exact sequence of events and what sparked the clashes.

Social media posts said the clashes took place on Tuesday night and were caused by a dispute over lockdown curbs.

The government of Guangzhou, a city hard-hit in the latest wave of infections, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

China Dissent Monitor, run by US government-funded Freedom House, estimated at least 27 demonstrations took place across China from Saturday to Monday. Australia’s ASPI think tank estimated 43 protests in 22 cities.

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2022-11-30 05:47:34Z
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Selasa, 29 November 2022

Baling MP to be probed for calling PM an 'agent of Israel', say cops - The Star Online

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  1. Baling MP to be probed for calling PM an 'agent of Israel', say cops  The Star Online
  2. Malaysia's PM Anwar acts against a critic who accuses him of being an agent of Israel  The Straits Times
  3. PH to counter 'overwhelming' slander against Anwar, govt  Free Malaysia Today
  4. PM issues letter demanding apology from Baling MP over audio alleging Israel links  The Star Online
  5. Israeli agent? I'm more concerned about welfare of the people, says PM Anwar [NSTTV]  New Straits Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2022-11-29 12:53:00Z
1675648648

China to accelerate push to vaccinate elderly against COVID-19 - CNA

China's low vaccination rates, particularly among the older population, have long been seen as prolonging Beijing's no-tolerance approach to COVID-19.

Just 65.8 per cent of people over 80 are fully vaccinated, NHC officials told a press conference Tuesday.

And China has not yet approved mRNA vaccines, proven to be more effective, for public use.

Many fear that lifting that policy while swathes of the population remain not fully immunised could overwhelm China's healthcare system and cause over a million deaths.

But the zero-COVID policy has stoked massive unrest, with people taking to the streets in China's major cities on Sunday to protest draconian lockdowns and broader restrictions on freedom of movement.

A deadly fire last week in Urumqi, the capital of northwest China's Xinjiang region, was the catalyst for the wave of outrage, with protesters blaming COVID-19 restrictions for hampering rescue efforts - claims the government has denied.

China logged 38,421 domestic infections Tuesday, slightly down from record highs seen over the weekend and comparably low when compared to caseloads seen in western countries during the height of the pandemic.

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2022-11-29 08:51:00Z
1672812601

China Uses Police, Censors, Quiet Covid Easing to Stem Protests - Bloomberg

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  1. China Uses Police, Censors, Quiet Covid Easing to Stem Protests  Bloomberg
  2. China Corona News Today LIVE: Chinese Citizens Protest Against Xi Jinping | Protest In China News  India Today
  3. China moves to curb rare, nationwide protests  CNA
  4. Pressure on China's Covid-19 strategy  The Straits Times
  5. China's Xi Jinping Should Heed Covid-Zero Protests  Bloomberg
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2022-11-29 08:58:15Z
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