HomeNewsOpinionProtests across China reflect a governing crisis — that’s bad news for Xi Jinping

Protests across China reflect a governing crisis — that’s bad news for Xi Jinping

The CPC’s self-governance model has not adequately reflected the ‘people’s interests’, but prioritised maintaining ‘political stability’ at all costs for regime survival and continuity

December 02, 2022 / 10:10 IST
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China's harsh measures to control coronavirus have drawn global scrutiny.  (Image credit: Reuters)
China's harsh measures to control coronavirus have drawn global scrutiny. (Image credit: Reuters)

From Shanghai, Wuhan, and Guangzhou, Chengdu to Beijing, protests are ongoing across China. This spontaneous outcry has united the demand for ending COVID-19-related lockdown restrictions. The party-controlled State has put its entire population under unprecedented restrictions to fight against the virus through a ‘zero-Covid’ policy — border restrictions, quarantine, testing, and snap lockdowns.

The government not only clamped down on the news online within China by random checks of cell phones and sharing apps, but even spammed Twitter to unsolicited sites to obscure the protest news abroad. Despite these strict policies, the situation on the ground looks far from sanguine.

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China is not alien to protests and public outcry. But the current protests follow the death of at least 10 people in the apartment fire in Urumqi on November 24, the provincial capital of Xinjiang, China’s restive region in the west. It is reported that the lockdown exacerbated rescue efforts.

Unlike other issues in Xinjiang, this accident resonated among Chinese citizens in major provincial capitals, and elite universities such as Tsinghua and Peking, leading to severe criticism of government policies, and calls even for ‘Xi step down’ — Xi xia tai, China’s national anthem and other non-verbal protests like holding blank sheets of paper, and placards. Although intellectual criticisms of the regime and the leadership have been witnessed recently, such direct calls by the protesters for the party core to step down are unheard of, given the nature of the political control under the current regime. More so after the recently-concluded 20th party congress.