New Delhi
Protests against Chinese government's strict Covid measures have intensified with people taking to the streets against President Xi Jinping's harsh zero-Covid policy.
Thousands of protesters turned out in Shanghai, where people were bundled into police cars, BBC reported. Students were also seen demonstrating at universities in Beijing and Nanjing, among other places.
The latest unrest follows a protest in the remote north-west city of Urumqi, where lockdown rules were blamed after 10 people died in a tower block fire, BBC reported.
Protesters in North Beijing have torn down the metal fences which have been set up to “quarantine” them.
— (((Tendar))) (@Tendar) November 27, 2022
The size of protests in China hasn’t been seen in decades. #China pic.twitter.com/LkmPndsvoc
Though Chinese authorities denied that Covid curbs caused the deaths, officials in Urumqi issued an apology late on Friday, pledging to "restore order" by phasing out Covid curbs, the report said.
During Saturday night's protest in Shanghai, people were heard openly shouting slogans like 'Xi Jinping, step down' and 'Communist party, step down', BBC reported.
CHINA - The people of Guangzhou refuse to enter Covid quarantine and tear down barriers.
— Bernie's Tweets (@BernieSpofforth) November 14, 2022
Now you know what those thousands of quarantine camps are for! To control their people not a mostly harmless virus.
pic.twitter.com/8Y9cl0GYnA
People were seen holding blank banners, while others lit candles and laid flowers as a mark of tribute to the victims in Urumqi. Such demands are an unusual sight within China, where any direct criticism of the government and the President can result in harsh penalties, BBC reported.
In a rare surge of protests in China, demonstrators called for the ruling Communist Party and its leader, Xi Jinping, to step down, amid anger at the deaths of at least 10 people in an apartment fire in Xinjiang, presumably during a strict Covid lockdown. https://t.co/7eT7YT4nHw pic.twitter.com/WT54Q0yC1M
— The New York Times (@nytimes) November 27, 2022
Demonstrators who led anti-government chants were taken away, and punched or pushed up against a police car in some cases, the report said. Meanwhile, Beijing on Sunday promised to ban the practice of barring building gates in closed-off residential compounds.
ALSO READ: China: Protesters chant 'Step down CCP'
In particular, barricading building gates and residential-complex entries in high-risk areas has been strictly prohibited, Xinhua news agency reported. Snap lockdowns have caused anger across the country - and Covid restrictions more broadly have trigged recent violent protests from Zhengzhou to Guangzhou, BBC reported.