by Lauren Jackson
Getty
Images is a rare public challenge to the world's most powerful authoritarian government...
Some Chinese people, many of them young, are fed up with the government's lockdowns, mandatory quarantines and mass testing, all part of the zero-Covid strategy intended to limit transmission of the virus.
But few demonstrators shouted their frustration:
These blank sheets illuminate the limits of criticism in China.
In 'democracies', booming crowds and brazen signs are hallmarks of protest. But Chinese citizens risk being prosecuted for criticizing the government.
The Communist Party under Xi Jinping, China's leader, has cracked down on dissent, making even subtle acts of opposition perilous.
Standing at night in the dark, faces covered by masks, the protesters risk imprisonment by gathering at all.
Today, I want to share photos and videos that illustrate how protesters are deploying unusual tactics to challenge the authorities.
People gathered in cities across the country to mourn the victims, including on Urumqi Road in Shanghai:
via
Associated Press
One gathering in
Beijing began at an altar adorned
in tribute to the fire's victims and evolved into this
demonstration:
One Shanghai resident said that the initial purpose of the papers on Saturday was to signal to the police that those gathered were mourning silently.
(White is a common color at Chinese funerals.)
The seemingly innocuous papers have forced government officials to determine what might be grounds for arrest, and some protesters used the sheets to mock the Communist Party's predicament.
Below, one paper on a wall at a gathering in Shanghai reads,
Agence
France-Presse - Getty Images
Crowds of people in Beijing and Shanghai, mainly in their 20s and 30s, marched and chanted for an end to the country's three years of draconian Covid restrictions and demanded more rights.
Some in Shanghai went so
far as to even call for Xi to step down, a rare and
bold challenge.
Here, you can see the police confronting a man as they tried to block a street in Shanghai:
Agence
France-Presse - Getty Images
Censors scrubbed protest symbols and slogans from social media, and Chinese spam flooded Twitter to obscure news of the unrest.
Some protest images slipped through, going viral outside the Chinese mainland.
At a vigil in Hong Kong, demonstrators held up blank paper in solidarity:
What is clear is that the protests have united many Chinese people in a rare display of civil unrest. Xi has remained silent, but the demonstrations have fractured the perception abroad that he exacts ironclad control over China's citizens.
Outside a university in
Seoul, South Korea, hand-drawn posters criticized the Chinese
government and begged for the world's help - in the form of
attention:
Agence France-Presse - Getty Images
Additional information - Video
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