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View Full Version : Anger in China after officials break into homes in hunt for Covid contacts



Teh One Who Knocks
07-20-2022, 10:30 AM
The Associated Press


https://i.imgur.com/jfiMwIw.png

Authorities in southern China have apologised for breaking into the homes of people who had been taken to a quarantine hotel, in the latest example of heavy-handed virus-prevention measures that have sparked a rare public backlash.

State media said that 84 homes in an apartment complex in Guangzhou city’s Liwan district had been opened in an effort to find any “close contacts” hiding inside and to disinfect the premises.

The doors were later sealed and new locks installed, the Global Times newspaper reported.

The Liwan district government apologised on Monday for such “oversimplified and violent” behaviour, the paper said. An investigation has been launched and “relevant people” will be severely punished, it said.

China’s leadership has maintained its hard-line “zero-Covid” policy despite the mounting economic costs and disruption to the lives of citizens, who continue to be subjected to routine testing and quarantines, even while the rest of the world has opened up to living with the disease.

Numerous cases of police and health workers breaking into homes around China in the name of anti-Covid-19 measures have been documented on social media. In some, doors have been broken down and residents threatened with punishment, even when they tested negative for the virus. Authorities have demanded keys to lock in residents of apartment buildings where cases have been detected, steel barriers erected to prevent them leaving their compounds and iron bars welded over doors.

China’s Communist leaders exert stringent control over the government, police and levers of social control. Most citizens are inured to a lack of privacy and restrictions on free speech and the right to assembly.

However, the strict anti-Covid-19 measures have tested that tolerance, particularly in Shanghai, where a ruthless and often chaotic lockdown spurred protests online and in person among those unable to access food, health care and basic necessities.

Authorities in Beijing have taken a gentler approach, concerned with prompting unrest in the capital ahead of a key party congress later this year at which president and party leader Xi Jinping is expected to receive a third five-year term amid radically slower economic growth and high unemployment among college graduates and migrant workers.

A requirement that only vaccinated people could enter public spaces was swiftly cancelled last week after city residents denounced it as having been announced without warning and unfair to those who have not had their shots.

“Zero-Covid” has been justified as necessary to avoid a wider outbreak among a population that has had relatively little exposure to the virus and less natural immunity. Although China’s vaccination rate hovers at about 90%, it is considerably lower among elderly people, while questions have been raised about the efficacy of China’s domestically produced vaccines.

China’s national borders remain largely closed and although domestic tourism has picked up, travel around the country remains subject to an array of regulations, with quarantine restrictions constantly in flux.

In one recent incident, 2,000 visitors to the southern tourist hub of Beihai were forced to prolong their stays after more than 500 cases were found and they were barred from leaving.

China regulates travel and access to public places through a health code app on citizens’ smartphones that must be updated with regular testing. The app tracks a person’s movements as a form of contact tracing, allowing a further imposition of public monitoring.

The measures remain in place despite relatively low rates of infection. The National Health Commission on Tuesday announced 699 new cases of domestic transmission detected over the previous 24 hours, the bulk of which were asymptomatic.

PorkChopSandwiches
07-20-2022, 02:55 PM
The US is so oppressive we should be more communist

Teh One Who Knocks
07-20-2022, 03:04 PM
The US is so oppressive we should be more communist

:agreed:

Sadly, there are people in this country that would be okay with the government just busting into their homes and searching for whatever.

PorkChopSandwiches
07-20-2022, 03:23 PM
"I have nothing to hide"

deebakes
07-21-2022, 12:14 AM
i don't :lol:

Godfather
07-21-2022, 03:14 AM
:agreed:

Sadly, there are people in this country that would be okay with the government just busting into their homes and searching for whatever.

I have a buddy like this. Maybe I'm exagerating a touch. He's an engineer and probably on the spectrum. His name is Dan and his nickname is Safety Dan because everything is by the book (he's truly in the perfect profession, I'd sleep under a giant icicle if he told me it wasn't going to fall). I think I've told this story before, but Safety Dan once called 911 because someone right a red light. Sweetest guy in the world who would do anything for you, but yeah, letter of the law or he'll flip his lid with a comical temper.

Aaaaanyways, poor Safety Dan got very wrapped up in COVID restrictions. He called the cops multiple times when he heard parties in his condo building during the pandemic. He still wears a mask indoors despite restrictions being lifted months ago. When his own pregnant wife got covid, he made her sleep in another room and isolate despite them both being triple vaccinated.

So I 100% think that if you said the cops broke down someone's door to enforce a covid rule 6-12 months ago, he'd find a way to justify it :lol:

deebakes
07-21-2022, 03:16 AM
get that guy a puppers gf

Godfather
07-21-2022, 03:26 AM
get that guy a puppers gf

I know right. His wife is a huge stoner and has mellowed him out massively but he still has his moments.

lost in melb.
07-23-2022, 11:32 PM
i don't :lol:

If you hear a knock at the door - do stop dogging your mum :hand: