Public anger in China towards COVID-19 lockdowns has sparked rare protests in a number of major cities in recent days, with some demonstrators calling on the Communist Party to step down.
In Shanghai, which suffered a strict lockdown in spring, the protests continued on Sunday afternoon despite police clearing away hundreds of demonstrators with force and pepper spray in the morning.
The protests spread to about 50 universities, according to the Associated Press news agency.
The latest demonstrations were prompted by a fire in a high-rise apartment block in the northwestern Xinjiang region on Thursday.
The fire, in the city of Urumqi, killed at least 10 people, and questions have been raised over whether China‘s strict lockdown policy stopped residents from escaping the flames.
Officials deny this, and a fire department spokesperson inspired further anger after appearing to blame residents for not being able to “rescue themselves”.
Many Chinese cities have been under strict lockdown for months – many of Urumqi’s four million residents, for example, have been unable to leave their homes for any reason since August.
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In Shanghai, in videos shared on social media and verified by Sky News the protesters were seen chanting slogans including “Xi Jinping, step down, Communist Party, step down”, “Unlock Xinjiang, unlock China”, “do not want PCR (tests), want freedom” and “press freedom”.
A protester who gave only his family name, Zhao, told The Associated Press that one of his friends was beaten by police and two friends were pepper sprayed.
He said police stomped on his feet as he tried to stop them from taking his friend away. He lost his shoes in the process, and left the protest barefoot.
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Reuters reported it had seen a video showing Beijing residents in an unidentifiable part of the city marching around an open-air carpark on Saturday, shouting “end the lockdown”.
Sean Li, a resident of Beijing, told Reuters that a planned lockdown for his compound was called off on Friday after residents spotted workers putting barriers on their gates.
The residents had protested to their local leader and convinced him to cancel the plans.
Mr Li said: “The Urumqi fire got everyone in the country upset.
“That tragedy could have happened to any of us.”
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Urumqi saw protests on Friday night when a vigil for fire victims turned into an anti-lockdown demonstration.
People chanted “open up, open up” in videos that were shared on social media before being deleted by censors on Saturday.
But the protesters won some concessions, with parts of the city deemed low risk being given a bit more freedom from restrictions during the weekend.
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Protests against government policy are rare in China but even more unusual in Xinjiang.
Xinjiang, home to China’s persecuted Uyghur minority, has experienced some of the country’s longest lockdown restrictions, with reports of people left starving earlier in the year.
China’s zero-COVID policy was initially well-received by citizens, who saw it as minimising deaths while other countries were battling huge casualties.
But support has fallen in recent months as Chinese people tire of restrictions that go far beyond what was seen during the UK’s lockdown, for example.
China is the only major country that is still fighting the COVID-19 pandemic with mass testing and strict lockdowns.