Phase Two Of Shanghai Lockdown Begins. 16 Million Citizens To Be Tested In The Coming Days.

According to China’s state-run media, Chinese officials plan to test 16 million inhabitants in western Shanghai in the following days, after the city began the second phase of its lockdown on April 1. Meanwhile, residents in eastern and southern Shanghai who hoped to resume regular life on April 1 following a four-day lockdown have been advised that they may be confined to their homes for much longer, signaling that the city’s COVID-19 outbreak is far from over. For over a month, China has been fighting the Omicron variant of the CCP virus, with Shanghai being one of the hardest-hit areas. On April 1, the city recorded 4,502 new illness cases, while the true figure could be far higher, as experts and several Chinese people have previously claimed that Chinese officials underreport infection statistics. Shanghai officials began implementing a two-stage lockdown…

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China’s Imposes it’s First Lockdown of 2022.

On Feb. 7, the Chinese authorities announced its first lockdown in the Chinese year of the Tiger as a means of containing a COVID-19 outbreak. Residents of the famed Communist base Baise in Guangxi Province have been warned not to leave their homes as of Monday. The Baise city regime announced in a notice that the city was infected with the Omicron strain of the CCP virus. “Nobody can leave or enter our city. We can’t leave home.”    On Feb. 7, Yun Fei, a resident of Baise’s Debao county, told the Chinese language Epoch Times that “all public transportation has stopped.” “The atmosphere is intense [in Nanning]. Some roads are blocked, and the intercity buses have stopped,” said a resident called Zhao from Nanning, the province’s capital, which is 165 miles away from Baise. “Some residential compounds have started to…

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Xi’an Residents Fighting Starvation During Lockdown.

Since China’s anti-COIVD-19 program imposed a strict lockdown, causing food scarcity for more than twenty days, Chinese people in Xi’an city have continued to seek foreign assistance. After the abrupt lockdown in Xi’an, 62-year-old decoration worker Liang Yanping from Hubei and his coworkers were locked down in an unfinished house without heating, a stove, or any furnishings, according to a Jan. 11 report in the state-run China Youth Daily. Only three boxes of instant noodles kept them alive for three weeks throughout the coldest part of the year. The workers were praised for being the “loveliest people” who did not cause any trouble for Xi’an and merely asked for a meal during the New Year festival, according to the story. Through another citizen’s inability to get to the hospital for a sudden bone dislocation, the report implicitly validated the difficulty of…

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China is Censoring Negative Posts Regarding to Xi’an’s Human Starvation or “Lockdown”.

On Jan. 5, the Chinese authorities banned Xi’an residents from posting unfavorable information on social media about the draconian COVID-19 measures of the lockdown. Violators will have their accounts removed. Simultaneously, “positive” videos and texts promoting the COVID-19 guidelines and praising the strict control are circulating on Chinese social media sites. The regime has adopted the motto “Go Xi’an.” China’s censorship bureau promotes images, articles, and videos that coin the phrase “Go Xi’an.” All users in China are required to register on social media using their cell phone number, which is linked to their ID. Once a person is barred from possessing a social media account, he or she will be unable to communicate emotions with friends online and will have a reduced social credit score. Anyone with a low social credit score is unable to purchase airline or high-speed train tickets…

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