Ex-Xinjiang Commander Promoted by Xi to Terrorize Hong Kong.

Peng Jingtang, a Xinjiang paramilitary officer, was nominated by China’s dictator Xi Jinping to lead Chinese forces in Hong Kong on January 9. Peng oversaw the Chinese Communist Party’s crackdown in Xinjiang, where a genocide has been occurring for years. From 2018 to 2019, Major General Peng served as the regional chief of staff of the People’s Armed Police (PAP). He also served as the PAP’s overall deputy chief of staff. The PAP is primarily responsible for countering riots and protests. Peng, on the other hand, headed “counterterrorism” efforts in Xinjiang, where the only terrorism is that imposed by the CCP. The CCP in Xinjiang uses Uyghur terrorism as an excuse to impose Han bigotry on the region through a network of concentration camps, “reeducation” centers, and factories where forced laborers are subjected to slave-like conditions such as torture, rape, mass…

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Beijing’s ‘Olympic Bubble’ is Keeping Chinese Dissidents out of the Winter Olympics.

A coronavirus outbreak in Tianjin, Beijing’s adjacent city, has occurred just four weeks before the start of the Chinese capital’s Winter Olympics. This means that all 15 million citizens of Tianjin are unable to travel to Beijing, which is only 100 kilometers distant. Meanwhile, Beijing’s “Closed Loop” or “Bubble” precautions for the Winter Olympics are fully operational. The Olympics will begin on February 4th. Twenty more patients tested positive for COVID-19 PCR testing on Jan. 9, according to the Jinnan District Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Tianjin, a day after 20 others were discovered to have the virus. The infection has reached to at least three schools. In two of the instances, the Tianjin Center for Disease Control and Prevention used genetic sequencing to identify the virus as the novel Omicron variant. The Tianjin municipal government agreed on…

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China’s Second Largest City, Follows Xi’an in Imposing Strict COVID Measures, Causing Residents to panic Buy Food & Necessities.

After two asymptomatic COVID-19 cases were discovered on January 2 and a third on January 3, 2022, China’s central Henan Province placed Yuzhou City under lockdown. Yuzhou is China’s second-most-strictly-closed city, behind Xi’an, with inhabitants being prohibited from leaving their homes except for COVID-19 testing in the wake of the recent epidemic. Xi’an, in China’s northwest, is under one of the world’s strictest curfews. Since Dec. 9, 2021, when a positive COVID-19 case was discovered, thirteen million inhabitants have been confined to their homes or in collective isolation facilities on the city’s outskirts. On Jan. 6, Zhengzhou, the provincial capital of Henan, reported 26 additional cases. In Zhengzhou, panic shopping began almost immediately, with YouTube footage showing people swarming into supermarkets and food stores in search of basics. Yuzhou, a small county-level city in China, has registered 55 positive COVID-19…

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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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Walmart Boycotting Xinjiang Sourced Products Resulted in Backlash From CCDI.

Walmart Inc.’s decision to maintain a customer boycott on Xinjiang-sourced items from its Sam’s Club online app has angered the Chinese Communist Party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI). The decision by the American retailer to exclude items from the far-western Chinese region of Xinjiang from its online app has sparked outrage in China. According to Reuters, China’s anti-graft bureau was outraged by the boycott, accusing Walmart Inc. of “stupidity and short-sightedness.” The CCP’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection also accused the mega-corporation of attempting to “muddle through” the controversy by neglecting to reply to concerns or issue a comment. “To take down all products from a region without a valid reason hides an ulterior motive, reveals stupidity and short-sightedness, and will surely have its own bad consequences,” the CCP’s anti-corruption office warned on its website, as if threatening the American corperation.…

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Two Editors of Chinese Media Outlet Stand News Denied Bail for Conspiring to Publish “Seditious” content.

On Dec. 30, a Hong Kong court refused bail to two former top editors of Stand News who were accused of conspiring to publish “seditious” content. They were among seven people detained the day before in a police crackdown on their pro-democracy news organization, which garnered international outrage. The outlet’s former head editor, Chung Pui-kuen, was the lone defendant to appear at West Kowloon Magistrates’ Court on Thursday. Patrick Lam, who was interim editor-in-chief at Hong Kong’s Stand News until resigning after his detention on Wednesday, had his lawyer apply for bail while he was in the hospital. Best Pencil (Hong Kong) Limited, the company behind the now-defunct Stand News, was charged with the same offense. On Wednesday, the independent online news organization declared its closure, only hours after 200 national security agents stormed its office, froze its assets worth…

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