Also Friday, more cities eased
restrictions, allowing shopping malls, supermarkets and other businesses to
reopen following protests last weekend in Shanghai and other areas in which
some crowds called for President Xi Jinping to resign. Urumqi in the northwest,
site of a deadly fire that triggered the protests, announced supermarkets and
other businesses were reopening.
The ruling Communist Party is trying to
crush criticism of the human cost and disruption of its “zero COVID” strategy,
which has confined millions of people to their homes. Protesters have been
detained and photos and videos of events deleted from Chinese social media.
Police fanned out across Shanghai, Beijing and other cities to try to prevent
additional protests.
Lin, who plays for the Loong Lions
Basketball Club, made “inappropriate remarks about quarantine hotel-related
facilities” where the team stayed Wednesday ahead of a game, the China
Basketball Association announced. It said that “caused adverse effects on the
league and the competition area.”
The association gave no details of Lin’s
comments and there was no sign of them on his account on the popular Sina Weibo
social media platform.
The Shanghai news outlet The Paper reported
Lin posted a video complaining about hotel workout facilities ahead of games
next week in Zhuji, a city south of Shanghai in Zhejiang province.
“Can you believe this is a weight room?”
Lin was quoted as saying. “What kind of garbage is this?” The Paper said the
video was deleted after “the situation was clarified” that the hotel was only
for a brief stay required by regulations.
A representative of Vision China
Entertainment, which says on its website it represents Lin, didn’t respond to a
request for comment. Phone calls to Loong Lions headquarters in the southern
city of Guangzhou weren’t answered.
Lin, born in California to parents from
Taiwan, was the first American of Chinese or Taiwanese descent to play in the
NBA.
Lin played for California’s Golden State
Warriors in 2010 before joining the New York Knicks in the 2011-12 season. He
became the first Asian American to win an NBA championship with the Toronto
Raptors in 2019. He played for the Beijing Ducks in 2019 before joining the
Loong Lions.
On Friday, there were no signs of more
protests.
China’s case numbers are low, but “zero
COVID” aims to isolate every infected person. That has led local officials to
suspend access to neighborhoods and close schools, shops and offices.
Manufacturers including the biggest iPhone factory use “closed-loop” management,
which requires employees to live at their workplace without outside contact.
Residents of some areas complain that local
officials, who are threatened with being fired if an outbreak occurs, impose
excessive quarantines and other restrictions in response to a spike in
infections that began in October.
The government reported 34,980 infections
found in the past 24 hours, including 30,702 with no symptoms.
Demonstrations erupted Nov. 25 after a fire
in an Urumqi apartment building killed at least 10 people.
That set off angry questions online about
whether firefighters or victims trying to escape were blocked by locked doors
or other anti-virus controls. Authorities denied that, but the deaths became a
focus of public frustration.
Xi’s government has promised to reduce the
cost and disruption of controls but says it will stick with “zero COVID.”
Health experts and economists expect it to stay in place at least until
mid-2023 and possibly into 2024 while millions of older people are vaccinated
in preparation for lifting controls that keep most visitors out of China.
Urumqi will “increase efforts to resume
production and commerce” by reopening hotels, restaurants, large supermarkets
and ski resorts, the official newspaper Guangming Daily reported on its website,
citing Sui Rong, a member of the Municipal Committee.
Elsewhere, the northern city of Hohhot in
the Inner Mongolia region restarted bus service and allowed restaurants and
small businesses to reopen, according to state media. Jinzhou in the northeast
lifted curbs on movement and allowed businesses to reopen.
Tiajjin, a port east of Beijing, said
subway riders no longer need to present negative virus tests. Fuzhou on the
southeast coast said people who don’t go out no longer need to be tested.
On Thursday, the metropolis of Guangzhou in
the south, the biggest hotspot in the latest infection spike, allowed
supermarkets and restaurants to reopen.
Other major cities including Shijiazhuang
in the north and Chengdu in the southwest restarted bus and subway service and
allowed businesses to reopen.
The ruling party says it is trying to
restrain local officials who are under pressure to prevent outbreaks while
reopening businesses.
“Without approval, it is strictly forbidden
to arbitrarily close schools and suspend classes, suspend work and production,
block traffic or enforce isolation measures,” the ruling party newspaper
People’s Daily said in an editorial. -AP