China has suspended or closed the social media accounts of more than 1,000 critics of the government’s policies on the COVID-19 outbreak, as the country moves to roll back harsh anti-virus restrictions.
The popular Sina Weibo social media platform said it had
addressed 12,854 violations including attacks on experts, scholars and medical
workers and issued temporary or permanent bans on 1,120 accounts.
The ruling Communist Party had largely relied on the medical
community to justify its tough lockdowns, quarantine measures and mass testing,
almost all of which it abruptly abandoned last month, leading to a surge in new
cases that have stretched medical resources to their limits. The party allows
no direct criticism and imposes strict limits on free speech.
The company “will continue to increase the investigation and
cleanup of all kinds of illegal content, and create a harmonious and friendly
community environment for the majority of users,” Sina Weibo said in a
statement dated Thursday.
Criticism has largely focused on heavy-handed enforcement of
regulations, including open-ended travel restrictions that saw people confined
to their homes for weeks, sometimes sealed inside without adequate food or
medical care. Anger was also vented over the requirement that anyone who
potentially tested positive or had been in contact with such a person be
confined for observation in a field hospital, where overcrowding, poor food and
hygiene were commonly cited.
The social and economic costs eventually prompted rare
street protests in Beijing and other cities, possibly influencing the party’s
decision to swiftly ease the strictest measures.
As part of the latest changes, China will also no longer
bring criminal charges against people accused of violating border quarantine
regulations, according to a notice issued by five government departments on
Saturday.
Individuals currently in custody will be released and seized
assets returned, the notice said.
The adjustments “were made after comprehensively considering
the harm of the behaviors to the society, and aim to adapt to the new
situations of the epidemic prevention and control,” the official China Daily
newspaper website said in a report on the notice.
China is now facing a surge in cases and hospitalizations in
major cities and is bracing for a further spread into less developed areas with
the start of the Lunar New Year travel rush, set to get underway in coming
days. While international flights are still reduced, authorities say they
expect domestic rail and air journeys will double over the same period last
year, bringing overall numbers close to those of the 2019 holiday period before
the pandemic hit.
The Transportation Ministry on Friday called on travelers to
reduce trips and gatherings, particularly if they involve elderly people,
pregnant women, small children and those with underlying conditions.
People using public transport are also urged to wear masks
and pay special attention to their health and personal hygiene, Vice Minister
Xu Chengguang told reporters at a briefing.
Nonetheless, China is forging ahead with a plan to end
mandatory quarantines for people arriving from abroad beginning on Sunday.
Beijing also plans to drop a requirement for students at
city schools to have a negative COVID-19 test to enter campus when classes
resume Feb. 13 after the holiday break. While schools will be allowed to move
classes online in the event of new outbreaks, they must return to in-person
instruction as soon as possible, the city education bureau said in a statement
Friday.
However, the end to mass testing, a highly limited amount of
basic data such as the number of deaths, infections and severe cases, and the
potential emergence of new variants have prompted governments elsewhere to
institute virus testing requirements for travelers from China.
The World Health Organization has also expressed concern
about the lack of data from China, while the U.S. is requiring a negative test
result for travelers from China within 48 hours of departure.
Chinese health authorities publish a daily count of new
cases, severe cases and deaths, but those numbers include only officially
confirmed cases and use a very narrow definition of COVID-related deaths.
Authorities say that since the government ended compulsory
testing and permitted people with mild symptoms to test themselves and
convalesce at home, it can no longer provide a full picture of the state of the
latest outbreak.
On Saturday, the National Health Commission reported 10,681
new domestic cases, bringing the country’s total number of confirmed cases to
482,057. Three new deaths were also reported over the previous 24 hours,
bringing the total to 5,267.
The numbers are a fraction of those announced by the U.S.,
which has put its death toll at more than 1 million among some 101 million
cases.
But they’re also much smaller than the estimates being
released by some local governments. Zhejiang, a province on the east coast,
said Tuesday it was seeing about 1 million new cases a day.
China has said the testing requirements being imposed by
foreign governments — most recently Germany and Sweden — aren’t science-based
and has threatened unspecified countermeasures. Its spokespeople have said the
situation is under control, and reject accusations of a lack of preparation for
reopening.
Despite such assertions, the Health Commission on Saturday
rolled out regulations for strengthened monitoring of viral mutations,
including testing of urban wastewater. The lengthy rules called for increased
data gathering from hospitals and local government health departments and
stepped-up checks on “pneumonia of unknown causes.”
If a variant emerges in an outbreak, it is found through
genetic sequencing of the virus.
Since the pandemic started, China has shared 4,144 sequences
with GISAID, a global platform for coronavirus data. That’s only 0.04% of its
reported number of cases — a rate more than 100 times less than the United
States and nearly four times less than neighboring Mongolia.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong also plans to reopen some of its border
crossings with mainland China on Sunday and allow tens of thousands of people
to cross every day without being quarantined.
The semi-autonomous southern Chinese city has been hard-hit
by the virus and its land and sea border checkpoints with the mainland have
been largely closed for almost three years. Despite the risk, the reopening is
expected to provide a much-needed boost to Hong Kong’s tourism and retail
sectors. -AP