Poor boy lived and died during Covid. RIP
BEIJING: Chinese local authorities apologised Thursday (Nov 3) after a three-year-old boy died of carbon monoxide poisoning when medical care was delayed because of a COVID-19 lockdown, in a rare admission of responsibility.
The northwestern city of Lanzhou has been locked down for nearly a month under China's harsh zero-COVID policy, which has seen millions of people across the country confined to their homes and often complaining of poor conditions, food shortages and slow emergency responses.
Local police had earlier confirmed the death of a child in a Tuesday statement but did not mention delays in accessing medical treatment.
The same day footage of people desperately administering the child CPR on a flatbed tricycle spread rapidly, along with videos of small neighbourhood protests that evening.
"INDIRECTLY KILLED"
The boy's father, Tuo Shilei, wrote on social media Wednesday that he had been denied permission to leave his housing compound by workers stationed at a checkpoint, and that an ambulance did not arrive in time.
"I personally think that he was indirectly killed," Tuo told Reuters by phone.
At around midday on Tuesday, after his wife slipped and fell after being affected by gas fumes while cooking, Tuo noticed that his son, Wenxuan, was also unwell. Tuo said he tried desperately to call for an ambulance or police, but could not get through.
After about 30 minutes Wenxuan's condition worsened, and Tuo said he performed CPR, which helped briefly. He rushed with his son to the entrance of their community compound, under strict lockdown, but staff at the gate would not let him past, telling him to call neighbourhood authorities or an ambulance.
Frantic and unwilling to wait any longer for an ambulance, Tuo crashed through the barriers with his son and some "kind-hearted" locals called a taxi to take them to a hospital, where doctors' efforts to save Wenxuan were unsuccessful.
"There was the COVID situation at the checkpoint. The staff did not act, and then ignored and avoided the problem, and then we were blocked by another checkpoint," said Tuo, who is 32 and owns a small meat shop.
"No help was provided. This series of events caused the death of my child."
The Lanzhou government and department of health and the Gansu provincial government did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Reuters was not immediately able to reach the hospital where the boy died.
On Thursday district health authorities published a detailed account of the incident on social media and expressed their "sincere condolences" to the boy's relatives.
"We sincerely accept criticism and supervision from the media and netizens, and are determined to rectify (mistakes)," they wrote.
The Lanzhou authorities admitted it took more than 90 minutes to dispatch an ambulance after the boy's father rang an emergency hotline multiple times, and they confirmed lengthy interactions with staff took place at the compound gate.
"This incident exposed blockages in the emergency rescue mechanism, weakness in emergency response capabilities, and the inflexibility of cadres' work," their statement said.
SOCIAL MEDIA OUTRAGE
Authorities said Tuo had eventually managed to flag a taxi with help from a policeman at another checkpoint.
However, Tuo said he had been forced to break through a checkpoint barrier and that it was a passer-by who helped him flag the ride.
He also claimed he was asked to present a PCR test result by community staff, despite the entire housing compound having been under lockdown and not tested for the previous 10 days.
The tragedy triggered a storm of online criticism of China's zero-COVID policy, with one related hashtag censored on Weibo after gaining hundreds of millions of views.
"Three years of the COVID pandemic have been his entire life," read one widely circulated comment.
"Even though I didn't experience it, I feel like I can't breathe," wrote another user.
Tuo said he was later contacted by a person who said they were a retired local official and offered to arrange for Tuo to be sent 100,000 yuan (US$13,743) if he signed a pledge agreeing not to go public or seek redress over the incident.
Tuo said he rejected the offer, instead demanding an explanation for his son's death.
On Wednesday morning, a funeral for Wenxuan was held in the family's nearby hometown of Hezheng. Tuo did not attend, for fear of being quarantined on arrival.
Numerous cases of people dying because they were unable to get medical care due to COVID-19 restrictions have drawn viral outrage this year, including during Shanghai's two-month lockdown.
In January, a senior Chinese official warned hospitals not to turn away patients after a woman's miscarriage during a lockdown in Xi'an sparked fury. She was refused hospital entry for not having a PCR test result.
Late last month, censors scrubbed posts saying a 14-year-old girl had died in the central city of Ruzhou after falling ill in a quarantine facility and being denied prompt medical care.
Tiong peasants lives are expendable. This uneducated commie pig already made this point very clear : 社会主义是拿人命换来的 !
Here's to eradicating COVID-19 at all costs!
Adios kiddo. Too bad you were born in the wrong country at the wrong time. Perhaps you will have better luck in the next life.
Till date the CCP just doesn't get it; the more you attempt to suppress the virus outbreak, the harder it bounces back to bite you in the ass.
China COVID-19 cases surge to 6-month high as tensions in affected cities build
BEIJING: China on Friday (Nov 4) reported the highest daily count of new local COVID-19 cases in six months as outbreaks widened, pushing policymakers to walk an even finer line between holding the virus at bay while keeping a lid on social and economic angst.
New locally transmitted cases rose to 3,871 on Thursday, according to regular data released by the National Health Commission, the highest since early May when Shanghai was fighting its worst outbreak and Beijing was scrambling to contain one.
Almost three years into the pandemic, China has stuck to a strict COVID-19 containment policy that has caused mounting economic damage and widespread frustration. Curbs and lockdowns became more frequent with the spread of the highly transmissible Omicron strain. China's borders remain largely shut.
Bloomberg News reported on Friday that China was working on plans to scrap a system that penalises airlines for bringing virus cases into the country, citing people familiar with the matter, saying the effort was a sign authorities were looking for ways to ease the impact of its COVID policies.
China has yet to describe when or how it will begin to exit from its current approach. Earlier this week, Chinese shares jumped after rumours that China was planning a reopening from strict COVID-19 curbs in March.
Domestic tensions have steadily built this year as the endless curbs, restrictions and lockdowns fuelled unhappiness.
The central city of Wuhan, where the pandemic began, has imposed an array of temporary lockdowns and restrictions after double-digit new cases were reported in the past week.
Videos showing rowdy protests inside a compound in Wuhan's Hanyang district on Thursday night were shared on social media on Friday, with angry residents seen smashing down COVID-19 disaster relief tents and calling for an end to their lockdown.
Crowds in the videos, which Reuters could not immediately verify, can be heard shouting, "Give us freedom, give us freedom!"
"SAVE YOURSELF"
On Wednesday, an industrial park that houses an iPhone factory of Foxconn entered a seven-day lockdown due to COVID-19, in a move likely to intensify pressure on the Apple supplier as it scrambles to quell worker discontent at the base.
The lockdown marks a re-tightening of measures in the central city of Zhengzhou, which unexpectedly lifted a quasi-lockdown on its nearly 13 million residents just the day before.
Also this week, posts on rapidly rising food prices in Xining, the capital of Qinghai province in China's northwest, and a lack of access to daily essentials because of lockdowns went viral on social media.
More at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/china-covid-19-cases-surge-six-months-highest-tension-affected-cities-3044551
Tiong shittyzens get fucked by their own very government's crazed pursuit of Covid Zero, song boh?
LONG LIVE WINNIE XI!
😡😡😡