
According to images and video clips circulating online, a bus driving at night, with the driver wearing a full hazmat suit that left only his eyes uncovered was evident. Footage
videos clips show the bus being towed by a truck, its top crushed, and a hazmat suited worker spraying disinfectant on it. The survivors of the crash are now receiving treatment in hospital, according to authorities.The deaths
sparked a huge outcry on Chinese social media, with many questioning the
increasingly over-the-top implementation of China’s zero-Covid policy, which
relies on snap lockdowns, mass testing and extensive quarantining measures to
curb outbreaks.
Stringent
and prolonged lockdowns have recently sparked outcries in cities ranging from
Guiyang, Chengdu to Jinan, as well as the regions of Xinjiang and Tibet.
“What
makes you think that you won’t be on that late-night bus one day?” read a viral
comment, which garnered more than 250,000 likes before it was censored.
“We’re all
on the bus. We just haven’t crashed yet,” another comment said.
Chinese
censors rushed to cover the outrage. Many state media postings about the
accident have closed the comment section, and search results appeared to be
filtered. A related hashtag attracted more than 450 million views as of Sunday
evening, but only posts from official government and media accounts were shown.
A Guizhou
resident who said her friend was killed on the bus took to Weibo to demand the
Guiyang government to be held accountable. Her posts were widely shared,
drawing an outpouring of anger and sympathy.
Guizhou
officials are under huge pressure to contain even small-scale Covid outbreaks
in the lead up to the 20th Party Congress, where Chinese leader Xi Jinping is
expected to secure a norm-breaking third term in power.
Guizhou
reported 712 infections for Saturday, accounting for 70% of new cases
nationwide. Nine local officials in Guiyang have already been suspended this
month for failing to implement Covid policies properly.
On
Saturday, Guiyang officials vowed to “fight a decisive battle” to eliminate community
transmission. In zero-Covid China, a solution commonly used by local
authorities is to bus entire buildings or communities of residents out of the
city to quarantine elsewhere.
In Guiyang, which was placed under a lockdown earlier this month, authorities prepared 20 buses and 40 drivers to transport close contacts of Covid cases to other cities, the state-run Guiyang Evening Paper reported. As of Saturday, more than 7,000 people had been transferred, and nearly 3,000 were waiting to be bused out.
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