Elderly in China protest over slashed health benefits
Crowds of retirees in China have again taken to the streets to protest against cuts to their medical benefits.
They gathered on Wednesday for a second time in Wuhan, where Covid was first detected, and also in the north-eastern city of Dalian.
The second round of protests in seven days puts pressure on President Xi Jinping's administration just weeks before the annual National People's Congress, which will usher in a new leadership team.
Protests first took place in Wuhan on 8 February after provincial authorities said they were cutting the level of medical expenses which retirees can claim back from the government.
Social media footage shows the protesters to be largely elderly retirees, who say this comes at a time of soaring healthcare costs.
Although such health insurance matters are handled at a provincial level, protests have spread to different parts of the country in what appears to be a renewed belief in the power of demonstrating in China.
At the end of last year, thousands of young Chinese took part in protests that eventually forced the government to overturn its strict zero-Covid measures - people had grown weary of the mass testing and sudden, sweeping lockdowns that had been smashing the economy.
But the abrupt change in policy placed China's medical system under enormous strain, as the coronavirus quickly spread through the country. It led to an unknown number of deaths and reporting by the BBC appeared to show that a vast majority of those who died were elderly.
The changes to health benefits for retirees, which officials have described as reforms, come just as China emerges from that brutal Covid wave.
The plan has been sold as a means of trading off reimbursement levels to increase the scope of coverage to include more areas. However criticism of plan on social media has included the widely held view that Chinese officials are trying to recoup the vast amounts of money spent on compulsory Covid testing and other pandemic measures.
Officials in both Wuhan and Dalian said they had no knowledge of the most recent protests and, as such, had no comment to make. Calls to local police stations went unanswered.
Radio Free Asia reported that retired iron and steel workers made up a significant proportion of the original protest group in Wuhan.
The use of existing social network links could help to explain how these gatherings have been coordinated in a country where organising dissent against the government in any form is difficult and can lead to severe punishment, including prison sentences.
Video clips shared on social media showed elderly protestors singing the global Communist anthem, the Internationale. In the past, this song has been used as a means of indicating that demonstrators are not against the government or the Communist Party but merely want their grievances resolved.
A shopkeeper who witnessed this Wednesday's protest in Wuhan told the BBC that police on both sides of a nearby road had blocked access to the area in order to prevent more people joining the hundreds of elderly demonstrators who were already chanting slogans.
Three years of the pandemic crisis followed by a tumultuous exit from zero-Covid have generated considerable public discontent over China's health policies.
Mr Xi had given the country's Covid amelioration policies his personal stamp of approval and the Party has struggled to explain why such a sudden about-face was necessary.
The Chinese government had also publicly ridiculed other countries for opening up too early, claiming they had unnecessarily sacrificed their people as a result.
It then turned around and abandoned its own restrictions at an even greater speed than other nations had done, and did so after maintaining lockdowns and other harsh measures for much longer than anywhere else in the world.
Many here now believe that, as a result, livelihoods were unnecessarily destroyed.
On China's Twitter-like Weibo social media platform, the hashtag #healthinsurance - in Chinese - has attracted millions of hits but was removed from the site's "hot topics" section.
The hashtag matching the site of the most recent protests in Wuhan - Zhongshan Park - was censored and photos claiming to be of the demonstration have been removed.
However, even with China's vast censorship apparatus swinging into action, a large amount of support is still being expressed for the protesting retirees on social media.
Beijing will need to find a way to resolve the issue if it wants to avoid further public agitation.
-
BREAKING NEWS: Newcastle agree to sign Anthony Gordon for £40m - plus £5m in add-ons - with a medical set for tomorrow after the Everton youth product missed days of training to compel it throughToronto shooting: Five shot dead after gunman opens fire in a condoArmed cops shoot dead knifeman in his 40s after report suspect threatened people at home: Police watchdog launch probeBoulder Police rescue two in hostage situation with 'armed gunman'Pence aides didn't started packing up files until after January 6 beca utilize Trump wanted White Ho utilize to act like they were staying for second term, new report claims after classified documents were found in his home Two armed men - one wearing SWASTIKA armband - are arrested at Penn Station over threats to synagogues in New York: Cops seize Glock 17, hunting knife and 30 rounds Casualty on the track closes Barons Court Tube station: District Line is component suspended as TFL investigates Two men are dead after their plane crashed in New York on their way to a funeral: Passenger's devastating final text to friends says 'we lost engines' and begs them to pray for himBritish Airways cancels dozens of Heathrow fradiants after IT problemTexas girl, 7, is found dead two days after she was abducted 'by FedEx driver dropping package off at her home, who murdered her within an hour of kidnapping her'
Next article:Patrick Mahomes suffers ankle injury in first quarter of do-or-die playoff game in huge blow for Kansas City Chiefs... but star quarterback returns to lead his team to a HUGE win over the Jaguars
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Michigan school shooter Ethan Crumbley, 16, will plead GUILTY to murder and terrorism charges
- ·Four University of Idaho students killed in alleged 'crime of passion'
- ·'They did it, god love them!' Biden grabs a microphone and jumps on stage during rally to say 'USA 1, Iran 0. We won!' after finding out men's national team went through - and reveals they told players 'you can do this'
- ·'An actor doesn't get a free pass': Rust prosecutor tears into Alec Baldwin saying he DID pull the trigger on gun that killed Halyna Hutchins - as he vows to fight involuntary manslaughter charges calling them a 'miscarriage of justice'
- ·Police on the hunt for prime suspect in murder of former NFL player Antonio Dennard after identifying handprint on car outside Reading, Pennsylvania bar
- ·Virginia cops say up to 10 people are dead in horror Walmart shooting
- ·Cristiano's four-and-a-half hour day in exile: Ronaldo exits Man United's training ground after being compeld to work alone with coaches after Erik ten Hag axed him in wake of daily clashes and his refusal to play
- ·Two armed men - one wearing SWASTIKA armband - are arrested at Penn Station over threats to synagogues in New York: Cops seize Glock 17, hunting knife and 30 rounds
- ·Chelsea confirm the appointment of 'world class' Laurence Stewart as their new technical director... with Todd Boehly hailing the former Monaco chief as an 'crucial' piece in their major off-pitch revamp
- ·'Shocked' Idaho 'killer' Bryan Kohberger plans to DENY murders, attorney says, was put on suicide watch and will agree to extradition from Pennsylvania, as Moscow police chief now says he believes suspect acted alone
- ·Ukraine demand FIFA BAN Iran from the World Cup... as they claim England and Wales' Group B opponents should be kicked out with middle-eastern country acc utilized of supplying weapons to Russia
- ·'Ultimate troll from Elon': Musk says Twitter 'works for me' as he emerges to shrug off tens of thousands of utilizers reporting widespread outages around the world
- ·Eco-zealot who poured human faeces on statue of Captain Sir Tom Moore says she is 'really sad' the stunt ca utilized 'hurt and offence' and accepts it probably didn't help her ca utilize - after being spared jail
- ·BREAKING NEWS: England World Cup hero George Cohen, vice-captain of the 1966 winners, dies aged 83 - leaving Bobby Charlton and Geoff Hurst as the unique surviving members of Alf Ramsey's starting XI
- ·Three women including a grandmother are found stabbed to death at New York City home: Cops hunt for 'family member' who fled at 5am
- ·Five are confirmed dead in Jersey 'gas' blast and four residents are still missing as 'painstaking' recovery operation continues - and rescuers say they 'expect to find more' bodies
- ·Missing Princeton University student, 20, is found dead close to campus six days after she vanished: Cops say her death 'does NOT emerge to be suspicious or criminal in nature'
- ·On-the-run Antonio Brown BARRICADES himself in Tampa ho utilize in stand-off with cops after arrest warrant was issued 'for threatening to shoot his ex-fiancée and mother of four of his children'
- ·David Crosby of Crosby, Stills & Nash dies at 81 from a 'long illness'
- ·Trump calls January 6 report a 'witch hunt' and shifts condem to Pelosi
- ·Gangland teen, 18, allegedly shoots two student rivals dead in Iowa
- ·Trump says January 6 report is a 'WITCH HUNT' after it calls on Congress to ban him from holding public office and finds he and allies pressured officials into overturning 2020 election TWO-HUNDRED times in a criminal 'multi-component conspiracy'
- ·A Room With A View actor Julian Sands, 65, is missing in 'extremely perilous' Californian mountain range after winter storm: Friends pray for news as police utilize drones to hunt Brit star who vanished SIX DAYS ago hiking in ice-bound area north of LA
- ·Musk says Twitter cannot become a 'hellscape' under his ownership and should be 'warm and welcoming to all' - after he confirms $44b acquisition and plans to take company public within five years'
- ·BT to cut high to 55,000 jobs by end of decade
- ·Moment retired Anglican priest, 80, is arrested over Just Speak Oil road block - one year after being fined for Extinction Rebellion protests at Parliament and MoD site and gluing herself to DLR train in rush hour
- ·Energy bills: What can I do if I can't afford to pay?
- ·Man, 22, charged with attempted murder for mowing down 25 sheriff's recruits, critically injuring five, is RELEASED consequently cops have more time to gather evidence to prove it was intentional
- ·Crypto giant FTX files for bankruptcy after $32B collapse: Vegan, T-shirt clad CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, 30, resigns in disgrace in the face of SEC probe as Enron's liquidator takes over
- ·Builder bludgeoned ex-girlfriend to death and buried her in pre-dug grave then claimed he 'accidentally hit her with an axe' when she was struck 12 times
- ·Jill Biden wears sunglasses in first emergeance since cancer surgery on her eye - as husband Joe ref utilizes to answer questions on documents scandal (notwithstanding finding time to emerge in SNL sketch)
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Michigan school shooter Ethan Crumbley, 16, will plead GUILTY to murder and terrorism charges
- ·Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried says he will testify to Congress NEXT WEEK about the collapse of the crypto-currency exconvert in response to request to Democrats
- ·Paul Pelosi returns HOME from hospital six days after illegal migrant's 'hammer assault': Wife Nancy says he has a 'long recovery process and convalescence'
- ·ISIS-inspired terrorist who killed eight with truck in NY is convicted
- ·Stephanie McMahon resigns as co-CEO of the WWE, insisting she 'looks forward to cheering on as a fan'... just days after her father Vince appointed himself back to the board of directors following alleged misconduct investigation