Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver rally reflects Chinese COVID protests

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2022 02:09 PM
  • Vancouver rally reflects Chinese COVID protests

VANCOUVER - Hundreds of people have rallied in Vancouver in sympathy with rare protests that are sweeping across China in response to the country's hardline zero-COVID lockdown policies.

The protesters outside the Vancouver Art Gallery Sunday night also mourned the deaths of at least 10 people in an apartment fire in the Xinjiang region that critics blame on the anti-virus controls that have restricted millions of people to their homes in China.

Protesters lit candles and held up blank sheets of paper, in what has become a Chinese symbol of dissent.

The crowd chanted slogans in English and Mandarin against the Chinese Communist Party and called on President Xi Jinping to step down.

Protests broke out over the weekend in at least 10 Chinese cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Nanjing and Guangzhou, a scale that is highly unusual.

Xi's government faces mounting anger at its zero-COVID policies that have shut down access to areas throughout China in an attempt to isolate every case at a time when other countries are easing controls.

MORE National ARTICLES

Child allegedly taken from TTC station found safe

Child allegedly taken from TTC station found safe
Subway service was stopped while officers searched for the man and child, but police now say service is resuming. Police say the child is two years old.

Child allegedly taken from TTC station found safe

B.C. to offer COVID booster for 12-plus this fall

B.C. to offer COVID booster for 12-plus this fall
The advantage of getting the shot this fall is that new Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are expected to be more tailor-made to fight Omicron variants. Almost 94 per cent of B.C. residents have had their first shot, 91.2 per cent have had a second, but just 59.5 have had their booster.

B.C. to offer COVID booster for 12-plus this fall

One person injured after shots fired into a Surrey residence

One person injured after shots fired into a Surrey residence
A 40-year-old woman who was inside the residence suffered non-life threatening injuries and is in stable condition recovering in hospital. The Surrey RCMP General Investigation Unit has taken conduct of the investigation. The investigation is in the early stages and police are still working to determine a possible motive for this shooting.

One person injured after shots fired into a Surrey residence

Abe assassination 'shocking': Trudeau

Abe assassination 'shocking': Trudeau
The 67-year-old Abe, who was Japan’s longest-serving leader when he resigned in 2020, collapsed bleeding and was airlifted to a nearby hospital in Nara, although he was not breathing and his heart had stopped. He was pronounced dead after receiving massive blood transfusions, officials said.

Abe assassination 'shocking': Trudeau

House arrest for former B.C. clerk of legislature

House arrest for former B.C. clerk of legislature
Craig James, who’s 71 years old, was found guilty of fraud and breach of trust over expenses of a new suit and shirts he claimed as work attire. Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes sentenced James to three months, imprisonment but to be served in his home.

House arrest for former B.C. clerk of legislature

Rogers outage affects 911, passport offices

Rogers outage affects 911, passport offices
A notice on the Toronto-based telecommunications company's website said the outage is impacting both its wireless and home service customers and is also affecting phone and chat support.

Rogers outage affects 911, passport offices