Close X
Sunday, December 22, 2024
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

Flu epidemic has begun as rates soar: PHAC

Flu epidemic has begun as rates soar: PHAC
The agency's FluWatch report says Canada has now entered a flu epidemic, which is declared most years after the threshold of a 5 per cent positivity rate is surpassed. It says the week of Oct. 30 to Nov. 5 saw a test positivity rate of 11.7 per cent, compared to 6.3 per cent the previous week.

Flu epidemic has begun as rates soar: PHAC

Trudeau pledges cash for infrastructure, vaccines

Trudeau pledges cash for infrastructure, vaccines
It's the largest funding agreement the Liberals have made as part of their forthcoming Indo-Pacific strategy, and part of a G20 project meant to help low- and middle-income countries have safer and more sustainable cities.

Trudeau pledges cash for infrastructure, vaccines

Kids' medicine coming, but no detail on how much

Kids' medicine coming, but no detail on how much
Senior officials are answering questions at a House of Commons committee as hospitals and nervous parents with sick kids at home struggle to find children's Tylenol and Advil.

Kids' medicine coming, but no detail on how much

Bird flu fighters face unprecedented challenge

Bird flu fighters face unprecedented challenge
By some measures, the ongoing outbreaks of avian flu in British Columbia pale when compared to the devastating eruption of the disease in 2004 that prompted a cull of 17 million birds. But the enemy that farmers and scientists now face represents an unprecedented challenge, experts say.  

Bird flu fighters face unprecedented challenge

Surrey, B.C., to keep RCMP as sole police force

Surrey, B.C., to keep RCMP as sole police force
Council voted 5-4 in favour of keeping the federal force, as Mayor Brenda Locke and the four councillors elected under her Surrey Connect banner made good on an election promise to end the transition to the Surrey Police Service.  

Surrey, B.C., to keep RCMP as sole police force

New economic diversification program builds more resilient rural communities

New economic diversification program builds more resilient rural communities
The Government of B.C. is investing as much as $33 million in 2022-23 to create the Rural Economic Diversification and Infrastructure Program (REDIP), which will support projects that promote economic diversification, resilience, clean-growth opportunities and infrastructure development.

New economic diversification program builds more resilient rural communities