Firecracker Ban Lifted In Some Chinese Cities Ahead Of Lunar New Year

Authorities in some Chinese cities have lifted the ban on fireworks amid protests, ahead of the Lunar New Year on January 22, US-based non-profit news service Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported.

However, the authorities in some other Chinese cities have, in fact, doubled down on the ban, the report claimed, adding that they have been punishing residents for setting off firecrackers.
Firecrackers in Beijing were first banned in 1993 after 544 people were injured in cracker-related incidents. The crackers were also deemed to contribute to the country’s pollution.

The complete ban was, however, lifted in 2005, and people were allowed to burst crackers around the Lunar New Year. But the ban was reinforced in 2012 following a decline in the country’s air quality.

Local governments in Dongying and Binzhou cities of China have, through their official websites, announced that fireworks and firecrackers will be allowed to welcome the Year of the Rabbit, say reports.

Authorities in Beijing and the northeastern port city of Dalian will allow fireworks within limited hours until the first month of the lunar calendar, the government-backed news site The Paper reported, according to RFA.

Officials in the northern province of Hebei said the ban on firecrackers would continue.

Online news service Red Star said in the southwestern city of Ya’an alone, eight districts and counties have different regulations on fireworks around the Lunar New Year, reported RFA.

Qin Peng, a New York-based political commentator, said public defiance of the firecracker ban came three years after the enforcement of the ‘Zero Covid’ policy.

“Chinese people have so much pent-up pain and anger in them over the last three years, that they have erupted in protests in a lot of places,” the RFA quoted Qin as saying.

“The authorities know very well that they have provoked public anger, and that it’s not just among a minority group, but that it runs right through all of China’s cities and villages,” Qin added. (ANI)

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China In A Bind: To Recover Economy Or Control Covid-19 | Lokmarg

China In A Bind: To Recover Economy Or Control Covid-19

Beijing is struggling to choose between economic recovery and Covid control and if China reimposes the ‘Zero-Covid’ policy to contain damages by upcoming Covid waves, there will be a huge impact on its economy. If not, people’s lives will be in danger. It is a double whammy for the country, writes Federico Giuliani in Insideover.

China is facing a double whammy of Covid infections and economic crises, which are interlinked, and one gets worse if another is tried to be addressed.

The number of new Covid cases is rising rapidly while businesses and industries are facing losses and shutdowns. There are predictions that China is expected to see more than one million Covid-related deaths in the coming days, reported Insideover.

At the same time, the Chinese government is struggling to impose curbs thanks to a negative impact on the country’s economy.

Analysts have forecast China’s economic growth to slump to 2.8-3.2 percent this year, which would be the lowest in five decades.

China has, for the first time, officially acknowledged Covid deaths in recent weeks. This has given credibility to reports of a heavy death toll in the country due to Covid infections, said Giuliani.

Crematoriums are busy and dead bodies covered in yellow bags can be seen lying on the floor. Even health workers are getting infected with coronavirus, leading to disruption of emergency and crematorium services. Bodies had to be kept waiting for three days before they are cremated.

This gives a glimpse into the deteriorating situation in China. Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) has projected over a million deaths in the next year while a third of China’s population is expected to be Covid positive by April 1, reported Insideover.

Beijing has sounded alarmed over new three waves of Covid infections in the coming months. Wu Zunyou, the chief epidemiologist at the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, said there are likely to be three successive waves until March 2023.

The rush at hospitals, crematoriums, and social media posts are revealing that China is facing a huge health crisis that is likely to be bigger than the previous waves of Covid.

“We cremated 150 bodies [in a day], many times more than a typical day last winter,” said an employee at Beijing Dongjiao Funeral Home.

Another employee at Tongzhou Funeral Home said the demand was largely due to Covid deaths. “We’re burning from morning until 10 pm. The furnaces can’t take it,” he said.

A few weeks ago, different cities in China had seen unprecedented protests from people over the failure of the ‘Zero Covid’ policy.

Protestors raised concerns over inhuman conditions during quarantines and over the loss of livelihoods. It also saw calls being made to overthrow Xi and the communist regime.

While the ‘Zero Covid’ policy appears to have failed in containing Covid infections, it dealt a severe blow to China’s economy, said, Giuliani.

The retail sale has fallen by 5.9 percent in November year-on-year while the slump for property investment is a whopping 19 percent, while the industrial output and fixed asset investment have slowed down to 2.2 percent and 5.3 percent respectively, reported Insideover.

The abrupt shutdown of factories and even small businesses including restaurants led to huge livelihood losses. Major international companies, including US-based Apple and Japan’s Renesas Electronics, were forced to suspend their operations.

The unemployment rate has reached 5.7 percent while it jumped to 17.1 percent for young people aged 16 to 24. Yet, the Beijing government continued with strict restrictions under the Zero Covid policy.

Following the public protest, it has relaxed some restrictions. However, the warnings of new and dreadful covid waves have created a catch-22 situation, said Giuliani.

Earlier, analysts had warned Beijing that its Zero Covid policy was hurting its economy and jobs in China as the restrictions reduced demand.

“Some companies, affected by the drop in orders, laid off workers to lower costs,” said Wang Zhe, senior economist for Caixin Insight Group.

Now, even as Beijing has finally abandoned the ‘Zero Covid’ policy, experts do not expect an economic recovery anytime soon. Rather it continues to deteriorate, reported Insideover.

“I am expecting a big collapse in industrial production in December,” said Alicia Garcia-Herrero, chief economist of Asia-Pacific at Natixis.

Highlighting the slowdown in the Chinese economy, a report by the World Economics Sales Managers Survey has expressed the possibility of a recession in 2023.

“(Chinese economy) may be heading for a recession in 2023. The lights may not have gone out, but prospects for economic growth in 2023 have certainly dimmed,” the report read. (ANI)

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