BEIJING, May 7, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - From quoting the national anthem to
referencing Hollywood blockbusters and George Orwell's dystopian novel
"1984", Chinese web users are using creative methods to dodge censorship and
voice discontent over Covid measures.
China maintains a tight grip over the internet, with legions of censors
scrubbing out posts that cast the Communist Party's policies in a negative
light.
The censorship machine is now in overdrive to defend Beijing's stringent
zero-Covid policy as the business hub of Shanghai endures weeks of lockdown
to tackle an outbreak.
Stuck at home, many of the city's 25 million residents have taken to
social media to vent fury over food shortages and spartan quarantine
conditions.
Charlie Smith, co-founder of censorship monitoring website GreatFire.org,
said the Shanghai lockdown had become "too big of an issue to be able to
completely censor".
Hell-bent on getting their messages out, wily web users were turning to
tricks such as flipping images and using wordplay, he said, using a pseudonym
due to the sensitivity of his work.
In one example, censors deleted a popular hashtag on the Weibo social
media platform quoting the first line of China's national anthem: "Arise,
those who refuse to be slaves."
The line was being shared alongside a torrent of anti-lockdown fury.
Others hijacked a hashtag about American human rights failings to make
tongue-in-cheek barbs about home confinement in China.
In a similar attempt, netizens rallied to push Orwell's fiction "1984" to
the top of a list of popular titles on the Douban ratings site, before it was
blocked.
Censors also raced to kill off a menagerie of memes and hashtags based on
a government official who previously said foreign journalists were "secretly
loving" the fact they had safely seen out the pandemic in China.
Users then devised a series of oblique puns on that quote, eventually
prompting censors to block the hashtag "La La Land".
- 'Us against the AI' -
Last month the internet police floundered in quashing viral video "Voices
of April" that featured stories from distressed Shanghai residents in
lockdown.
Web users rapidly re-edited and shared the six-minute clip to outrun
largely automated screening software, which struggled for hours to identify
the different versions.
One frustrated Shanghai local said netizens shared the various formats "to
make a point" even though each post vanished within minutes.
"It was us against the AI," the resident told AFP, requesting anonymity.
People in Shanghai have become more "willing to pay the price" for airing
critical views, said Luwei Rose Luqiu, an assistant professor at Hong Kong
Baptist University.
The "hardship, discontent and anger" they have endured in lockdown have
"far outweighed the fear" of punishment for posting sensitive content, she
told AFP.
Gao Ming, 46, said he received calls from police last month telling him to
delete anti-lockdown posts on Twitter and Facebook, which are blocked in
China.
But the public relations professional has so far refused, telling AFP he
is "against censorship" and wants to spread debate about China's Covid
strategy.
"I'm totally against the current policy," he said, arguing that the
lockdown has caused unnecessary deaths by cutting access to regular medical
care.
Top Chinese leaders vowed at a meeting on Thursday to stick "unwaveringly"
to zero-Covid and "resolutely fight against all words and deeds that distort,
question or reject our nation's disease control policies".
State media has played up the positives and "sidelined private
difficulties", said a Beijing-based journalism professor who requested
anonymity.
The approach has created "two Shanghais", where official portrayals
contrast sharply with what people view online, the professor added.
Online outrage is unlikely to prompt the Communist Party to relax its
hardline approach, particularly with the country's president so invested in
zero-Covid, said Yaqiu Wang, senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch.
"It's harder for the government to walk back when it becomes an
ideological issue that's attached to Xi Jinping personally," she said.