Three years of zero-COVID lockdowns in China served as a wake-up call to many Chinese people.
“The pandemic in the past three years made me see how evil the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is and how it has been persecuting us Chinese,” said Zheng Min, a Chinese woman from the coastal city of Qingdao in eastern Shandong Province.
Ms. Zheng and her brother’s family were living over a thousand miles away from each other during the pandemic—Ms. Zheng and her daughter lived in Qingdao; her brother’s family lived with their parents in Nanning, the capital city of China’s southern Guangxi region.
The stringent lockdowns impacted Chinese families throughout the country. The two siblings and their parents were confined within their dwellings, short of food, and subjected to constant mandatory COVID-19 PCR testing. Their mother was pushed down to the ground by pandemic control staffers when she tried to get out of her home to shop for food.
“Too many things happened during the three years of lockdowns,” said Ms. Zheng in a recent interview with the Chinese language edition of The Epoch Times. “The Chinese Communist Party has been suppressing the Chinese people and has done many inhumane things to us.”
The whole family decided to flee China. The family of eight members arrived in the United States before Christmas last year after traveling for two months through several countries.
Lacking Food, Mandatory Regular PCR Tests
Like other Chinese people throughout the country, Ms. Zheng and her family suffered severely from the strict lockdowns.Life was hard when they could not go out to buy themselves food, Ms. Zheng said.
In Qingdao where Ms. Zheng and her child were living, a fever case at a local primary school triggered a sudden citywide lockdown. The two lived on a small bag of rice and some pickled and salted vegetables—the only food they had at home—for over ten days.
Regular mandatory PCR tests were another nightmare for Ms. Zheng.
“We had to take PCR tests every other day because the green health code on our mobile phone was valid for only two days,” said Ms. Zheng.
“We didn’t have any freedom or dignity at all,” Ms. Zheng said.
Mother Injured by Quarantine Staff
Ms. Zheng’s parents lived with her brother’s family in Nanning, the capital city of China’s southern Guangxi Region.Ms. Zheng’s mother once attempted to go out to get food for the family after a long lockdown, but the quarantine staff outside pushed the elderly down to the ground, causing a compound fracture in her left wrist. Ms. Zheng’s father tried to help his wife but was pressed down to the ground as well.
Ms. Zheng’s elder brother, unable to intervene, could only record what was happening with his mobile phone. As a result, he was knocked down by the police, handcuffed, and taken to the police station for interrogation for nearly a day. He was forced to delete all the videos before he was able to leave the police station.
The family had to pay all the medical costs for the elderly woman by themselves, and there was no way of appealing for justice.
No Privacy, No Dignity, No Safety
Ms. Zheng’s sister-in-law planned to go and visit her relatives in her hometown in northern China. Soon after she had purchased her plane ticket, the village head in her hometown called her, warning her that she should take PCR tests before getting back to her home village.Ms. Zheng’s sister-in-law had no idea how the village head came to know about her flight because she booked it without telling anyone.
She wanted to stay anonymous in the interview for fear of retaliation by the communist regime and its long-arm policing in the United States.
“I feel that the monitoring and tracking follow me everywhere I go,” the sister-in-law said in the interview.
She once rejected the local police who tried to install a monitoring app—supposed “anti-fraud software”—on her mobile phone. She told the police that her phone didn’t have enough internal memory.
The police just grabbed her phone and checked it to see if she was lying. She was able to get away without any punishment because the phone’s internal memory was indeed too small for that app to be installed.
Ms. Zheng added that teachers in her child’s school also required that parents install the so-called anti-fraud app on their phones and then upload a screenshot to the teacher to verify that the app had indeed been installed.
The school also handed out various kinds of investigative questionnaires for children and parents to fill in, according to Ms. Zheng. “The school wants to know the occupations and incomes of the parents. It also wants to know the blood type of the child,” Ms. Zheng said.
Striving for China’s Democracy
Ms. Zheng feels lucky that she’s now in the United States and she wants to do something for her compatriots back in China, she said.She has been active in pro-democracy events with Chinese dissidents in the United States and protests in front of Chinese embassies and consulates in the United States.
On Dec. 10, she attended the unveiling ceremony of a monument to commemorate a significant event known as the “Great Escape to Hong Kong” (1950s–70s). The monument was dedicated to honor the survivors who fled communist China during the Cultural Revolution and remind the international community that true freedom remains elusive under the rule of the CCP.
“The CCP’s persecution of the Chinese people must be stopped,” said Ms. Zheng.