Unprecedented Number of Chinese Nationals Crossing US Border Coincides With ‘Run’ Social Media Trend in China

Unprecedented Number of Chinese Nationals Crossing US Border Coincides With ‘Run’ Social Media Trend in China
Illegal aliens seeking asylum line up to be processed by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents at a gap in the border fence U.S.-Mexico near San Luis, Ariz., on Dec. 26, 2022. Rebecca Noble/AFP via Getty Images
Updated:
0:00
News Analysis

The lockdown of Shanghai, China’s largest city, in March 2022 prompted the emergence of “润,” pronounced “run,” as Chinese sought to emigrate. In January, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced a 10-fold increase in the number of Chinese nationals crossing the southern border, raising national security concerns.

In January alone, 1,084 Chinese nationals were apprehended at the southern U.S. border, compared with 89 in January 2022, representing a 1,118 percent increase, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

In addition, Border Patrol agents at the U.S. southern border arrested 2,999 Chinese nationals in the four-month period from October 2022 to January 2023, a 719 percent increase from 366 in the same period in 2022, and more than the 2,626 arrested in fiscal years 2021 and 2022 combined.

Why the surge in Chinese crossing the United States’ southern border?

This is just one small stream in the wave of migration that has erupted in China in recent years.

CCP’s Zero-COVID Policy Boosts ‘Run’ Trend

In May 2022, the Chinese character “润” appeared frequently on Chinese social media.

When posted on social media, the Chinese word, which is pronounced like the English word “run,” is used as a code word to mean “to run away and emigrate overseas.”

Beginning in March 2022, authorities in Shanghai, a city with many business, cultural, and academic elite, began to lock the city down and separate children from parents infected with COVID-19, sparking public discontent. Residents who criticized the authorities online were approached by police.

Captivity and authoritarianism have caused a surge in Chinese people’s desire for immigration and an increase in online discussions about the topic.

Police officers block Wulumuqi Street in Shanghai where protests were held against zero-COVID the previous night in response to a deadly fire in Unumqi, Xinjiang, on Nov. 27, 2022, where protests against zero-COVID took place the previous night in response to a deadly fire in Urumqi, Xinjiang. (Hector Retamal/AFP via Getty Images)
Police officers block Wulumuqi Street in Shanghai where protests were held against zero-COVID the previous night in response to a deadly fire in Unumqi, Xinjiang, on Nov. 27, 2022, where protests against zero-COVID took place the previous night in response to a deadly fire in Urumqi, Xinjiang. Hector Retamal/AFP via Getty Images

“A lot of clients I know in Shanghai have already run. Those who have the means to run, either themselves or their children, have done so,” said netizen “Hong Buming.”

Chen Chuanchuang, a Chinese lawyer who escaped to New York in 2012, said that although the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been tyrannical for decades, it’s still rare to see almost everyone in China being held as prisoners as they have been for the past three years.

“For example, when there were serious conflicts between urban and rural areas, the 20 percent urban population still had a much better [life] than the other 80 percent rural population,” Chen told The Epoch Times on Feb. 16.

“But this time, whether you are in the city, in the countryside, in Beijing, in Shanghai, everywhere, we see the authorities locking people in their homes like prisoners. So for the average people, such personal experience is more unforgettable to them.”

According to the WeChat Index, provided by Chinese social media WeChat, after the CCP announced it would “strictly adhere to the ‘zero COVID' policy” on April 3, 2022, the overall search index for “immigrants” increased by 440 percent on that day.

According to the migration keyword search data released by Baidu for the week of March 28, 2022, the number of searches about “conditions for emigrating to Canada” surged by 2,846 percent compared to the previous month. This was followed by a 2,455 percent month-on-month increase in the number of searches for “good places to go abroad.”

At the CCP’s 20th National Congress, Xi Jinping successfully kicked off his third term, prompting more Chinese to consider leaving.

China's President Xi Jinping (L) walks with (2nd L to R) Li Qiang, Li Xi, Zhao Leji, Ding Xuexiang, Wang Huning, and Cai Qi, members of the Chinese Communist Party's new Politburo Standing Committee, the nation's top decision-making body, as they meet the media in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Oct. 23, 2022. (Wang Zhao/AFP via Getty Images)
China's President Xi Jinping (L) walks with (2nd L to R) Li Qiang, Li Xi, Zhao Leji, Ding Xuexiang, Wang Huning, and Cai Qi, members of the Chinese Communist Party's new Politburo Standing Committee, the nation's top decision-making body, as they meet the media in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Oct. 23, 2022. Wang Zhao/AFP via Getty Images

David Lesperance, a European lawyer who worked with wealthy families in Hong Kong and China, told the Financial Times that he had received three instructions from Chinese ultra-high net worth business families to carry out their “fire escape plans.” Many of his clients spent years planning their escape, moving money legally to safe offshore jurisdictions and arranging overseas homes and new citizenship for their families.

About 10,800 wealthy Chinese emigrated in 2022, the most since 2019, according to New World Wealth, a global data intelligence partner of investment immigration consultancy Henley & Partners.

1 Smuggling Case Triggers Demonstration Effect

There are many ways for the rich to emigrate, but how can the poor escape China?

A CNN report in August 2022 caught many people’s attention.

The story describes how Wang Qun, a 33-year-old Chinese man, left his family behind and traveled thousands of miles by plane, bus, boat, and motorcycle through dense jungles and barren mountains, into and out of detention centers, and finally across the southern U.S. border.

Another young Chinese man, Liu Xiang, saw the report. It made the road map of China in his mind instantly clear.

Liu has long wanted to go abroad.

Liu was born in Xinjiang in 1985. This was the source of many of the horrors in his life.

After graduating from college, Liu stayed in Xinjiang to work. Once while walking on the street, he was stopped by the police for no reason.

“In the activity of checking phones on the street, [the police] checked my phone and found that there were some apps in my phone which were not approved by the Xinjiang government and considered to be relatively sensitive,” Liu told The Epoch Times on Feb. 17.

“He told me that I could be sent to a reeducation camp for such behavior, but since he didn’t find many ‘illegal’ records of mine, he let me off. Yet he said if he found anything like that again, he would send me in.”

A facility believed to be a reeducation camp where mostly Muslim ethnic minorities are detained, in Artux, north of Kashgar in China's western Xinjiang region, on June 2, 2019. (Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images)
A facility believed to be a reeducation camp where mostly Muslim ethnic minorities are detained, in Artux, north of Kashgar in China's western Xinjiang region, on June 2, 2019. Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images
After this horrific experience, Liu left Xinjiang to work in Beijing and managed to change his hukou (his ID number in China’s household registration system) from Xinjiang to Shenzhen. However, the CCP’s surveillance system has been following him like a ghost.

“Since I was born in Xinjiang, my hukou [ID card number] starts with 65. Whenever I stay in a hotel or take public transport anywhere in the country, the police will stop me,” he said. “Because I was born there and my hukou was there, they have put me in another category. When I stay in a hotel, the police will come to check on me, asking me what I am doing, how many days I am staying, and my contacts—everything.”

Since 2020, Liu had been thinking about leaving China.

On Sept. 24, 2022, Liu saw CNN’s report on Wang and the smuggling route into the United States.

On Sept. 25, Liu’s application for a passport was rejected. The reason given by the authorities was that it was “nonessential international travel.” Inspired by netizens, Liu applied for a passport again on Sept. 30 under the pretext of “taking an IELTS test in Macao,” referring to the International English Language Testing System. On Oct. 14, Liu got his passport.

On Oct. 27, Liu went to the U.S. Consulate to apply for a tourist visa but was denied. Liu made up his mind to follow the same route to the United States as Wang did.

1,600 Miles Across Mexico on Motorcycle

Liu traveled to Macau from Zhuhai on Nov. 1, 2022. He then flew from Macau to Thailand, from Thailand to Seoul, and from Seoul to Panama City. There, he was smuggled into Costa Rica, then all the way through Nicaragua, Honduras, and Guatemala, and finally into Mexico. From there, he took 14 days on a motorcycle to travel 1,600 miles from the south to the north of Mexico, to reach the border with California.
A group of illegal aliens walks up the road after crossing the Rio Grande from Mexico. Further up the road, they will board a bus bound for the Border Patrol processing facility in McAllen, Texas, on April 18, 2019. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)
A group of illegal aliens walks up the road after crossing the Rio Grande from Mexico. Further up the road, they will board a bus bound for the Border Patrol processing facility in McAllen, Texas, on April 18, 2019. Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times

Liu lived in fear and experienced hardship along the way.

“Every day, there might be [Mexican] immigration checks, and then there were gangs and even some dirty cops,” he said. “All these people came in and tried to rob us of all our money, but we had to leave some money for the next gang. If we didn’t have any money, they would send us to immigration jail, so we walked very carefully every day. When we saw a checkpoint up ahead, we tried to avoid it.”

Despite the hardships, Liu didn’t care because there was a goal in mind.

Liu declined to say much about the specific process of entering the United States, saying that once he made it in, he was finally relieved.

“I felt like I was finally free of those fears and able to stand up and move forward with dignity,” he said.

Along the way, Liu encountered about 50 Chinese citizens who were also trying to sneak across the southern border into the United States.

Surge in Chinese Smuggling Raises Concerns

Victor Avila, a former Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent and border security expert, told Texas Scorecard last month that according to his source, thousands of Chinese nationals were heading to the border from South America.

The number of Chinese smuggled across the southern border into the United States has soared, sparking concern in Washington.

In the past two years, the influx of illegal immigrants at the southern border of the United States has skyrocketed, reaching 1,734,686 in 2021, up 278 percent from 458,088 in 2020. The number of illegal immigrants crossing the southern border in 2022 reached 2,378,944, a 419 percent increase over 2020.

This is a “perfect opportunity” for the CCP’s security services to place their personnel in the United States, Gordon Chang, a U.S.-based China expert, told Fox.

“Our southern border is undefended and there are bad actors coming in,” he said. “We need to get control of the situation.

Victor Avila, a retired ICE agent, agrees that stowaways pose a serious security threat because CCP spies are likely hiding among them.

“This is a national security issue ... because we know who China is,” Avila said. “They’re our biggest adversary.”

Such concerns are justified, as the CCP’s influence is spreading across Latin America and the Caribbean, with two-way trade soaring from $18 billion in 2002 to nearly $316 billion in 2019. China is the largest trading partner of Brazil, Chile, Peru, and Uruguay. The CCP has free trade agreements with Chile, Costa Rica, and Peru. In addition, 19 countries in the Western Hemisphere have expressed their willingness to participate in the CCP’s Belt and Road Initiative, and Beijing has set up about 45 Confucius Institutes in the region.

The CCP aims to penetrate societies via every avenue, Chen said.

“They certainly haven’t given up other means of coming in under legal cover, but smuggling has one ‘advantage’ over legal visas,” he said.

“No matter what kind of visa you apply for, you always have to submit personal information about yourself. Your family background, your working environment, all of that has to be verified by the U.S. Embassy. But if you are smuggled in, there is no way to verify it. You are what you say you are.”

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Jenny Li has contributed to The Epoch Times since 2010. She has reported on Chinese politics, economics, human rights issues, and U.S.-China relations. She has extensively interviewed Chinese scholars, economists, lawyers, and rights activists in China and overseas.
Related Topics