Mother leaps to death after struggling with militant lockdown in China
>
Distressing audio of a daughter welded into her home by Beijing officials and begging to be released after her mother leapt to her death after struggling with the latest militant lockdown has sparked fury in China.
The 55-year-old, Mrs Wang, lived with her 29-year-old daughter in a residential building in Hohhot, inner Mongolia, that was completely shut down due to Covid.
The gates were locked from the outside and residents could not open them from the inside.
Mrs Wang had anxiety disorder and had allegedly taken prescription drugs for her condition since 2019.
Her daughter had expressed concerns to the property manager on the morning of November 4 that her mother was having a mental breakdown and contacted again as her condition worsened.
What’s on Weibo reported that when the daughter asked the building manager to call the emergency hotline, he said: ‘call them yourself, I’m busy.’
No one came to check on Mrs Wang or her daughter. Mrs Wang fell from the bedroom window of her apartment after her daughter went into the living room to charge her phone.
Audio footage of the woman’s daughter went viral on Chinese social media, banging on the gate and begging community workers to unseal her mother’s door and help her.
The daughter shouted: ‘Open the gate, open the gate! I’m begging you, please’, according to CNN.
She called for the property manager to open the barrier gates and when they were eventually opened, first responders found the daughter next to her mother’s body.
Authorities admitted that their zero Covid lockdown protocols delayed their emergency response.
The 55-year-old, Mrs Wang, lived with her 29-year-old daughter in a residential building in Hohhot, inner Mongolia, that was completely shut down due to Covid. She jumped to her death after her daughter made repeated calls for help as her mental health deteriorated on November 4
Audio footage of the woman’s daughter went viral on Chinese social media, banging on the gate and begging community workers to unseal her mother’s door and help her
The video has drawn attention to the mental health crises exacerbated by weeks in lockdowns
The video has drawn attention to the mental health crises exacerbated by weeks in lockdowns.
One comment on Weibo said: ‘Who has the right to weld building gates shut? Who has the right to weld building gates shut?
‘Who has the right to restrict others’ freedom to live? What if there is an earthquake or fire, who is responsible afterwards?’
A clip was later posted online of officials disinfecting the area with chemicals.
Authorities admitted that their zero Covid lockdown protocols delayed their emergency response. Pictured: Apartment blocks in the area after the incident
Officials have vowed to punish community workers who forcibly seal household doors and building gates with locks, despite it being widespread practice in areas that are locked down.
It came days after a toddler in Lanzhou, northwest China’s Gansu province, died of carbon monoxide poisoning after the slow response of emergency medical services delayed hospital treatment.
In a viral social media post that was later deleted, the boy’s father blamed lockdown controls and community workers for obstructing their access to hospital, while district authorities later apologised for the incident.
Despite the zero-Covid policy and militant lockdowns grinding the country to a halt, China today reported its highest daily Covid caseload.
The country today logged more than 5,600 cases, almost half were in Guangdong province, a manufacturing hub in the country’s south home to major ports.
A clip was later posted online of officials disinfecting the area with chemicals
A woman lowers her mask to get swabbed for COVID test in Beijing yesterday
A woman wearing a face mask uses an iPhone as she walks on a street in Beijing today
Beijing over the weekend quashed hopes that its strict zero-Covid policy – in which spot lockdowns, quarantines and mass testing are employed to quash outbreaks – might be relaxed anytime soon.
However, the continued lockdowns have caused scandals, with residents complaining of inadequate conditions, food shortages and delayed emergency medical care.
A gruelling lockdown at the biggest iPhone factory in the world, based in Zhengzhou, has impacted production of Apple products temporarily, meaning that customers would experience delays in receiving their orders.
A gruelling lockdown at the biggest iPhone factory in the world, based in Zhengzhou, has impacted production of Apple products temporarily, meaning that customers would experience delays in receiving their orders. Pictured: An apple store in Beijing
Yesterday, Apple said in a statement: ‘The facility is currently operating at significantly reduced capacity.’
Foxconn, Apple’s principal subcontractor which runs the plant, revised down its quarterly earnings forecast today due to the lockdown.
China’s National Health Commission vowed Saturday to ‘unswervingly’ stick to zero-Covid, dashing a major stock market rally last week on the back of unsubstantiated rumours that Beijing would imminently loosen its strict virus policy.