Chinese Citizens Are Starving, Jumping From Balconies To Their Deaths After Weeks Of ‘COVID Zero’ Lockdown

 

After communist China began enforcing a “zero-Covid” policy, reinstituting the most onerous “safety” restrictions in the country since the manufactured pandemic began more than two years ago, Chinese citizens are desperate for food and other basic necessities to the point where many of them are killing themselves.

China’s financial capital, Shanghai, began what was announced to be an eight-day lockdown on March 28, but has since enforced an indefinite citywide quarantine.

Those confined to their homes are desperate for food after weeks of lockdown.

Chinese residents are seen in videos circulating on social media yelling out of their apartment windows about starvation.

https://twitter.com/GundamNorthrop/status/1511397246868238340?s=20&t=UhsyT_IWq4AXqjxSuEdHYA

“We are starving to death,” a woman is heard screaming.

“We haven’t eaten for a very long time,” a man shouts.

A resident from another apartment showcased a refrigerator bare of food on a balcony.

Deaths by suicide in Hong Kong have reached a “crisis level” amid the city’s fifth COVID-19 wave, according to The Hong Kong Jockey Club Center for Suicide and Prevention at the University of Hong Kong.

Research compiled by the group shows China’s suicide index registered 4.03 deaths per day over a seven-day period between March 11 to 18, hovering around 11 to 12 death by suicide cases per million people which crosses the crisis-level mark of 3.56 in its rolling analysis, Independent reports.

“Researchers said the current spike could be due to isolation under Covid social-distancing norms enforced by the government,” the publication notes.

Footage out of China published last week shows a couple throwing themselves out of a window to their deaths.

Security forces in Hazmat suits patrol the streets around the clock to abduct, assault and incarcerate residents who are caught breaking quarantine.

Even Chinese residents who are asymptomatic or have a mild infection are isolated from non-infected people in the make-shift concentration camps.

People with mild and asymptomatic cases of Covid-19 quarantine at the Shanghai New International Expo Center on 1 April.

A video surfaced from China’s state-run wards, where food and resources are also scarce, shows dozens fighting over water, food and limited supplies.

Hundreds of infants and toddlers have been separated from their parents by tyrannical Chinese authorities after testing positive for COVID with results from unreliable PCR tests.

Several children piled into a metal-barred cot are wheeled through the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Centre as they are separated from their families after having contracted Covid

Under China's unbending virus controls, anyone found positive - even if they are asymptomatic or have a mild infection - must be isolated from non-infected people. That includes children who test positive but whose family members do not, health officials confirmed on Monday, defending a policy which has spread anxiety and outrage across the city

“If the child is younger than seven years old, those children will receive treatment in a public health center,” Wu Qianyu, an official from the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, said Monday. “For older children or teenagers… we are mainly isolating them in centralized [quarantine] places.”

China is even using COVID-19 to justify torturing and killing pets.

Meanwhile, in the United States, a plurality of Democrat voters are proponents of sweeping COVID mandates, including forcing  unvaccinated Americans to quarantine in their homes “at all times except for emergencies.”

Photo of author
Alicia is an investigative journalist and multimedia reporter. Alicia's work is featured on numerous outlets including the Gateway Pundit, Project Veritas, Red Voice Media, World Net Daily, Townhall and Media Research Center, where she uncovers fraud and abuse in government, media, Big Tech, Big Pharma and public corruption. Alicia has a Bachelor of Science in Political Science from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. She served in the Correspondence Department of the George W. Bush administration and as a War Room analyst for the Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee.

You can email Alicia Powe here, and read more of Alicia Powe's articles here.

 

Thanks for sharing!