Xinjiang Police are looking into 3 guys for making defamatory comments about a lockdown on live television.

Police in Xinjiang are investigating three men for illusory anti-lockdown messages made in the regional capital, Urumqi . The messages are criticizing COVID-19 restrictions .

Beijing, November 19: According to Radio Free Asia (RFA), police in Xinjiang are now investigating three men for illusory anti-lockdown messages made in the regional capital, Urumqi, which are criticizing COVID-19 restrictions.A 41-year-old internet user named Li from Kashgar, a 28-year-old man named Huang, and a 36-year-old man with family name Li, both from Urumqi, allegedly According to a statement released by the China Digital Times website,Huang had incited others to attack maliciously during a news media live stream of the State Councils' November 11 press conference, prompting the Xinjiang Communist Party secretary to visit districts on November 7 for making statements about COVID-19, according to the statement.The cyberspace ministry said the use of the word Urumqi was distracting from the law, which had resulted in the death of up to a dozen The relevant departments will take this matter seriously and look at any recent omissions... when broadcasting... and will not tolerate insulting remarks.According to RFA, public outrage against the zero-COVID scheme has risen as people in Xinjiang have been confined to their homes for a long time, according to Jiangsu-based current affairs commentator Zhang Jianping.Zhang said that public outrage with the rolling lockdowns and widespread compulsory testing of the zero-COVID scheme has heightened.Some have publicly resisted or expressed their dissatisfaction in public, he said.

Even some politicians have pointed to the fact that we have been at the line for far too long, according to current affairs commentator Li Ang.Normal people are now all viewed as potential sources of instability, according to Li.The Communist Party has set itself up against the people, and all it does is about defending its hold on power.They have to erase any voices they find offensive or dissonant, according to photos obtained by RFA Uyghur Service earlier this month, who are both dedicated to catching hawks, he said.

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