Is this gross, or what?--Chicom medics FORCE woman to take covid anal swab by torture, twisting her arms

Apollonian

Guest Columnist

Video: Chinese Medical Police Torture Woman in Public to Force Anal Swab​

Infowars.com
November 29th 2022, 10:20 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/vide...e-torture-woman-in-public-to-force-anal-swab/

Keep in mind, WEF founder Klaus Schwab calls China "a role model for many countries"

A video shows Chinese medical police forcibly taking an anal swab from a lady:

Forcing a woman to take an anal swab by bending and twisting her arm🤬 pic.twitter.com/JHK9TaYk5S
— TXDeplorable (@Texas_Made956) November 27, 2022

The video was presumably filmed during one of China’s draconian Covid-19 lockdowns in which anal swabs were increasingly common throughout the country’s ‘quarantine centers,’ including ports of entry.

“Japan has asked China to stop taking anal swab tests for Covid-19 on its citizens when they enter the country,” the BBC reported last year. “Some have complained that the procedure caused them ‘psychological distress,’ officials say.”

“China, which has largely brought the virus under control, started carrying out anal swabs in January [2021].”

The video received attention after WEF founder Klaus Schwab recently declared China as the “model for many nations,” despite its numerous human rights abuses and the lack of upward mobility for millions of its citizens.

“I think it’s a role model for many countries,” Schwab said. “I think we should be very careful in imposing systems, but the Chinese model is certainly a very attractive model for quite a number of countries.”

It’s worth noting that freedom of speech is non-existent in China, a country known for not only its brutal treatment against people criticizing the government, but also for its suppression of religious freedom.


“The Chinese government is wary of religion for several reasons. China is officially an atheist state and Communist Party members are banned from believing in or practicing any faith; there is concern that religion can function as an alternative to Communism and thus undermine loyalty to the government,” reports Human Rights Watch. “…As interest in religion has increased, so have efforts by the state to control it, in part because the government is convinced that religion breeds instability, separatism, and subversion, with Christianity and Islam in particular seen as vehicles for foreign influence and infiltration.”
 

Shock Video: CCP Thugs Break Into Man’s Home, Torture Him in Front of Children​

by Jamie White
November 30th 2022, 12:01 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/shoc...o-mans-home-torture-him-in-front-of-children/

CCP officials interrogate man for complaining about zero-COVID policy as White Paper protests erupt across China.

Disturbing video out of China shows Chinese Communist Party enforcers interrogating and torturing a man in his own home in front of his children after he complained about the COVID lockdown policy.

CCTV footage from within this man’s home in Liuyang City, Hunan, shows four CCP police who reportedly forced their way in surrounding and interrogating him before beating him in front of his small children.

【Warning, Very Brutal Image】

The Chinese Communist police illegally broke into a Chinese man's home, suspected him of being involved in a protest, and tortured him to confess in front of his small children.pic.twitter.com/y6KiKfjgRH
— Inty (@__Inty__) November 30, 2022

The man’s wife put out a bulletin to neighbors breaking down the incident and calling for justice. A translated version was found on social media.

“Just yesterday morning, Liao Yong, the director of the Social Security Comprehensive Management Office of the Hehua Sub-District Office in Liuyang City, Hunan Province, broke into my house with three policemen,” she stated.

“My husband was along with two of our children and was worried about scaring them, so he wanted them to talk outside, but several of them got physical with my husband and after forcing their way into our home, they directly accused and labeled us as making ‘anti-government remarks’, after my husband argued back, he pinned my husband to the sofa and beat him.”
Image

“After learning that my home has CCTV cameras, he asked us to delete the video in an attempt to cover up the whole incident,” she added. “We hope the relevant authorities will investigate and give us justice.”

Image

Unfortunately, brutal footage like this is not an isolated occurrence in China amid its zero-COVID lockdown enforcement and subsequent White Paper protests.

This footage shows CCP enforcers known as “Big Whites” attempting to kidnap a man from his apartment to place him in a COVID quarantine camp.

中共工作人员,非法强行进入中国人的家,试图暴力把他拉走。

Chinese communist workers, who illegally forced their way into the Chinese man's home and tried to violently pull him awaypic.twitter.com/FzU7mqMPYP
— Inty (@__Inty__) November 30, 2022

This footage shows CCP forcing a woman to take a COVID anal swab test in full view of the public.

Forcing a woman to take an anal swab by bending and twisting her arm🤬 pic.twitter.com/JHK9TaYk5S
— TXDeplorable (@Texas_Made956) November 27, 2022

The White Paper revolution kicked off earlier this month after it was reported that dozens of people were burned alive in their apartment building which was sealed off from the outside by the CCP as part of its zero-COVID strategy.

The ensuing protests resulted in CCP officials beating demonstrators and incarcerating journalists, and even rolling out tanks into the streets.

Chinese police arrested a BBC journalist for covering a protest in China

After arresting, he was beaten up & kicked

Rajdeep says there's no freedom for journalists in India

But must be sent to China for a month pic.twitter.com/vBCRIuT3Nv
— Mahesh Vikram Hegde 🇮🇳 (@mvmeet) November 28, 2022

WOW!

Watch this brave woman stand strong and continue to film the abuses of Chinese government security forces!

She then gets beaten herself!

While we support the people of Iran, we must also support the brave people of China as they take on the totalitarian CCP! pic.twitter.com/AmCXbdD11t
— Yashar Ali 🐘 یاشار (@yashar) November 28, 2022

ภาพclip vdo ยานพาหนะของ PLA เคลื่อนผ่านเมือง Xuzhou โดยสันนิษฐานว่าไปยังจุดเกิดเหตุประท้วงในเซี่ยงไฮ้ pic.twitter.com/rjfq3V0DSZ
— tudorsmith (@tudor44871647) November 30, 2022

Meanwhile, the CCP is continuing to weld apartment doors shut from the outside.

An apartment building in Chengdu in China… the government is welding the entrance door to the apartment building to enforce the lockdown… if you do not have enough food at home, you will starve…

Some people are committing suicide jumping out of their windows.

🔊sound …😰 pic.twitter.com/F1tRANXK8x
— Wall Street Silver (@WallStreetSilv) November 27, 2022

In China right now the regime continues to pursue a policy of zero covid, caging people in apartment buildings like animals. A few days ago 10 people died in a fire in one such building – presumably because the doors had been locked from the outside like you see here! pic.twitter.com/TS9ZhkVBzG
— Niall Murphy 🏳️‍🌈 🇵🇱 (@niallmurphy007) November 27, 2022

This asinine policy led to this heartbreaking footage showing a woman falling to her death trying to escape another apartment fire.

Graphic warning. Another tragedy in #CCP’s inhumane #ZeroCovid #lockdown. The victims in #UrumqiFire even didn’t have a chance to get out of the locked apartments. That’s why in #China, #ChinaUprising #ChinaProtest2022 #BlankPapersRevolution is happening. pic.twitter.com/hG0h8EkAX1
— Jennifer Zeng 曾錚 (@jenniferzeng97) November 29, 2022
 

Fresh Clashes in Guangzhou as China Threatens ‘Crackdown’ on Anti-Communist Uprising​

Link: https://www.breitbart.com/asia/2022...reatens-crackdown-on-anti-communist-uprising/

1
Protesters hold up blank papers and chant slogans as they march in protest in Beijing, Sunday, Nov. 27, 2022. Protesters angered by strict anti-virus measures called for China's powerful leader to resign, an unprecedented rebuke as authorities in at least eight cities struggled to suppress demonstrations Sunday that represent a …
Ng Han Guan/AP
JOHN HAYWARD1 Dec 202223
5:15

Police in white hazmat suits clashed with anti-lockdown protesters in the Chinese city of Guangzhou on Tuesday and Wednesday, providing evidence the uprising continues despite mounting threats of a brutal crackdown.
Chinese security officials actually used the word “crackdown” on Tuesday, teasing a Tiananmen Square-style ending for the biggest protest movement to sweep China since the 1989 student uprising – which might very well have toppled the Communist regime, had it not resorted to mass murder against the demonstrators and then pressured the civilized world into accepting it.
The uprising is still vigorous enough to push a flood of news and images past China’s censorship firewalls to the outside world, transmitting photos and videos from thousands of smartphones, so the battle that began in Guangzhou on Tuesday night was verified and reported by outlets like the Hong Kong Free Press (HKFP):
Security personnel in hazmat suits formed ranks shoulder-to-shoulder, taking cover under see-through riot shields, to make their way down a street in the southern city’s Haizhu district as glass smashed around them, videos posted on social media showed.
In the footage people could be heard screaming and shouting, as orange and blue barricades were pictured strewn across the ground.
People are seen throwing objects at the police, and later nearly a dozen men are filmed being taken away with their hands bound with cable ties.
The Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission in Beijing, China’s top security and law enforcement authority, used ominous language in a statement on Tuesday that dismissed the anti-lockdown protests as the work of “hostile forces” and threatened to “crack down on illegal criminal acts that disrupt social order.”
“We are not foreign forces, we are Chinese citizens. China should have different voices,” a demonstrator shouted in response at an event in Hong Kong on Tuesday.
Massive deployments of security forces have apparently suppressed protests in the capital city of Beijing and Shanghai, an international financial hub subjected to an exceptionally grueling coronavirus lockdown last spring.
Massive protests erupted over the weekend along a road in Shanghai named after Urumqi, the capital of the heavily oppressed Uyghur region of East Turkistan and the scene of a deadly apartment fire on Thursday. A still-unknown number of families were killed in the fire because coronavirus lockdown protocols trapped them inside the building and prevented firefighters from extinguishing the blaze.
Protests continued in other Chinese cities despite mass arrests and threats of retaliation against demonstrators, so the Communist regime is evidently thinking about relaxing its deranged “zero Covid” policies just enough to cool public anger.

Chinese health officials told reporters on Tuesday they might “fine tune and modify” their policies to moderate the “negative impact on people’s livelihoods and lives,” which is the closest any Chinese Communist official has come to admitting the lockdowns could be profoundly harmful.
Reuters on Wednesday spoke to young Chinese who are still livid over the deaths in Urumqi and others previously killed by coronavirus lockdowns. These students and young professionals were both exhilarated and terrified by the prospect of rising up against their Communist masters and demanding greater political freedoms. Some saw similarities between the current moment and the Tiananmen Square uprising – an event the Chinese Communist Party has ordered them to forget.
“This is the first time in my life I’ve done something like this. In my heart, I’ve murmured such things a thousand times, but hearing these slogans suddenly chanted by so many real people was exciting and shocking to me,” a young woman in Shanghai said, requesting a pseudonym for her safety.
“In an irrational reality, being rational and using logical words are far, far from adequate,” she told online friends who were reluctant to join the protest movement, although she appreciated the need to “lie low” and evade the Communist Party’s pervasive electronic surveillance network.
“The worst is that you’ll be locked up right? But it’s better than facing the reality day by day and then not being able to do anything, and then you feel sorry for yourself,” another female protester said defiantly.
Washington Post reporter Cate Cadell on Tuesday offered some chilling observations of just how all-encompassing the Chinese security state has become, illustrating how difficult it will be for even the most tech-savvy young people to “lie low” after having even tangential contact with the protest movement:

As Cadell meticulously documented, none of the techniques outsiders assume might be effective will save demonstrators from the “crackdown” threatened by Communist officials – not masks, safety in numbers, or online anonymity, or even evading firewalls to use foreign social media platforms.
There is little indulgence for the youthful exuberance of students, the official system for filing grievances is merely employed to target disgruntled subjects for even more surveillance, and as protesters learned over the past week, Chinese police will arrest people for holding signs that do not say anything at all.
 
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