Beijing Hastily Recruits More Security, Ups Censorship of ‘Bridge Man’ Protest Before Party Congress

In front of all cameras monitoring Beijing, a man dressed as a construction worker unfurled two banners on an overpass on Oct. 13, demanding an end to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) draconian zero-COVID policies and the removal of Xi Jinping as China’s top leader.The man was later identified by China Change, which is an information platform on human rights, the rule of law, and civil society in China. Yaxue Cao, a China Change founder, posted on Twitter on Oct. 14 that the man is Peng Lifa, also known as Peng Zaizhou online. Peng wrote on one of the banners: “We don’t want PCR tests; we want to eat. We don’t want lockdowns; we want freedom. We don’t want lies; we want dignity. We don’t want the ‘Cultural Revolution;’ we want reform. We don’t want a leader; we want votes. We don’t want to be slaves; we want to be citizens.” Identity of the Man Who Pulled Off Protest on Beijing Overpass Amid Unprecedented Security Before the CCP Congress https://t.co/RpaUuRzrfo #彭立发 #彭载舟 — Yaxue Cao (@YaxueCao) October 14, 2022 On the other banner, Peng advocated strikes by students, teachers, and workers. He also demanded the removal of Xi Jinping, whom he called a “dictator and traitor.” Video clips and photos of Peng putting up the banners and using a loudspeaker to broadcast what he had written on the two banners soon went viral in China and overseas. Smoke could be seen billowing from Sitong Bridge, as Peng burnt what looked like tires to generate smoke to attract the attention of passers-by. The bridge is located in the northwestern downtown Haidian District of Beijing, which is home to several prestigious Chinese universities, including Peking University and Tsinghua University, and is close to Zhongguancun—China’s silicon valley. Peng was soon arrested by Beijing police. Since then, there has been no information on his whereabouts or well-being, triggering concerns in China and overseas over his safety. Censorship The Chinese regime acted swiftly to block information on the protest spreading online, which happened just days before the CCP’s 20th national congress—an event that takes every five years when the CCP makes political reshuffles and decisions on the policies for the coming five years. Additional sensitive words have added to the regime’s already expansive online censorship efforts. In addition to the words and phrases on the banners, expressions such as Sitong Bridge, Beijing, Haidian (the district), banners, brave man, and courage have been censored from Chinese social media platforms. People sharing photos and videos of Peng’s protest have found their social accounts terminated or banned. The phrase “I have seen it!” has also been banned on Chinese social media, after people started using it to refer to the protest. According to China Change, a journalist said his account has been suspended for 60 days for merely saying “I’ve seen it.” A song with the title “Sitong Bridge” has also been removed from Chinese online music platforms, according to The Associate Press on Thursday. Recruiting Bridge Security Guards Beijing authorities responded to the one-man protest by immediately further tightening its security around the national congress on for Oct. 16. In addition to police patrolling and checking people in the areas near Sitong Bridge, the local authorities in Beijing urgently put up advertisements to recruit temporary security personnel for the sole purpose of keeping an eye on bridges in Beijing. The job title for these security guards is “bridge watchers,” as translated directly from the Chinese phrase. The Chinese language edition of The Epoch Times viewed the recruitment ads and contacted several of them for comment. One of the HR agencies told The Epoch Times that they only want male bridge security guards. According to the job posts, the daily wages of the bridge security guards range from 240 yuan ($33) to 360 yuan ($50). Applicants should be at least 5.5 feet tall and aged between 18 and 45. They are provided a tent on or below the bridge where they are assigned to work. There are normally two guards working together, who can take turns resting. Another recruitment agency told The Epoch Times that they wanted people for watching the bridges for the whole month of October. He said that his agency needed about 20 people, but he knew some other agencies that want to recruit at least 100 people. Online posts show that these security guards wear fluorescent vests on which are written “Chinese militia.” One staffer of a recruitment agency told The Epoch Times that they recruit temporary security guards all the time, not just for the CCP’s 20th national congress but for a routine “maintenance of social stability” as required by the regime The Chinese regime deems dissidents, religious groups, rights activists, veterans, and petitioners as elements “destabilizing” China, whereas critics point out these groups are just destabilizing to the regime’s tyrannical rule.

Beijing Hastily Recruits More Security, Ups Censorship of ‘Bridge Man’ Protest Before Party Congress

In front of all cameras monitoring Beijing, a man dressed as a construction worker unfurled two banners on an overpass on Oct. 13, demanding an end to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) draconian zero-COVID policies and the removal of Xi Jinping as China’s top leader.

The man was later identified by China Change, which is an information platform on human rights, the rule of law, and civil society in China. Yaxue Cao, a China Change founder, posted on Twitter on Oct. 14 that the man is Peng Lifa, also known as Peng Zaizhou online.

Peng wrote on one of the banners: “We don’t want PCR tests; we want to eat. We don’t want lockdowns; we want freedom. We don’t want lies; we want dignity. We don’t want the ‘Cultural Revolution;’ we want reform. We don’t want a leader; we want votes. We don’t want to be slaves; we want to be citizens.”

On the other banner, Peng advocated strikes by students, teachers, and workers. He also demanded the removal of Xi Jinping, whom he called a “dictator and traitor.”

Video clips and photos of Peng putting up the banners and using a loudspeaker to broadcast what he had written on the two banners soon went viral in China and overseas. Smoke could be seen billowing from Sitong Bridge, as Peng burnt what looked like tires to generate smoke to attract the attention of passers-by.

The bridge is located in the northwestern downtown Haidian District of Beijing, which is home to several prestigious Chinese universities, including Peking University and Tsinghua University, and is close to Zhongguancun—China’s silicon valley.

Peng was soon arrested by Beijing police. Since then, there has been no information on his whereabouts or well-being, triggering concerns in China and overseas over his safety.

Censorship

The Chinese regime acted swiftly to block information on the protest spreading online, which happened just days before the CCP’s 20th national congress—an event that takes every five years when the CCP makes political reshuffles and decisions on the policies for the coming five years.

Additional sensitive words have added to the regime’s already expansive online censorship efforts.

In addition to the words and phrases on the banners, expressions such as Sitong Bridge, Beijing, Haidian (the district), banners, brave man, and courage have been censored from Chinese social media platforms.

People sharing photos and videos of Peng’s protest have found their social accounts terminated or banned.

The phrase “I have seen it!” has also been banned on Chinese social media, after people started using it to refer to the protest.

According to China Change, a journalist said his account has been suspended for 60 days for merely saying “I’ve seen it.”

A song with the title “Sitong Bridge” has also been removed from Chinese online music platforms, according to The Associate Press on Thursday.

Recruiting Bridge Security Guards

Beijing authorities responded to the one-man protest by immediately further tightening its security around the national congress on for Oct. 16.

In addition to police patrolling and checking people in the areas near Sitong Bridge, the local authorities in Beijing urgently put up advertisements to recruit temporary security personnel for the sole purpose of keeping an eye on bridges in Beijing. The job title for these security guards is “bridge watchers,” as translated directly from the Chinese phrase.

The Chinese language edition of The Epoch Times viewed the recruitment ads and contacted several of them for comment.

One of the HR agencies told The Epoch Times that they only want male bridge security guards.

According to the job posts, the daily wages of the bridge security guards range from 240 yuan ($33) to 360 yuan ($50). Applicants should be at least 5.5 feet tall and aged between 18 and 45. They are provided a tent on or below the bridge where they are assigned to work. There are normally two guards working together, who can take turns resting.

Another recruitment agency told The Epoch Times that they wanted people for watching the bridges for the whole month of October. He said that his agency needed about 20 people, but he knew some other agencies that want to recruit at least 100 people.

Online posts show that these security guards wear fluorescent vests on which are written “Chinese militia.”

One staffer of a recruitment agency told The Epoch Times that they recruit temporary security guards all the time, not just for the CCP’s 20th national congress but for a routine “maintenance of social stability” as required by the regime

The Chinese regime deems dissidents, religious groups, rights activists, veterans, and petitioners as elements “destabilizing” China, whereas critics point out these groups are just destabilizing to the regime’s tyrannical rule. The regime spends a huge percentage of its budget on police, state security, armed civil militia, courts and jails, and AI monitoring technology and equipment every year to crack down on these people in China.

The Epoch Times reported in 2018 that the CCP spent more on domestic security than on national defense in 2009, 2011, and 2013 and that the regime’s Ministry of Finance stopped including such budgets in its annual total budgets disclosure. In 2013, the regime spent $121 billion on domestic security compared to $114 billion on national defense.

Li Dayu, a former Chinese journalist turned YouTuber, now based in the United States, said in a recent post that it is “stupid” for the communist regime to recruit “bridge watchers,” as banners can also appear in other places including on walls, tree branches, and utility poles. “How many more people does it [the communist regime] have to hire?” Li said in his latest program, “Maybe they need to hire ‘wall watchers’ and ‘utility pole watchers’ in the future as well.”

The Epoch Times reached out to the Haidian District Urban Administrative and Law Enforcement Bureau, and a female staffer replied that it was the sub-district office that was recruiting bridge security guards. The Epoch Times reached out to the Haidian sub-district office and had received no reply as of press time. Xisanqi Sub-district Office, one of the offices in the Haidian district, denied recruiting any security guards to monitor bridges in its jurisdiction.

Radio Free Asia posted on Oct. 14 that governments of Beijing’s various districts were urgently publishing recruitment advertisements for “bridge watchers” to stand guard on bridges 24 hours a day in two shifts.

Wang Dan, a former student leader of the peaceful student protest in Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989, lauded the protester Peng Lifa as China’s new “tankman” or “bridge man” for his courage to speak up and his quest for liberal democracy.

Peng’s online name “Zaizhou” means “holding up the boat” literally in English, and it originates from an ancient Chinese saying, “The water that bears the boat is the same that swallows it up—that advises rulers to treat their people well, as they are the ones that will otherwise overthrow them.”

The 1989 student protest ended in a massacre by the Chinese regime, which sent tanks and soldiers with live ammunition to squash the peacefully protesting students in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. It is estimated that thousands died.

Xiao Luysheng, Hong Ning, and Zhang Ting contributed to this report.


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Sophia Lam joined The Epoch Times in 2021 and covers China-related topics.