'Heroic hymn of the people': Chinese government film marks year since
Wuhan lockdown
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[January 22, 2021]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China premiered
a patriotic documentary film on Friday to mark the one-year anniversary
of Wuhan's coronavirus lockdown, part of a broader effort by authorities
to cast the government's early response to COVID-19 in a positive light.
Small numbers of viewers gathered in Beijing to watch the film "Wuhan
Days and Nights" as it opened to the public exactly a year after Wuhan
went into a surprise 76-day lockdown in the early hours of Jan. 23,
2020.
Wuhan, in the central province of Hubei, is believed to be the epicentre
of the global pandemic that has infected nearly 100 million people and
killed over two million so far.
China managed to quash the virus months later with strict control
measures and life in Wuhan has largely returned to normal, but the
government's early response drew widespread public criticism.
The documentary, a co-production between state media and the Hubei
Propaganda Department, was released in theatres nationwide and features
tearful scenes inside Wuhan's hospitals, including medical staff tending
to patients and shots of empty streets.
"It is using life to record life, and create a heroic hymn of the
people," said a state media article posted on the Wuhan government
website following an early viewing for medical workers in the city
Wuhan.
State media have described the film as the first major documentary on
China's outbreak.
"YEAR OF STRUGGLE"
Dozens of laudatory documentaries have been released by local propaganda
authorities and government-backed media on China's COVID-19 outbreak,
evoking wartime analogies to describe the actions of medical workers and
policymakers, including President Xi Jinping.
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A woman watches the Chinese documentary "Days and Nights in Wuhan"
following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at a
cinema in Beijing, China, January 22, 2021. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
The film's release comes as China battles a fresh wave of infections
after months of apparent success in containing the virus.
Authorities are discouraging travel during next month's Lunar New
Year holiday and have imposed lockdowns on some cities, in an eerie
repeat of last year.
"I wanted to learn how China got through the hardship," said a woman
surnamed Li, 32, who was one of the first people to see the film in
Beijing. "We've been through a year of struggle and hard work, and
now there are new cases in many places."
Beijing has also sought to control the narrative around the outbreak
by silencing critics.
There was an outpouring of public grief and anger in February 2020
following the COVID-19-linked death of a Chinese doctor who had been
reprimanded for issuing an early warning about the disease.
In December, a Chinese court jailed citizen journalist Zhang Zhan
for four years for sharing her own series of first-hand accounts
from Wuhan's streets and hospitals.
Wuhan has officially recorded 46,483 cases of the disease and 3,869
deaths.
(Reporting by Cate Cadell; Editing by Kim Coghill and Gareth Jones)
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