China bank protest stopped by health codes turning red, depositors say
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[June 14, 2022]
By Engen Tham
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - A protest planned by
hundreds of bank depositors in central China seeking access to their
frozen funds has been thwarted because the authorities have turned their
health code apps red, several depositors told Reuters.
The depositors were planning to travel to the central province of Henan
this week from across China to protest against an almost two-month block
on accessing at least $178 million of deposits, which has left companies
unable to pay workers and individuals unable to access savings.
Rights groups have warned China could use its vast COVID surveillance
infrastructure to stifle dissent. Without a green code on their
smartphone app, citizens lose access to public transport and spaces such
as restaurants and malls, as well as the right to travel across the
country.
"They are putting digital handcuffs on us," said a depositor from
Sichuan province surnamed Chen, who declined to use his full name for
fear of government retribution.
The Henan provincial government, the National Health Commission and the
Ministry of Public Security did not respond to requests for comment.
After recent COVID outbreaks, some regions in China have asked
travellers to register their plans online.
A man surnamed Liu, who lives in Hubei province, found that his health
code turned red on the morning of June 12 after he registered the day
before to travel to Henan.
Liu had planned to travel to a protest planned for Monday in the Henan
provincial capital Zhengzhou, where he had hoped to get his money back.
The protest would have been the latest among numerous such
demonstrations in Henan in recent months.
More than 200 depositors were similarly blocked when their health codes
turned red, according to members of a WeChat group.
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People line up to enter a branch of China Construction Bank, after
the lockdown placed to curb the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
outbreak was lifted in Shanghai, China June 6, 2022. REUTERS/Aly
Song/File Photo
It could not be ascertained if the change in code was
intended to block the protesters or for another reason, but three
depositors told Reuters they knew people who had registered to
travel to Henan, who were not connected to the frozen funds, whose
codes did not turn red.
Yu Zhou Xin Min Sheng Village Bank, Shangcai Huimin Country Bank and
Zhecheng Huanghuai Community Bank froze deposits on April 18, with
all three telling customers they were upgrading internal systems.
Liu, who declined to give his full name for fear of government
repercussions, said his child may not be able to go to school if his
code does not soon revert to green.
"I can't do anything, I can't go anywhere. You're treated as though
you're a criminal. It infringes on my human rights," said Liu.
Wang Qiong, who lives in the central city of Wuhan, found her health
code had turned red after she registered to travel to Henan on June
11.
"The police had my identity details from the last time I went to
protest in April," said Wang, who said she has lost access to 2.3
million yuan ($341,550).
Other depositors told Reuters they were able to arrive in Zhengzhou
by train and car but their codes turned red as soon as they scanned
city health codes.
($1 = 6.7340 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Engen Tham; Additional reporting by Martin Quin
Pollard; Editing by Tony Munroe and Mark Potter)
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