
-
German budget plans outline vast spending - and record debt
-
Deadly dengue fever impacts climate-hit Bangladesh coast
-
France orders Tesla to end 'deceptive commercial practices'
-
France charges Briton over staged Disneyland 'marriage' with child
-
Israel says agreed to Trump plan for ceasefire with Iran
-
Brazil records 62% jump in area burned by forest fires: monitor
-
It will be 'big and punchy': Athletics chief Coe looks to future
-
India's Pant reprimanded for dissent in first Test
-
Oil prices drop as Israel agrees to ceasefire proposal
-
UK aims to tackle Google dominance of online search
-
'Not at the level': Atletico left to ruminate after Club World Cup KO
-
Border confusion as Thailand shuts land crossings with Cambodia
-
Vietnam puts 41 on trial in $45 mn corruption case
-
World facing 'most complex' situation in decades: WEF
-
Trial of Sean Combs approaches final stretch
-
Panama says has regained 'control' of restive province after months of protests
-
Pharrell bigs up brown denim as Paris fashion week starts
-
'Companions' ease pain of China's bustling, bamboozling hospitals
-
Japan PM to face tough upper house election on July 20
-
Judge tells Australian mushroom murder jury to put emotion aside
-
Messi's Miami and PSG progress to set up Club World Cup reunion
-
Rock on: how crushed stone could help fight climate change
-
Porto, Al Ahly out after sharing eight goals in thriller
-
Glamour, gripes as celebs head to Venice for exclusive Bezos wedding
-
Messi to face PSG after Miami and Palmeiras draw to go through
-
Schmidt warned he must release Wallabies for Lions warm-ups
-
Palmeiras fight back against Inter Miami - both teams through
-
With missiles overhead, Tel Aviv residents huddle underground
-
Virgin Australia surges in market comeback
-
Asian stocks up as Trump announces Iran-Israel ceasefire
-
Flatterer-in-chief: How NATO's Rutte worked to win over Trump
-
NATO summit seeks to keep Trump happy -- and alliance united
-
Russian drone attacks kill three in northeast Ukraine
-
Better than gold: how Ecuador cashed in on surging cocoa prices
-
Pro-Palestinian protest leader details 104 days spent in US custody
-
Gender not main factor in attacks on Egyptian woman pharaoh: study
-
'Throwing the book away' with no preparation for next season: Bayern's Kompany
-
Global Financial Institutions and Technology Leaders Collaborate Under FINOS to Launch Open Source Common Controls for AI Services
-
Trump announces ceasefire between Iran and Israel
-
US Supreme Court allows third country deportations to resume
-
Oil prices tumble as markets shrug off Iranian rebuttal to US
-
Rishabh Pant: India's unorthodox hero with 'method to his madness'
-
PSG ease past Seattle Sounders and into Club World Cup last 16
-
Atletico win in vain as Botafogo advance at Club World Cup
-
Osaka, Azarenka advance on grass at Bad Homburg
-
Haliburton latest NBA star with severe injury in playoffs
-
Trump wants quick win in Iran, but goal remains elusive
-
Kasatkina falls, Fonseca secures first win on grass at Eastbourne
-
Iran attacks US base in Qatar in retaliation for strikes on nuclear sites
-
Club World Cup prize money does not mean more pressure: Chelsea boss Maresca

China's censors scrub viral Shanghai lockdown video from online platforms
A viral video showing the impact of the prolonged coronavirus lockdown on Shanghai's residents has been taken down by China's internet censors Saturday, triggering an online backlash.
About 25 million residents in Shanghai have been shut inside their homes since early April as officials rush to curb its worst ever outbreak since the beginning of the pandemic.
The city has struggled to provide fresh vegetables and other essentials to those in lockdown, while patients have reported trouble accessing regular medical care as thousands of health staff were deployed to covid testing and treatment.
The issues were chronicled in a six-minute video titled "Voice of April", which was widely shared on Weibo and WeChat -- major social media platforms in China.
Shot against a simple aerial black-and-white view of the city, the video opens with audio clips from media briefings in March where officials say Shanghai will not have a citywide lockdown.
The decision was quickly reversed by April as the highly transmissible Omicron variant led to a spike in infections.
As the camera pans across the empty streets of Shanghai, audio clips are played in chronological order showing the dire situation of residents shunted into their homes without preparation.
"We have gone to the hospital twice, but no one is there to treat us," a man whose father is ill is heard saying.
In another, a woman complains about not being allowed back home when she returned from hospital after chemotherapy.
There is also a clip of residents yelling, "Thank you, Big Whites" -- a nickname for health staff dressed in white PPE gear deployed to various nieghbourhoods.
Internet censors battled for hours Saturday to scrub the video from Weibo and Wechat, as netizens kept uploading it into different cloud services.
The swift censorship led to an online backlash.
"The video was just presenting raw facts. There is nothing provocative!" said one commentator on Weibo.
"Its content is nothing new... But the fact of seeing that even that is censored, it bothers me," wrote another.
While "Voice of April" is not accessible on any major social media platform in China as of Saturday afternoon, it can still be viewed on Youtube.
Shanghai reported 23,504 new coronavirus cases and 12 deaths on Saturday.
A.S.Diogo--PC