‘FINAL WARNING’

China cops threaten to jail people for seven years if they share news on social media about killer coronavirus spread

CHINESE people are being threatened with seven years in prison if they dare to share news about the killer epidemic unfolding around them on social media. 

The draconian punishment has been introduced as information and images have been leaking out which lay bare the extent of the coronavirus crisis — and the desperate attempts to bring it under control. 

Read our coronavirus live blog for all the latest news and updates

An unverified clip appears to show Chinese police knocking on doors to threaten jail to anyone sharing news on social media

The police officers appear to be lining up along the corridor to warn those inside

For while the ruling Chinese Communist Party is battling coronovirus, it also wants to control what people know about.

The country’s People Daily — a newspaper which like all other news outlets is state-controlled — ran an article warning people of spreading “rumours” on social media. 

It declared those who “disrupt social order” by posting on information that doesn’t come from official sources on social media risk up to seven years behind bars.  

China’s huge online censorship system, which is known as the Great Firewall, is used to block any information the government deems to be “rumour” — or not a government source. 

But footage showing how the government is dealing with the coronavirus crisis has been leaking out.

Authorities should recognise that censorship only fuels public distrust, and instead encourage civil society engagement and media reporting on this public health crisis.

Yaqiu Wang, Human Rights Watch

Some hospital workers have posted traumatic clips exposing how they are struggling to cope. 

Other footage filmed by citizens and posted online has shown people being violently forced to wear masks as well as being barricaded in their own homes in a bid to stop the spread of the bug.

But the authorities are cracking down on what has been appearing on social media.

It emerged that eight medics raised the alarm on the coronavirus in December on a medical school’s alumni group on WeChat, a popular social network in China.

The whistleblowers from Wuhan have since been detained. 

And yesterday we reported how a man, called Fang Bin,  was tracked down and arrested after filming a covert video showing the true scale of the coronavirus as body bags pile up inside a Wuhan hospital. 

The images from inside a medical facility in Wuhan, the city at the epicentre of the deadly viral outbreak, shows covered bodies lining corridors as staffers and patients walk the halls with masks on.

In the covert video, Fang Bing claims to count eight body bags on top of each other

He then casually walks into a room as a man is pronounced dead on the spot

Fang Bin was later arrested by police for taking the covert video

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Human Rights Watch has said that police across China have detained dozens of people for their online posts related to the virus in recent weeks.

Yaqiu Wang, a China researcher for Human Rights Watch, said: “Authorities should recognise that censorship only fuels public distrust, and instead encourage civil society engagement and media reporting on this public health crisis.

“The coronavirus outbreak requires a swift and comprehensive response that respects human rights.”

To fight negative commentary being spread by social media the government owned media has stepped up their propaganda, showing just how well it has been responding.

This has included numerous videos of the new 1,000 hospital which has now been completed in Wuhan.

AFP or licensors
A man wearing a face mask cycles past the body of a man who collapsed and died

AFP or licensors
A medic in a hazmat suit with the body of the mask-wearing man in Wuhan

EPA
Patients queue up to seek treatment in Wuhan Tongji Hospital Fever Clinic in Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak

Weibo
This footage allegedly shows a dead body underneath a white sheet in hospital in Wuhan, China

Rex Features
Staff in hospitals in Wuhan have said they are overwhelmed and are at a breaking point

AFP or licensors
Medical staff puts on protective clothing before gong into the infected ward
Woman attacks shopping centre staff before being dragged away by police for refusing to wear a mask to prevent coronavirus spread
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