China | Chaguan

China’s harsh and elitist covid rules

The pandemic revives old fears about migrants from humble places

IN TIMES OF disease, revolution or famine, Beijing’s city gates offered China’s imperial rulers more than mere security. These hulking towers of grey brick and stone were symbols of a system that strove to keep death itself far from the seat of supreme power. When smallpox swept the arid plains and mountains of north-east China, the sick were quarantined miles outside Beijing and even imperial family members banished, if they lacked immunity from a previous infection. During some bubonic plagues, burials were banned in Beijing and detailed records kept of each coffin exiting its gates. In the heyday of China’s final, revolution-haunted dynasty, the Qing, the city maintained a garrison of 33,000 paramilitary police—or about one guard for every 20 Beijingers—with orders to track and register every stranger who entered its walls, whether domestic or foreign. When famines stalked the countryside, a gruel of millet and rice was served at temples just outside the city gates, to keep refugees from storming Beijing.

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “China’s elitist covid rules”

The Fed that failed

From the April 23rd 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from China

A traditional fortune teller waits for customers in his shop in Beijing, China

It’s a good time to be an astrologer in China

In the face of hardship, the country’s youth are embracing superstition

A container terminal in Qingdao, China

The early days of the Trump administration, as viewed from China

A good start, but it could get worse quickly


A man watches live coverage on a TV screen at his store of Chinese President Xi Jinping

How (un)popular is China’s Communist Party?

As the economy falters and the social compact frays, Xi Jinping wants to know


An outrage that even China’s supine media has called out

Anger is growing over a form of detention linked to torture and deaths

Why foreign law firms are leaving China

A number of them are in motion to vacate

An initiative so feared that China has stopped saying its name

“Made in China 2025” has been a success, but at what cost?