China’s leader Xi Jinping is suffering from brain aneurysm and wants to be treated with traditional medicine, reports claim
- Bloggers speculate that Chinese premier has bulging blood vessel in brain
- Censored social media posts suggest Xi’s poor health worsened by Covid crisis
- He reportedly wants treatment with traditional medicine and no major surgery
- Xi was rushed to hospital with brain bleed in late 2021, unverified reports claim
Chinese premier Xi Jinping won’t go under the knife to treat a rumoured brain aneurysm, reports in China claim.
Bloggers suggested the Beijing leader, 68, prefers traditional medicine and will refuse brain surgery, according to posts removed by state censors.
At the start of the pandemic, China worked to export traditional medicine options for the treatment of Covid. Xi was one of the campaign’s leading advocates.
The premier has reportedly struggled as a wave of ultra-strict Covid lockdowns across China stretch the nation’s economy – and the government’s ability to suppress dissent.
Xi Jinping (pictured at a Communist Party meeting on May 10) is allegedly suffering from a bulging blood vessel in his brain. Brain aneurysms tend to affect adults over 40
He is thought to have been rushed to hospital late last year after doctors spotted a bulging blood vessel in his brain, news agency ANI reported.
Like Putin, Xi’s health has always been a closely guarded secret.
Addressing a crowd in Shenzhen during the first Covid wave in 2020, observers noted his slow speech and coughing.
While visiting Italy in March 2019, Xi was pictured with a noticeable limp and needing help while trying to sit down.
Last week the Politburo state council warned the public not to rebel against lockdowns.
China’s ‘Zero Covid’ policy has included some of the world’s most draconian social distancing measures including fencing around apartment buildings and metal barriers in the street.
Elusive Xi hosts Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi for an Asian leader summit in January 2020
Toddlers have also reportedly been separated from their parents in pursuit of containing the virus.
In Shanghai, images of workers in white hazmat suits sealing entrances of housing blocks and closing off entire streets with green metal cages spread on social media.
Xi reaffirmed his commitment to a ‘zero-COVID’ policy two weeks ago, putting China at odds with much of the world.
While many countries are dropping restrictions and trying to live with the virus, China is keeping its international borders largely shut and closing off entire cities to all but essential travel.
The Chinese Politburo acknowledged the economic cost of lockdowns, saying efforts must be made to ‘minimize the impact of the epidemic on economic and social development,’ the official Xinhua News Agency reported.
Despite the toll on the economy and everyday life, the approach is extolled by the Communist Party as a virtuous display of self-sacrifice under the slogan ‘Persistence is victory.’
Though it carefully censors the web, China’s government has also struggled to keep a lid on disaffection with the Zero Covid plan.
An estimated 180million Chinese are in lockdown despite relatively low infection rates.
Draconian measures in Shanghai have only tightened, with children told to walk to school in hazmat suits and diners trapped in a restaurant after the doors were drilled shut.
Buildings where cases were found have had entrances sealed up, with a small opening for Covid prevention guards to pass through.
‘This is so disrespectful of the rights of the people inside, using metal barriers to enclose them like domestic animals,’ said one Weibo user.
Another video showed residents shouting from balconies at workers as they set up fencing. The workers relented and took it away. Other videos showed people trying to pull fences down.
‘Isn’t this a fire hazard?’ commented another Weibo user.
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