Identity of the Man Who Pulled Off Protest on Beijing Overpass Amid Unprecedented Security Before the CCP Congress

China Change, October 13, 2022

Peng Lifa, disguised as a construction worker, was seen hanging up one of the two banners on Sitong Overpass. Photo: social media

Based on information online that we have gathered so far, the man is Peng Lifa (彭立发), known online as Peng Zaizhou (彭载舟), who displayed two large banners demanding the removal of Xi Jinping on Sitong Overpass (四通桥) on the Third Ring Road, north section, in Beijing Haidian District around 2 pm Beijing Time on October 13, the day after the Chinese Communist Party concluded the 7th Plenary Session of the 19th Central Committee. 

One banner reads: No PCR test, want livelihoods; not lockdowns, want freedom; not lies, want dignity; not Cultural Revolution, want reform; not a supreme leader, want ballots; not to be slaves but citizens.

The other reads: Students strike, workers strike, remove the dictator and state thief Xi Jinping.

The Sitong Overpass is 280 meters in length located at a busy part of the city with a concentration of universities and tech companies. It is a 6-lane city speedway overpass that can only be accessed through traffic from either direction. This gave Peng some time to carry out his action before the security responders arrived. 

He disguised himself as a construction worker wearing an orange work suit and a hard hat, and set something on fire that gave off a plume of black smoke to attract attention. He also appeared to have pre-recorded his message and broadcast it loud and clear on a loop.

His action obviously was well-planned, meticulously timed, and perfectly executed. So much so that the police may not be convinced that it was the act of one man.

He maximized the impact he could make in the few minutes he had, and succeeded in getting attention and getting his messages out: photos and video clips widely circulated on Chinese social media before censorship kicking in. Sitong Overpass, Peng Zaizhou, Peng Lifa, Haidian, brave man, Third Ring Road North, bridge + fire, banner (四通桥、彭载舟、彭立发、 勇士、海淀、北三环、北四环、桥+火、横幅) have since become sensitive words subject to account deletion and suspension. Rumor has it that WeChat has blocked 600,000 accounts for posting pictures of, or commenting on, the Beijing Sitong Overpass incident. A journalist reported that his account was suspended for 60 days for merely saying “I’ve seen it.”

Chinese netizens already dubbed Peng “The Bridge Man”, echoing The Tank Man of 1989.

It looks like he has two Twitter accounts @lifa_petter and @peng_phy. He posted similar messages in reply to some popular Chinese accounts the day before (Oct. 12) and in the early morning of Oct. 13, calling for a strike by students and workers, a military uprising, and drivers honking on October 16, the day the CCP is set to open its 20th Congress in which Xi is expected to go on to a third term as the Party’s General Secretary – breaking the term limit rules. These tweets have by now been removed.

He wrote, “We want Xi Jinping the tyrant to know that, there are men in China on the path to pursue freedom” — a reference to Xi’s laments that the Soviet Union didn’t have a man who was man enough to save it from collapse.

Peng has a background in physics and published a paper, which he tweeted, about electromagnetic force in Science and Technology Innovation Herald (科技创新导报), a state aerospace publication, as recently as 2021. Interestingly, on the website researchgate.net where his paper is available online, he has a tag that reads “Universal Suffrage Committee of the People’s Republic of China”.

He is also a partner at a company called Beijing Melon Network Technology Co., Ltd. (北京甜瓜网络科技有限公司) that sells acrylic products.

Based on China’s playbook in recent years, we fear that Peng will be tortured severely and locked up for years, and may even die, in prison. Like the Tank Man, we may never hear about him again.

Earlier this year, he tweeted photos of Beijing spring, him donating blood, and a recent photo of what seems a family outing rafting in Baihe Grand Canyon in northern Beijing.

The Chinese public’s anger, frustration, and resentment toward Xi is palpable, widespread, and intense as his tyrannical zero-Covid policy continues to sap businesses and societal vitality by subjecting millions and millions of people to unpredictable lockdowns and hardship.

From how it is decided upon, to the fact that everyone knows it is a terrible mistake but no one is able to correct it, the zero-Covid madness, we contend, is the equivalent of Mao Zedong’s Great Leap Forward, and will inflict comparable disasters on the people of China.


Related:

‘Bridge Man’ Peng Zaizhou’s Mission Impossible and His ‘Toolkit for the Removal of Xi Jinping’, China Change, October 19, 2022.

35 responses to “Identity of the Man Who Pulled Off Protest on Beijing Overpass Amid Unprecedented Security Before the CCP Congress”

  1. […] popularity is impossible to gauge. But he is likely testing his people’s patience. On Thursday, a courageous protester unfurled banners in Beijing, one calling for Mr. Xi’s ouster and another reading, in part, “We […]

  2. […] réseaux a permis de faire un maximum de bruit avant l’intervention de la censure, note le site Chinachange.org. Cela, grâce notamment au choix du lieu : la voie express située sur un viaduc de 280 […]

  3. […] réseaux a permis de faire un maximum de bruit avant l’intervention de la censure, note le site Chinachange.org. Cela, grâce notamment au choix du lieu : la voie express située sur un viaduc de 280 mètres […]

  4. […] réseaux a permis de faire un maximum de bruit avant l’intervention de la censure, note le site Chinachange.org. Cela, grâce notamment au choix du lieu : la voie express située sur un viaduc de 280 mètres […]

  5. […] not possible to gauge. However he’s doubtless testing his folks’s endurance. On Thursday, a courageous protester unfurled banners in Beijing, one calling for Mr. Xi’s ouster and one other studying, partly, “We […]

  6. […] popularity is impossible to gauge. But he is likely testing his people’s patience. On Thursday, a courageous protester unfurled banners in Beijing, one calling for Mr. Xi’s ouster and another reading, in part, “We […]

  7. […] honneurs de M. Xi. Toutefois il teste pratiquement la résistance de son saturé. Jeudi, une brave manifestant Des banderoles ont été hissées à Organsin, l’une appelant à l’expulsion de M. Xi et […]

  8. Waverly Duli says:

    When I first saw the  footage of the Peng Lifa protest I immediately thought the protest slogans were very well articulated and could only conclude that the author was no mere disgruntled CoVid lock-down soul. Rather he’s an educated intelligent snd well organised protestor. The heart goes out to him. In one’s dreams a swat team goes in and spirits him away from the clutches of these vile CCP animals ‘detaining’ him. But this isn’t a Hollywood movie. Instead the bastards seem to be winning at least for now..

    There’s a saying that goes: If you pay no interest to politics, one day politics will1 take an interest in you, regardless. And there’s another saying that expresses the same sentiment, albeit more cruely: A People don’t generally get the leaders they should, they get the ones they deserve. If China has been run by the cruel and inhuman  CCP machine for over seventy years, to what extent are they the authors of their own plight? Are they empathetic toward  the predicament of individuals or groups who are politically and unjustly targeted by the CCP?

    China’s techno-survrilence State is formidable and makes me feel more jaundiced about China’s potential for a Democratic future. Moreover, if this 3rd term endorsement goes through for Xi Jin-Ping at the Party Congress 8n as few days nothing good can possibly come of it.

  9. […] popularity is impossible to gauge. But he is likely testing his people’s patience. On Thursday, a courageous protester unfurled banners in Beijing, one calling for Mr. Xi’s ouster and another reading, in part, “We […]

  10. […] According to China Change, a journalist said his account has been suspended for 60 days for merely saying “I’ve seen it.” […]

  11. […] according to Journalist China Change said his account was suspended for 60 days for simply saying “I saw it.” […]

  12. […] According to China Change, a journalist said his account has been suspended for 60 days for merely saying “I’ve seen it.” […]

  13. […] According to China Change, a journalist said his account has been suspended for 60 days for merely saying “I’ve seen it.” […]

  14. […] According to China Change, a journalist said his account has been suspended for 60 days for merely saying “I’ve seen it.” […]

  15. […] Very thorough censorship of social media kicked in, to scrub the event from people’s minds: […]

  16. […] popularity is impossible to gauge. But he is likely testing his people’s patience. On Thursday, a courageous protester unfurled banners in Beijing, one calling for Mr. Xi’s ouster and another reading, in part, “We […]

  17. […] the regime. Unlike Tank Man, who has never been named, the man on the overpass has been identified, unofficially, as Peng Lifa. (Another difference between the two cases: We still don’t know for sure what […]

  18. […] According China Change, a reporter, said his account was suspended for 60 days for simply saying “I saw it.” […]

  19. […] too early to evaluate the full impact of the extraordinary one-man protest staged by Peng Zaizhou (彭载舟), real name Peng Lifa (彭立发), on Sitong Overpass (四通桥) on October 13, 2022 in […]

  20. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  21. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  22. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  23. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  24. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  25. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  26. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  27. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  28. […] Thorough censorship of social media began to put an end to the phenomenon From people’s minds: […]

  29. […] and swift: the scene was cleared inside hours and censors moved shortly, with as much as 600,000 WeChat accounts blocked as a part of effort to erase photos from public […]

  30. […] the CCP’s repressive leadership, on Oct. 13, a demonstrator Peng Lifa lit a smoke bomb and unfurled a banner on Beijing’s Sitong Overpass calling for Xi’s removal and democratic elections for the […]

  31. […] man now widely believed to be Peng Lifa reportedly disguised himself as a construction worker to get atop Beijing’s […]

  32. […] and fast: the scene was cleared in a few hours, and censors moved in quickly, with up to 600,000 WeChat accounts blocked as part of the effort to scrub the images from the public consciousnessMore on: China Asia […]

  33. […] too early to evaluate the full impact of the extraordinary one-man protest staged by Peng Zaizhou (彭载舟), real name Peng Lifa (彭立发), on Sitong Overpass (四通桥) on October 13, […]

  34. […] and fast: the scene was cleared in a few hours, and censors moved in quickly, with up to 600,000 WeChat accounts blocked as part of the effort to scrub the images from the public consciousnessMore on: China Asia […]

  35. […] 13 de octubre, una protesta de alto perfil de un solo hombre en el paso elevado Sitong de Beijing que pedía la destitución de Xi y elecciones […]

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