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Petitioners Gather in Beijing Ahead of CCP Top Political Meetings, as Regime Tightens Control

Video of a petitioner calling for rising up on social media has attracted wide attention.
Petitioners Gather in Beijing Ahead of CCP Top Political Meetings, as Regime Tightens Control
A man holds a protest banner outside the central petition office in Beijing on March 2, 2016. Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images
Alex Wu
2/28/2026|Updated: 3/1/2026
0:00

Many Chinese citizens with grievances are coming to Beijing to file petitions, as the Chinese communist regime is preparing for its annual top political meetings amid a sluggish economy and growing public discontent.

The Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) key annual meetings, known as “Two Sessions,” will be held next week. Authorities have already begun taking strict measures to prevent petitioners from traveling to Beijing.

The CCP’s Two Sessions are the annual plenary sessions of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference and the National People’s Congress, the two houses of China’s rubber-stamp legislature.

The Chinese regime set up its petition system decades ago, inviting citizens to directly address with central authorities issues or injustices caused by local officials. Numerous people from across the country travel to Beijing each year to file their petitions, especially before major political meetings or anniversaries. Petitioners believe that during these times, with more officials gathered in the capital, they have a better chance of having their grievances heard and corrected by someone in authority.

In response, the CCP typically ramps up its already stringent security measures ahead of dates deemed sensitive, stopping petitioners and preventing any potential escalation into protests at the nation’s political center.

A video circulating online shows that on Feb. 25, a huge crowd of petitioners gathered outside the State Bureau for Letters and Visits in Beijing.
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Another popular video on social media shows that on Feb. 23, several long-time petitioners were giving public speeches to the line of petitioners waiting outside the petition office.

One female petitioner, referencing CCP leaders without naming them, shouted: “Is this what peace and prosperity look like? You can see what happens to foreigners, but you can’t see what happens to Chinese people? How have you governed the country? This generation of leaders is blind and deaf; they have ruined this country and ruined the youth of so many people!”

The female petitioner also told other petitioners loudly that waiting in line to get into the petition office was useless, and called on everyone to learn from “peasant uprisings and workers’ strikes.”

“We demand human rights!” she shouted.

“Don’t use this method to seek justice, you'll never get any results, even if you try until you die,” she said.

Paramilitary police officers stop a woman as she protests on her knees in front of the Great Hall of the People during an annual session of China’s rubber-stamp legislature, the National People’s Congress, in Beijing on March 13, 2015. (Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images)
Paramilitary police officers stop a woman as she protests on her knees in front of the Great Hall of the People during an annual session of China’s rubber-stamp legislature, the National People’s Congress, in Beijing on March 13, 2015. Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images

CCP Tightening Control

Chen Fang, an insider in Beijing who used a pseudonym out of fear of reprisal, told The Epoch Times that the Chinese regime’s Stability Maintenance Office has been working since Lunar New Year’s Day to deal with petitioners.

The period from Feb. 25 to March 12 is the main “security period” for the Two Sessions, featuring stability maintenance work and the arrival of foreign journalists, Chen said. Secondary security checks have also begun, he said.

“Any train arriving in Beijing or passing through Beijing will undergo secondary security checks,” he said.

Every year as the CCP’s Two Sessions approach, CCP authorities either force dissidents in Beijing to “take a vacation” in other regions or place them under house arrest and surveillance. Chen said that as of Feb. 26, many dissidents had not yet been told to leave Beijing, which is later than in previous years, and he learned that one of the reasons for the delay is that the government is short of money.

Beijing authorities have recently issued several notices regarding security for the Two Sessions. A notice issued on Feb. 27 states that from March 1 to March 12, the release of balloons, kites, and other objects that may affect flight safety will be prohibited within the Beijing administrative area, as will the flight of unmanned aerial vehicles and the release of sky lanterns. Another notice issued on Feb. 25 states that Beijing will ban vehicles carrying hazardous chemicals for 12 days from March 2 to March 13.

Ning Haizhong, Luo Ya, and Sophia Lam contributed to this report.
Alex Wu
Alex Wu
Author
Alex Wu is a U.S.-based writer for The Epoch Times focusing on Chinese society, Chinese culture, human rights, and international relations.
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