{"id":143760,"date":"2023-11-28T12:06:26","date_gmt":"2023-11-28T12:06:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebrity-hub.com\/?p=143760"},"modified":"2023-11-28T12:06:26","modified_gmt":"2023-11-28T12:06:26","slug":"chinas-infamous-big-whites-return-as-workers-disinfect-streets-buildings-amid-outbreak-in-chilling-echo-of-covid-the-sun","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebrity-hub.com\/lifestyle\/chinas-infamous-big-whites-return-as-workers-disinfect-streets-buildings-amid-outbreak-in-chilling-echo-of-covid-the-sun\/","title":{"rendered":"China\u2019s infamous \u2018Big Whites\u2019 return as workers disinfect streets & buildings amid outbreak in chilling echo of Covid | The Sun"},"content":{"rendered":"
CHINA'S infamous "Big White" figures have made a chilling return as hazmat workers disinfect streets and buildings amid the country's latest mystery outbreak.<\/p>\n
Public health workers wearing full protective gear have appeared on the streets of northern China in the latest social media footage.<\/p>\n
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Beijing and Liaoning have been hit the hardest with the recent wave of illnesses but it is in Sanhe, in China's northern Hebei Province, where images and videos have emerged from.<\/p>\n
On Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, videos showed disease prevention teams disinfecting a classroom and city streets while dressed from head to toe in hazmat suits, as reported by Newsweek.<\/p>\n
Termed "dabai," literally meaning "big white [figures]," the hazmat workers became a symbol of China's unpopular "zero-COVID" policies.<\/p>\n
In a chilling echo of the pandemic, there are fears that involuntary quarantine at home and the forced removal of suspected cases from homes could make a return.<\/p>\n