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At least 5 people in China have disappeared, gotten arrested, or been silenced after speaking out about the coronavirus — here's what we know about them

Whistleblowers and citizen journalists in China are speaking out against the Chinese Communist Party and President Xi Jinping's handling of the coronavirus outbreak that originated in Wuhan.

Pro-democracy activist Leung Kwok-hung, wearing a mask, attends a vigil for Chinese doctor Li Wenliang, in Hong Kong, Friday, Feb. 7, 2020. The death of a young doctor who was reprimanded for warning about China's new virus triggered an outpouring Friday of praise for him and fury that communist authorities put politics above public safety. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

Chinese law professor Xu Zhangrun recently posted a scathing review of the way president Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party have handled the coronavirus outbreak.

"They all blithely stood by as the crucial window of opportunity to deal with the outbreak of the infection snapped shut in their faces," he wrote, suggesting that government censorship of information about the coronavirus hampered China's ability to control its spread.

Xu , who teaches at Beijing's Tsinghua University, added: "The cause of all of this lies with The Axlerod [that is, Xi Jinping] and the cabal that surrounds him."

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The essay , published online February 10, was immediately taken down. Xu was placed under house arrest, cut off from the internet, and scrubbed from all social media sites, The Guardian reported .

His critique came three days after Wuhan doctor Li Wenliang died of the coronavirus. Li had sent a message to a group of medical school alumni, warning them about a mysterious new illness. But local police reprimanded and silenced him.

In addition to Li and Xu, at least three citizen journalists have disappeared or were arrested after sharing information about the outbreak on social media.

Here's what we know about all five of them.

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"They confined him at home under the pretext that he had to be quarantined after the trip," the friend said. "He was in fact under de facto house arrest and his movements were restricted."

The Guardian reported that guards were patrolling outside Xu's home last week, though they have since left. Xu remains incommunicado.

The law professor's name is notably absent from China's Weibo social network.

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Florence Lo/Illustration/Reuters

According to The Guardian , many of Xu's friends have been unable to get in touch with him for days.One of the professor's friends anonymously reported that they had managed to text him but feared Xu was under surveillance.

"He has not directly responded (to my queries) but just told me not to worry," the friend told The Guardian.

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Xinhua/Li Jing/Getty

This isn't the first time Xu has been punished for "speech crimes," according to his essay.

In 2018, he was placed under investigation by Tsinghua University after publishing another essay criticizing Xi Jinping.

"I was suspended from my job as a university lecturer and cashiered as a professor, reduced to a minor academic rank," he wrote, adding, "my freedoms have been curtailed ever since."

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Vincent Yu/AP

The recent post from Xu, a civil-rights lawyer and public intellectual, called out the Chinese president for his "inability to handle major crises," according to the South China Morning Post .

Xu previously served four years in prison for his legal activism. He was arrested again on February 15 after being on run for two months following a police crackdown on a meeting of human-rights lawyers and activists that he attended in Xiamen.

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LI WENLIANG/GAN EN FUND via REUTERS

The WeChat message Li sent to his medical-school contacts on December 30 told them about seven patients with an unknown virus. They had all worked at or visited the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market.

The same day, the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission published a notice warning that some people had contracted a type of pneumonia, possibly at the market. But the commission said "organizations or individuals are not allowed to release treatment information to the public without authorization," CNN reported .

Screenshots of Li's message had already gone viral, though.

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Weibo

Four days after sharing the message, Li was summoned to a police station. Authorities told him that his warning was illegal and had "severely disturbed the social order," the BBC reported .

According to the BBC, the letter he was told to sign read: "We solemnly warn you: If you keep being stubborn, with such impertinence, and continue this illegal activity, you will be brought to justice is that understood?"

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Beneath that, Li wrote, "Yes, I do."

Li was not detained, and he returned to work.

STR/AFP via Getty Images

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While sick in the intensive care unit, Li continued to post on his Weibo account.

"I was wondering why [the government's] official notices were still saying there was no human-to-human transmission, and there were no healthcare workers infected," Li wrote on January 31 from his hospital bed, according to CNN .

Days before his death, he told the New York Times that officials could have done better at sharing information about the coronavirus at the beginning of the outbreak.

"I think it would have been a lot better. There should be more openness and transparency," he said.

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Screenshot YouTube/Chen Qiushi

Chen traveled to Wuhan in late January and uploaded more than 100 posts from Wuhan to his Twitter and Youtube accounts over two weeks. His videos showed overwhelmed hospitals and medical wards.

Chen's friends and family have been unable to reach him since February 6, according to posts on his Twitter account. They say he was forcibly quarantined by Wuhan police . Chen's Weibo account which had more than 740,000 followers was shut down on the day of his disappearance, according to his friends and family.

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"In front of me is the virus, and behind me is the legal and administrative power of China," he said in the video . "Even death doesn't scare me! Do you think I'm scared of the Communist Party?"

The Wuhan and Qingdao city police said they had no information about Chen's whereabouts when contacted by CNN .

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Chen Qiushi via AP

Chen traveled to Hong Kong in August to report on the protests there. After his trip, all of his social media accounts were deleted, he told Quartz in early February .

So this time, he added, "I gave my overseas friends all the passwords to my social media accounts like YouTube, and if I don't contact them for 12 hours they will change the passwords."

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One of Chen's friends, Xu Xiaodong, posted an update on YouTube February 9 saying Chen had been "detained in the name of quarantine" for two weeks, despite showing no symptoms of the virus. According to the AP , Xu also said on Twitter that day that no one had been able to get in touch with Chen in quarantine.

"I risked my life to post the videos," Chen told Quartz, and added: "If I get arrested they could force me to delete all my videos on YouTube and Twitter, and that would be a great blow to me."

Fang told The Los Angeles Times that authorities ordered him to stop posting "rumors" that would "spread panic" online.

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The police released him the next morning. Fang posted a video suggesting that he was released because of the outpouring of support for his freedom on social media.

After his release, Fang continued posting videos from hospitals across Wuhan.

"This pneumonia we see today, this Wuhan flu, it's both a natural disaster and a man-made problem," he said in one of his videos . "That's because they've covered up the facts. They muffled Li Wenliang for telling the truth."

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Screenshot/YouTube

He refused to leave his home, according to Vice , so firefighters broke down the door after police surrounded the apartment.

The last video Fang posted to his YouTube channel came on February 9. In it, he repeated again and again: "All citizens resist, hand power back to the people!"

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