The Chinese Communist Party‘s highly insulting anal testing has sparked international discontent. However, according to foreign media reports, the CCP has now made it mandatory for travelers entering China to undergo anal testing. Chinese Communist Party officials claim that some inbound travelers are allowed to take their own samples or provide fecal samples.
According to the Times, the New York Post and other media reports, the CCP is now mandating anal swab testing for almost all foreign travelers entering China, claiming that anal testing is “more accurate” than nasal or throat swab testing.
According to the report, diplomatic disputes with other countries over anal testing have intensified, leading Chinese doctors to suggest that officials allow travelers to take their own samples. The latest official flowchart shows that travelers can insert a swab into their anus for about 3 to 5 centimeters in the toilet, then gently rotate it and put it into the sampling container, and the whole process takes only 10 seconds.
The official guidelines for self-sampling of anal swabs are circulated on the Internet. (Web image)
There are also Shanghai doctors who say foreign travelers are allowed to provide stool samples in lieu of anal swab samples.
According to mainland media reports, Beijing has asked all incoming passengers to provide fecal samples, and in February, there were cases of passengers being forced to take anal swabs in Dalian, Xi’an, Shanghai and Tianjin. Netizens have revealed online how it feels to undergo anal exams, with some feeling intestinal discomfort for days afterward, and the most uncomfortable part being the shame of receiving an anal swab sample in front of others, especially the opposite sex.
Radio Free Asia quoted experts as saying that there is currently no academic evidence that anal swab testing is more accurate, and that the Chinese Communist Party’s compulsory anal testing of incoming passengers may be a way to “throw the blame” out.
The U.S. State Department recently protested to China over the mandatory anal swab testing of diplomats in China, and the Chinese Foreign Ministry subsequently promised that U.S. diplomats would be exempt from the test. Subsequently, The Japanese government also made representations regarding the forced anal testing of Japanese citizens, but did not receive a positive response from the Chinese side. The South Korean government announced that it had reached a compromise with the Chinese side and that South Koreans could provide a stool sample instead of an anal test when entering China.
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