Tag Archives: Construction

Bartender beats woman to death with fire extinguisher, leaves body with sandbag over head on construction site: Police – ABC News

  1. Bartender beats woman to death with fire extinguisher, leaves body with sandbag over head on construction site: Police ABC News
  2. Tatum Goodwin case: Details emerge as Dino Rojas-Moreno is charged in death of woman found in Laguna Beach alley KABC-TV
  3. Gruesome new details emerge in Laguna Beach kidnapping, murder of 27-year-old Tatum Goodwin FOX 11 Los Angeles
  4. Gruesome details released in Orange County woman’s death KTLA Los Angeles
  5. California Woman Found Dead In Alley Was Killed With Fire Extinguisher, Police Say HuffPost
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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A bridge under construction in India has collapsed – for the second time – CNN

  1. A bridge under construction in India has collapsed – for the second time CNN
  2. Bridge under construction collapses for second time in a year in eastern India South China Morning Post
  3. Bihar Bridge Collapse Poses Flooding Risk, Threatens River Biodiversity | Weather.com The Weather Channel
  4. A suspension bridge in India collapsed for the second time in 2 years, and it’s just one example of how structures and buildings have crumbled and fallen apart in the country Yahoo News
  5. Probe ordered as under-construction bridge collapses for the second time in India, raising safety concerns Fox News
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Boston Dynamics’ Atlas robot grows a set of hands, attempts construction work

Boston Dynamics’ Atlas—the world’s most advanced humanoid robot—is learning some new tricks. The company has finally given Atlas some proper hands, and in Boston Dynamics’ latest YouTube video, Atlas is attempting to do some actual work. It also released another behind-the-scenes video showing some of the work that goes into Atlas. And when things don’t go right, we see some spectacular slams the robot takes in its efforts to advance humanoid robotics.

As a humanoid robot, Atlas has mostly been focused on locomotion, starting with walking in a lab, then walking on every kind of unstable terrain imaginable, then doing some sick parkour tricks. Locomotion is all about the legs, though, and the upper half seemed mostly like an afterthought, with the arms only used to swing around for balance. Atlas previously didn’t even have hands—the last time we saw it, there were only two incomplete-looking ball grippers at the end of its arms.

This newest iteration of the robot has actual grippers. They’re simple clamp-style hands with a wrist and a single moving finger, but that’s good enough for picking things up. The goal of this video is moving “inertially significant” objects—not just picking up light boxes, but objects that are so heavy they can throw Atlas off-balance. This includes things like a big plank, a bag full of tools, and a barbell with two 10-pound weights. Atlas is learning all about those “equal and opposite forces” in the world.

Like everything in robotics, picking up and carrying an object is more complicated than it seems. Atlas has to figure out where it is in the world in relation to the object it’s picking up, come up with a grasping plan for the hands, and lift and manipulate the object, all while calculating how this extra bit of mass will affect its balance. As Boston Dynamics software engineer Robin Deits explains in the video, “When we’re trying to manipulate something like a plank, we have to just make pretty educated guesses about where is the plank, how fast is it moving, how do we need to move the arms to cause the plank to spin 180 degrees very quickly, and if we get those estimates wrong we end up doing silly things and falling over.”

Atlas isn’t just clumsily picking things up and carrying them, though. It’s running, jumping, and spinning while carrying heavy objects. At one point it jumps and throws the heavy toolbox up to its construction partner, all without losing balance. It’s doing all this on rickety scaffolding and improvised plank walkways, too, so the ground is constantly moving under Atlas’ feet with every step. Picking up stuff is the start of teaching the robot to do actual work, and it looks right at home on a rough-and-tumble construction site. The simple claw grippers mean Atlas crushes everything it picks up, though, with objects like the plank showing visible damage where the hands dug into it. Maybe the next set of experiments will teach Atlas to be less of a hulking gorilla.

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3 dead, 2 hurt in scaffolding collapse at Dilworth construction site – WSOC TV

CHARLOTTE — Three construction workers died in a scaffolding collapse in Dilworth Monday morning, Charlotte Fire confirmed.

It happened around 9 a.m. at a construction site on East Morehead Street, near Euclid Avenue, firefighters said.

Paramedics later confirmed two more construction workers were taken to the hospital, but neither were seriously hurt.

In a news conference, Charlotte Fire Capt. Jackie Gilmore said the department is waiting for OSHA to evaluate the scene.

Dozens of first responders, including Charlotte-Mecklenburg police and Charlotte Fire, were at the scene investigating. A CMPD crime scene investigation vehicle also remained at the scene.

Channel 9′s Hannah Goetz saw other construction workers in the area who were leaving their jobsites. Captain Gilmore said all construction work was stopped until the investigation was completed.

One worker told Channel 9′s Genevieve Curtis they were doing “as good as we can be.”

Charlotte Fire created a family reunification area for the victim’s families.

>> Channel 9 has several crews at the scene working to learn more.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

(WATCH: First responders speak about deadly Dilworth construction site accident)



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Texas to resume border wall construction after reaching deals with private property owners, Abbott says

The Texas government will resume construction of a wall on the state’s border with Mexico, according to Gov. Greg Abbott.

The announcement comes after an extended period of negotiation between Texas officials and private property owners for the construction of infrastructure on their land.

BIDEN ADMIN SUES ARIZONA OVER CREATION OF SHIPPING CONTAINER BORDER WALL TO STOP ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION

A pair of migrant families from Brazil pass through a gap in the border wall to reach the United States after crossing from Mexico to Yuma, Arizona, to seek asylum.
(AP Photo/Eugene Garcia, File)

“More border wall is going up next month,” said Abbott. “It took months to negotiate with private property owners on the border for the right to build on their property. 

He added, “We now should be building more border wall all of next year.”

TEXANS SHARE THEIR CONCERN OVER LIFTING TITLE 42

The border wall construction project has been under development for months after the Texas Facilities Commission approved a $167 million contract with Southwest Valley Constructors Co. The project is intended to erect a nearly seven-mile border wall in the Del Rio area.

A second contract was also inked with construction company BFBC of Texas to construct a separate seven-mile wall in the Rio Grande Valley.

LOCAL TEXAS LEADERS MAKE AN APPEAL TO ENACT CHANGE AT THE BORDER: ‘NO ONE’S LISTENING’

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. 
(Yasin Ozturk/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

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President Biden’s administration on Wednesday sued the state of Arizona over its construction of a makeshift border wall using shipping containers and razor wire in order to prevent the flow of illegal immigrants — with the administration claiming the state is trespassing on federal lands.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court, says that the installation of multi-ton shipping containers, welded shut and topped with razor wire, “damage[s] federal lands, threaten[s] public safety, and impede[s] the ability of federal agencies and officials, including law enforcement personnel, to perform their official duties.”

Texas and other states are bracing for the expiration of Title 42 Wednesday, which will go forward after the  U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit declined Friday to keep the Trump-era policy that restricts the number of asylum seekers the U.S. would allow under the COVID-19 pandemic.

Fox News’ Adam Shaw contributed to this report.

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Construction Begins on Square Kilometer Array Radio Telescope

The world’s largest radio telescope is officially under construction in Australia, where work is underway on one component of what will be an intercontinental instrument. When operational in the late 2020s, the telescope will offer a sharper, wider view of the universe in radio wavelengths.

The telescope is called the Square Kilometer Array, a reflection of scientists’ original goal of having a collecting surface of a square kilometer; the actual SKA will have a collecting area of half a square kilometer. According to an SKA Observatory release, teams celebrated the commencement of construction with ceremonies at project locations in Australia and South Africa.

The array will be a combination of nearly 200 radio dishes and 130,000 dipoles, which are smaller, ground-based antennae. In other words, the SKA is one big telescope made up of many smaller telescopes.

The array’s radio dishes will be located in South Africa’s Karoo Desert, and its Christmas-tree-shaped antennae will be situated deep in the Western Australian outback. Radio telescopes need radio silence to be able to focus on the long wavelengths from deep space, which is why the SKA’s organizers chose these remote set-ups.

Having such massive scientific instruments in wild places doesn’t come without difficulties. In Australia, ants can fry the electronics, and termites build mounds around telescope antennae. Kangaroos occasionally kick over existing instruments, and giant lizards named Steve walk around the arrays like they own the place. And given the near-total absence of humans, they kind of do.

Numerous predecessors to the SKA exist already, including the MeerKAT array in South Africa, which took a stunning image of the ‘threads’ in the galactic center. But only now are pieces of the SKA’s core being constructed, after years of design and planning. The completed SKA is expected to be operational in the late 2020s.

Bigger telescope arrays offer better resolution—hence the excitement surrounding what will be the world’s largest radio telescope array.

“To put the sensitivity of the SKA into perspective, the SKA could detect a mobile phone in the pocket of an astronaut on Mars, 225 million kilometers away,” Danny Price, a senior research fellow at the Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy, told AFP.

The SKA will observe massive compact objects like pulsars and black holes to better understand gravitational waves, as well as the epoch of reionization, when the first galaxies and stars appeared, and the first billion years of the universe.

The Webb Space Telescope is also looking at some of the universe’s earliest light, but it observes at the infrared and near-infrared wavelengths, rather than at the much longer radio wavelengths.

Combine these cutting-edge observatories with the number of new space missions set to launch at the turn of the decade, and it’s clear that we’re in for some very interesting astrophysical insights in the years ahead.

More: Webb Telescope Turns Its Eye on Saturn’s Mysterious Moon Titan

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Construction starts in Australia on the world’s largest radio telescope

Astronomers are now closer to a major technological upgrade. Australia has started construction of its portion of the Square Kilometer Array, a system that should become the world’s largest radio telescope. The Australian portion, SKA-Low, will revolve around 131,072 antenna “trees” in the country’s western Wajarri country. As the name implies, the array will focus on low-frequency signals. The Guardian notes it’s expected to be eight times more sensitive than existing telescopes, and map the cosmos about 135 times faster.

A counterpart with 197 conventional radio dishes, SKA-Mid, is coming to Meerkat National Park in South Africa’s dry, unpopulated Karoo region. That element will study mid-range frequencies. The Australian segment is a joint effort between the dedicated SKA Organization and the country’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO).

The combined array, originally envisioned in 1991, is expected to transform radio astronomy. It will mainly be helpful for studying the early universe, and might provide new insights into the formation of the first stars during the reionization period. However, it should also help investigate dark energy and its potential effect on cosmic expansion. The extreme sensitivity may even be useful in the search for extraterrestrial life, although the resolution will limit the most detailed searches to relatively close stars. Director Dr. Sarah Pierce told The Guardian the telescopes could spot an airport radar on a planet “tens of light-years away.”

Work on the Square Kilometer Array isn’t expected to finish until 2028, and it will take some time after that for scientists to collect and decipher results. As with the James Webb Space Telescope, though, the lengthy wait is expected to pay dividends. This is a generational shift that could provide new insights into the universe, not just more detail — Pearce expects SKA to shape the “next fifty years” of radio astronomy.

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SKA: Construction to begin on world’s biggest telescope – BBC

  1. SKA: Construction to begin on world’s biggest telescope BBC
  2. ‘Are we alone in the universe?’: work begins in Western Australia on world’s most powerful radio telescopes The Guardian
  3. ‘Great scientific step forward’: Construction of world’s largest radio observatory is finally under way Nature.com
  4. SKA – The world’s largest radio telescope observatory Australian Academy of Science
  5. In Australia and South Africa, construction has started on the biggest radio observatory in Earth’s history The Conversation
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Construction of world’s largest radio observatory is finally under way

After 30 years of planning and negotiations, construction begins this week on the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), the world’s largest radio-astronomy observatory. The giant instrument — to be built across sprawling sites in Australia and Africa — will collect the radio signals emitted by celestial objects and will hopefully shed light on some of the most enigmatic problems in astronomy, such as the nature of dark matter and how galaxies form.

On Monday, astronomers and local communities will travel to the remote sites in South Africa’s Northern Cape and Western Australia to celebrate the milestone with officials from the SKA Observatory (SKAO), the intergovernmental organization in charge of the telescopes.

“We’re basically setting the foundation of this instrument for the next 50 years,” says Lindsay Magnus, the director of the telescope being built in South Africa, who is based in Cape Town, South Africa. “That’s the exciting part — this is a long-term legacy.”

Years in the making

In 2012, it was decided that what had initially been conceived as a single giant telescope would consist of two instruments, one in South Africa and one in Australia. The large distances between antennas, and their sheer number, mean that the telescopes — called SKA-Mid and SKA-Low respectively — will pick up radio signals with unprecedented sensitivity. SKA-Low will detect frequencies between 50 megahertz and 350 megahertz and SKA-Mid will pick up frequencies between 350 megahertz and 15.4 gigahertz. Both are interferometers, in which many dish-shaped antennas together act as a single telescope.

The SKA will be built in stages, and the €1.3-billion (US$1.4-billion) first phase is expected to be completed in 2028. Another €700 million has been earmarked for operation costs for the telescopes over the next decade. The ultimate goal is to have thousands of dishes in South Africa and African partner countries, and one million antennas in Australia, with a total collecting area of one square kilometre. Phase one is about one-tenth of the total planned project.

SKA-Low

The SKA-Low telescope, in Australia, will comprise about 131,000 antennas, each resembling a two-metre-tall wire Christmas trees. More than 500 arrays of 256 antennas will dot the red sands of the site, which has been renamed the Inyarrimanha Ilgari Bundara, the CSIRO Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory. ‘Inyarrimanha Ilgari Bundara’, a name selected by the traditional owners of the land, the Wajarri Yamaji, means ‘Sharing sky and stars’.

Earlier this month, the Wajarri Yamaji and the Australian government registered a land-use agreement that would allow the telescope to be built on Wajarri Yamaji land. Local people will act as heritage monitors and accompany SKAO officials before any ground disturbance throughout construction, says Des Mongoo, a Wajarri Yamatji community member who is looking forward to work beginning. “Once they’ve started construction, there are opportunities for Wajarri people to be involved in employment and commercial opportunities.”

Scientists are also eager for the antennas to start collecting data. “[SKA-Low’s] sensitivity will allow us to observe the distant Universe in much more detail than anything we’ve done so far,” says Douglas Bock, director of space and astronomy at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Sydney, Australia. “This is particularly exciting because we know so little about the first billion years of the Universe.”

But the most exciting science will be phenomena that “we didn’t even know existed” when the telescopes were designed, predicts SKA-Low telescope director Sarah Pearce, based in Perth. The first four arrays will be collecting data by 2024, with all the arrays completed by 2028.

South Africa’s dishes

On Monday, preparations will also begin for building the first giant SKA-Mid dishes. These will form a collection of 197 antennas, extending over about 150 kilometres in South Africa’s dry Karoo region. Four will be complete in 2024, and many more will be added by 2028.

South Africa’s 64-dish MeerKAT telescope already exists on the site, and will be incorporated into SKA-Mid. In early 2022, using MeerKAT data, an international team published the most detailed image yet of the centre of our galaxy1, the Milky Way, as well as images of mysterious radio threads emanating from the galaxy’s black hole. The South African government and Germany’s Max Planck Society are adding another 20 dishes to the telescope, as part of an extension project. MeerKAT will be incorporated into SKA-Mid only towards the end of its construction in 2027.

“SKA will be a great scientific step forward,” says Erwin de Blok, an astronomer at the Netherlands Institute of Radio Astronomy in Dwingeloo and a principal investigator on a MeetKAT’s MHONGOOSE large-survey programme looking at galaxy formation. SKA-Mid “will help us study nearby galaxies in great detail and directly detect the flow of gas into galaxies and the processes that lead to star formation”.

However, SKA-Mid’s construction will interfere with MeerKAT observations, says South African Radio Astronomy Observatory director Pontsho Maruping in Cape Town. Radio telescopes are particularly sensitive to the radio waves emitted by vehicles and communications devices. “We’re going to do everything we can to make sure that observations don’t get unduly interrupted,” she says. MeerKAT will continue observing until it is incorporated into SKA-Mid in 2027.

By the end of the year, the SKAO, based in the United Kingdom, has awarded €500-million in construction tenders. About 70% of contracts have to go to industry in member countries. There are currently eight full members in the organization — namely Australia, China, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, South Africa, Switzerland and the United Kingdom — with France planning to join.

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China’s Covid Protests Began With an Apartment Fire in a Remote Region

As smoke crept through the 21-story apartment building in far western China, panicked messages filled the residents’ chat group. “On the 16th floor, we don’t have enough oxygen,” a woman gasped in an audio message. “Soon our children won’t be OK.”

Another person added a plea about the people in apartment 1901: “They wouldn’t be able to open the door. Can you break into it and take a look? There are many children inside.”

Many who heard the reports were shocked, not by a tragedy in the remote city of Urumqi, but because it had taken firefighters three hours to control the fire. People across the country believed the delays happened in part because of the pandemic restrictions that have been a running source of discontent throughout the country. The impact has reached into the heart of Chinese politics.

Excerpts of residents’ panicked conversation began to circulate on social media, along with videos of the emergency response. They showed fire crews struggling to get around barriers to approach the building. Videos showed fire crews’ water streams falling short of the fire as its flames slithered toward the top of the apartment tower.

Pandemic controls imposed by Chinese authorities around, and possibly inside, the apartment building had delayed the fire response, neighbors and family members of those killed have said. That would mean that the death toll, which many believed was much higher than the official tally of 10, was ultimately in part a product of China’s strict, already widely detested zero-tolerance Covid policy. The government denies all that.

Outrage spilled onto the streets of Urumqi, the capital of the heavily Muslim Chinese region of Xinjiang, where residents had been locked down for more than 100 days. Footage of the fire and the protest in Urumqi spread on Chinese social media and on the popular do-everything app

WeChat.

Firefighters sprayed water on a residential-building fire in the city of Urumqi that killed 10 and triggered protests against Covid-19 lockdowns.



Photo:

Associated Press

To large numbers of Chinese people who have had the experience of being locked inside their own apartments because of Covid controls, the words and images flowing out of Xinjiang conjured a scenario that seemed terrifyingly plausible.

“The 100-plus day lockdown is real. The many deaths from Covid controls are real. Discontent has accumulated and is destined to erupt,” said a user on the Twitter-like

Weibo

platform in one widely endorsed comment about the fire.

Within days, the protest would spread throughout China, growing into the largest show of public defiance the Communist Party has faced since the 1989 pro-democracy protests at Tiananmen Square. The demonstrations have posed a rare challenge to the recently extended rule of Chinese leader

Xi Jinping,

compounding the government’s challenges over how to ease its Covid restrictions.

Large protests erupted across China as crowds voiced their frustration at nearly three years of Covid-19 controls. Here’s how a deadly fire in Xinjiang sparked domestic upheaval and a political dilemma for Xi Jinping’s leadership. Photo: Thomas Peter/Reuters

China has experienced public outrage over its strict Covid-19 restrictions before, most of which the authorities had managed to contain online. Going back nearly three years, the death from the coronavirus of Li Wenliang, a doctor who was punished for warning others about the initial outbreak in Wuhan, unleashed a flood of grief and anger.

This September, a bus crash in Guizhou province that killed 27 people who were being sent to quarantine in the middle of the night raised an outcry about steps taken to control the coronavirus.

Mourners in Hong Kong paid their respects in February 2020 to Chinese physician Li Wenliang. Dr. Li raised early alarms about the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan but was silenced by police, only to die of the disease himself.



Photo:

jerome favre/EPA/Shutterstock

More recently, after an announcement that Covid restrictions would be eased led to little actual change, public frustration spilled out onto the streets. Workers at

Foxconn Technology Group’s

main plant in the city of Zhengzhou, the world’s largest iPhone factory, clashed with police while protesting a contract dispute with roots in pandemic lockdowns. In some Beijing neighborhoods, people argued with officials over the legality of controls.

In maintaining the lockdowns in Xinjiang, local authorities have been able to rely on the country’s most advanced and suffocating security apparatus, originally built to carry out a campaign of ethnic re-engineering against the region’s 14 million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims.

Most if not all of the fire’s victims belonged to these groups, according to relatives and overseas Uyghur activists. Discrimination by China’s Han majority against Turkic minorities has long fueled ethnic tensions in the region, which exploded into deadly race riots in Urumqi in 2009.

Yet in the past week, the sides found common cause, at least temporarily, in anger over the fire.

According to an official account published in the state-run Xinjiang Daily newspaper, the blaze began on the 15th floor, in the apartment of a Uyghur woman who was having a bath in a home spa when a circuit breaker flipped. She flipped it back, then was alerted by her daughter to the smell of smoke. When she re-emerged from the bathroom, flames had risen to the wooden ceiling from the bed.

A community worker arrived just as they were fleeing the flames, according to Xinjiang Daily. He called the fire service at 7:49 p.m. last Thursday, then helped rush the pair and their neighbors downstairs.

A still taken from a social media video shows a fire truck shooting water at the burning residential building in Urumqi. The fire and delays in fighting it proved a catalyst for nationwide protests against Covid-19 lockdowns.



Photo:

REUTERS

At the ground level, burning debris had begun falling over the doorway. Those who couldn’t leave through the front gate in time had to climb out of a window from an apartment, the newspaper reported.

Firefighters didn’t reach some of the apartments until around 90 minutes after they were called, according to posts on the chat group.

Video footage showed that traffic-control structures had to be removed as a line of fire trucks waited, causing delays. The government denied the structures had been installed for pandemic-control reasons.

At a press briefing convened late Friday night as protests unfolded, officials said that three fire trucks from a nearby station arrived at the scene five minutes after the fire was reported, but they were blocked by cars that had to be moved.

On social media, residents said those cars had been parked there for months during the fall Covid lockdown, and the engines couldn’t start.

Li Wensheng, Urumqi’s fire chief, said at the press briefing that some residents’ “self-rescue abilities were weak,” a comment that added to the simmering anger.

The Xinjiang and Urumqi governments didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Han residents of Urumqi led the protests that unfolded in the freezing night air the day following the fire. Uyghur residents have faced the strictest lockdowns and largely stayed home out of fear they would bear the brunt of any reprisals, overseas activists said.

Demonstrations were fueled by the group chat conversations and footage of obstructed fire trucks, as well as by videos circulating online that appeared to capture the screams of people from the smoldering building. “Open the gate!” one woman could be heard shouting in horror in one video.

On Saturday night, several female students stood for hours on the campus of Communication University of China in Nanjing, holding blank sheets of paper in silence, widely taken to be a reference to Chinese censorship. A male student from Xinjiang offered a tribute to the victims in Urumqi and to “all other victims nationwide,” saying he had been a coward for too long.

A man was arrested on a Shanghai street when protests erupted following a deadly apartment-building fire in China’s Xinjiang region.



Photo:

hector retamal/AFP/Getty Images

That same night, dozens of people in Shanghai gathered for a vigil with flowers and candles near a street named after Urumqi. Passersby joined in, and the crowd grew into the hundreds. Just past midnight, some demonstrators began chanting for Mr. Xi to step down.

Similar protests emerged in half a dozen Chinese cities and more than a dozen university campuses in the following days. In several instances, demonstrators chanted “We are all Xinjiang people.” Others called for democracy and free speech.

Chinese authorities have devoted enormous resources to building domestic security and surveillance systems specifically designed to prevent such wide and unified outbreaks of dissent. While protests aren’t uncommon, scholars who study China say they are almost always local events with little capacity to spread.

The Cyberspace Administration of China issued guidance to companies on Tuesday, including Tencent Holdings Ltd. and ByteDance Ltd., the Chinese owner of short video apps TikTok and Douyin, asking them to add more staff to internet censorship teams, according to people familiar with the matter. The companies were also asked to pay more attention to content related to the protests, particularly any information being shared about demonstrations at Chinese universities and the fire.

In imposing its stringent Covid controls, human-rights activists and other observers say, the Communist Party created an issue that China’s citizens only have to look out their front door to understand. Some Uyghurs affected by the fire said the fear and frustration stemming from pandemic controls crossed deep-seated ethnic divides.

Marhaba Muhammad, now a resident of Turkey, said she read news of the fire with a sense of horror. She recognized the building as the home of her aunt, whom she last visited in 2016, shortly before leaving China. The family lived in apartment 1901, the subject of one of the desperate messages left in the residents’ chat group.

Ms. Muhammad said she and her family abroad learned that the aunt, Qemernisahan Abdurahman, 48, had died in the apartment, along with four children age 5 to 13.

Ms. Abdurahman’s husband wasn’t there. He and an elder son were detained as part of the crackdown in Xinjiang in 2017 and now are imprisoned, said Ms. Muhammad and her brother, Abdulhafiz Maiamaitimin, who lives in Switzerland.

“This news is so painful. No one imagined,” she said.

Qemernisahan Abdurahman, 48, with 3 of her four children who died in the fire in Urumqi.



Photo:

Marhaba Muhammad

In apartment 1801, directly below where Ms. Muhammad’s aunt and children died, a woman also died along with her children, according to Abduweli Ayup, a Uyghur activist in Norway who spoke with relatives and neighbors of the fire victims.

Han Chinese don’t have to fear the level of oppression faced by Uyghurs, Ms. Muhammad said, referring to the Chinese government’s detention of upwards of a million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in internment camps and prisons—a practice the United Nations has said may constitute a crime against humanity.

Yet “after the fire, they realized that Uyghurs today would be the Chinese tomorrow,” she said.

Police have targeted protest participants by using some of the surveillance techniques honed in Xinjiang to target Uyghurs. In chat rooms used to organize demonstrations, protesters have reported police scanning the smartphones of pedestrians for overseas apps such as Twitter and Telegram, a common experience on the streets of Urumqi.

A lawyer representing more than a dozen protesters taken by police said she believes many of her clients were tracked through mobile-phone data, another echo of the Uyghur experience in Xinjiang.

On Tuesday, Chinese-Australian activist and cartoonist Badiucao, who goes by one name, reposted a widely shared video of police on the Shanghai subway checking the phones of passengers on Twitter. He appended a single phrase: “Xinjiang-ization.”

Protesters in Beijing lighted candles during a protest against China’s strict zero-Covid measures.



Photo:

Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

Write to Austin Ramzy at austin.ramzy@wsj.com and to Wenxin Fan at Wenxin.Fan@wsj.com

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