The Borneo Post

Muzzled China feminist group to sue over online censorship

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BEIJING: Feminist activists are preparing to sue China’s biggest social media platforms for deleting their organisati­on’s account, the group’s founder said Saturday.

On March 8, Internatio­nal Women’s Day, staffers operating the prolific Feminist Voices account on China’s Twitter-like Weibo platform found it had been deleted.

Weibo customer service representa­tives told them by phone that the account could not be reactivate­d due to the posting of ‘sensitive and illegal informatio­n’, the group’s founder Lu Pin told AFP.

The next day, the group’s WeChat public account had also disappeare­d.

The group has run into trouble before on social media, with their accounts being temporaril­y suspended and individual posts deleted, but ‘this time they say it’s a permanent deletion’, Lu said.

Feminist Voices has ‘already begun legal procedures and is preparing to sue Weibo and Wechat’, she said, adding that they have sent letters of complaint to both the government department in charge of the internet and the All- China Women’s Federation.

Neither Sina Weibo nor internet giant Tencent, which runs WeChat, responded to requests for comment.

The black- out prompted Lu to pen an open letter to British actress Emma Watson — ‘one of the feminist idols held in highest esteem by young Chinese women’, she said — to solicit the celebrity’s support.

“We are struggling to reactivate our accounts so that we can continue our work and are asking you to demonstrat­e your open support for Feminist Voices on Twitter,” she wrote in the Englishlan­guage missive, posted to Twitter Friday.

China’s ruling Communist Party runs one of the world’s most restrictiv­e online censorship regimes.

Feminist Voices, which establishe­d an account on Weibo in 2010, was temporaril­y blocked by authoritie­s last year after it translated and posted parts of an article by American academics calling for a ‘general women’s strike’. — AFP

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