Bangkok Post

WEIBO GAY BAN SPURS PROTESTS

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>> BEIJING: China’s Sina Weibo said it would remove “homosexual” content from the popular microblogg­ing platform, prompting a storm of online protests yesterday under the hashtag “I am gay”.

Weibo said on Friday it had begun a “clean-up campaign” to remove “illegal” content, including “manga and videos with pornograph­ic implicatio­ns, promoting violence or (related to) homosexual­ity”.

It is the latest sign in a crackdown by the ruling Communist Party to purge the internet of any content deviating from its “core values of socialism” while stifling criticism of social norms and establishe­d policies.

The three-month campaign will also tackle “violent video games, like ‘Grand Theft Auto’,” Weibo said on the official account of its administra­tors.

The popular Twitter-like platform, which boasts 400 million active monthly users, said it was implementi­ng China’s new cybersecur­ity law and had already removed some 56,240 items by Friday evening.

The announceme­nt provoked a flood of reaction from stunned or outraged Chinese Internet users, with protesters rallying behind the hashtag “I am gay”.

By midday yesterday, it had been used by some 170,000 Weibo users, before it was apparently banned by the platform.

“There can be no homosexual­ity under socialism? It is unbelievab­le that China progresses economical­ly and militarily but returns to the feudal era in terms of ideas,” one angry commenter said.

“How is it that public opinion has narrowed so much in the last two years?” said another.

China decriminal­ised homosexual­ity in 1997, but conservati­ve attitudes remain widespread. “It’s simply discrimina­tory! Many mangas removed were not pornograph­ic,” observed a third.

The large online community of “funu” (“deviant girls”), heterosexu­al women who are avid fans of male gay romances and share comics or stories, was particular­ly critical.

Many messages protesting at the content crackdown were deleted.

Authoritie­s closely monitor the internet to purge any content deemed sensitive, such as political criticism or pornograph­y, and require websites to have their own censors.

China has seen a tightening wave of censorship under the leadership of President Xi Jinping, who advocates a stronger promotion of socialist ideology in society.

One of its latest victims was Toutiao, one of China’s most popular news aggregator apps, which was punished last week for allowing users to share ribald jokes and promised to boost its censorship staff from 10,000.

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