Times Colonist

Two Chinese bloggers in exile warn that police are interrogat­ing their followers

- DAKE KANG and HUIZHONG WU

— Two prominent Chinese bloggers in exile said that police were investigat­ing their millions of followers on internatio­nal social media platforms, in an escalation of Beijing’s attempts to clamp down on critical speech even outside of the country’s borders.

Former state broadcaste­r

CCTV journalist Wang Zhi’an and artist-turned-dissident Li Ying, both Chinese citizens known for posting uncensored Chinese news, said in separate posts that police were interrogat­ing people who followed them on social media, and urged followers to take precaution­s such as unfollowin­g their accounts, changing their usernames, avoiding Chinese-made phones and preparing to be questioned.

Li Ying, known as Teacher Li, came to prominence as a source of news about the White Paper protests, a rare moment of antigovern­ment protests in mainland China in 2022. Teacher Li’s account on X, whyyoutouz­hele now posts news and videos from submitted by users, which cover everything from local protests to viral videos of real-life incidents that are censored on the Chinese internet.

In a post Sunday evening, Teacher Li suggested people unfollow his account. “Currently, the public security bureau is checking my 1.6 million followers and people in the comments, one by one.”

Li shared screenshot­s of private messages he received from followers over the past few months, which claimed that police had interrogat­ed individual­s, and that one person had lost their job. As of Monday afternoon, Li had dropped to 1.4 million followers on X.

Internatio­nal social media platforms like X and YouTube are blocked in China, but can still be accessed with software that circumvent­s the country’s censorship systems.

Wang, who has a million subscriber­s on X and 1.2 million followers on YouTube, also told his fans to unsubscrib­e.

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