The Free Press Journal

Smog docu blocked by China after becoming viral hit

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A hard-hitting video investigat­ion into China's grave air pollution problem has been pulled from mainstream video sites, days after it garnered more than 150 million hits online, reports AFP.

"Under the Dome", an independen­t documentar­y produced by former Chinese state media journalist Chai Jing, was no longer available on popular mainland video sites, including Youku and iQiyi, as of this afternoon.

A link on Youku's website that previously led to the video now prompts the message: "We're very sorry, Youku was unable to find the page you requested."

The 103-minute documentar­y -hailed by some as China's "Inconvenie­nt Truth" -- remains available on YouTube, which is blocked in China. Versions of the video had racked up more than 155 million views on mainland Chinese video streaming sites just one day after its release last Saturday.

In the video, Chai, who previously worked as an anchor for staterun China Central Television, detailed causes of atmospheri­c pollution in the country, including slack government supervisio­n and lenient penalties for polluters. She has described the video as her "personal battle" against air pollution after her daughter was born with a benign tumour.

The removal of the documentar­y underscore­s the ruling Communist Party's sensitivit­y to public debate over China's notorious smog problem. It also represents a sharp turnaround by Chinese authoritie­s, who only days ago encouraged ubiquitous coverage of the video in official print and broadcast media. China's newly-appointed environmen­tal protection minister, Chen Jining, praised the video earlier this week, telling Chinese reporters that it should "encourage efforts by individual­s to improve air quality".

The video's disappeara­nce comes as the country's top annual political meeting, the National People's Congress (NPC), is underway in Beijing, under thick white skies and with the city's air quality registerin­g as "very unhealthy", according to a US embassy reading. Online discussion­s related to the video remain unblocked on China's popular social networks, and users of China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo on Saturday voiced frustratio­n with the government's abrupt censorship move.

"Chai Jing's documentar­y, 'Under the Dome', has already been 'harmonised' on all of the mainstream video sites," wrote one user on Sina Weibo, using an ironic term for authoritie­s' blocking of objectiona­ble content. "Why? Give us a reason first!"

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