Bangkok Post

Beijing censors article by former premier

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China’s internet companies have blocked users from sharing a lengthy article written by former Premier Wen Jiabao in tribute to his late mother, in an unexplaine­d act of censorship against a senior member of the ruling Communist Party.

The obituary-style article written by Mr Wen about his mother, who died recently, appeared in a small weekly newspaper called the Macau Herald on Friday and was posted on a public account on Chinese chat app WeChat on Saturday, but was swiftly restricted.

The heartfelt tribute includes details of Mr Wen’s mother’s struggle during periods of upheaval in China, including the second Sino-Japanese War and the political purges of the Cultural Revolution.

“In my mind, China should be a country full of fairness and justice, always with a respect for the will of the people, humanity, and human nature,” said Mr Wen’s article, which did not directly discuss China’s current political environmen­t.

China’s ruling Communist Party (CCP) has recently sought to tighten control over how netizens discuss history on the country’s heavily-controlled internet, in the run-up to the 100th anniversar­y of the party’s founding, in July.

Last week, an arm of China’s cyber regulator launched a hotline for netizens to report “illegal” comments that “distorted” the party’s historical achievemen­ts and attacked the country’s leadership.

When users tried to share Mr Wen’s article, a notice appeared saying that the content went against WeChat’s regulation­s and could not be shared, a common censorship measure in China that is one step below purging articles completely.

It was unclear which part of the article may have triggered the restrictio­ns.

On Weibo, the Chinese social media site similar to Twitter, there was scant mention of the article, and comments and sharing functions had been disabled. Links to articles on Mr Wen’s tribute posted on Weibo returned “404” messages yesterday morning, indicating they had been deleted.

Former Chinese leaders and highprofil­e politician­s rarely cultivate public personas or share detailed biographic­al informatio­n in their retirement, and are expected to slip gracefully from the limelight upon stepping down.

Since assuming power in 2012, Xi Jinping has been cemented in the party constituti­on, putting him almost on par with Mao Zedong.

 ??  ?? Wen: Shared tribute to late mother
Wen: Shared tribute to late mother

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