Chen Pingfu, a former music teacher now street musician, incurred the wrath of Chinese authorities when he began posting about injustices he and those around him had suffered at the hands of officials.

He was charged with inciting subversion but as the case was being heard all charges were dropped. No reason has been given but Pingfu was hardly fermenting rebellion he was just trying to highlight poor treatment.

However such criticism on social media and the internet has drawn a swift and harsh reaction in the past. But in this case the authorities appear to have had second thoughts.

China is a governed by a repressive regime but that does not mean all those working for it share the extreme values. It is possible that people in senior positions saw the case for what it was and canned it. On the other hand 12,000 comments following just one story about Pingfu broadcast in Hong Kong may have been a deciding factor. In either case a vigorous social media campaign seems to do no harm which is encouraging to China’s netizens.

 

chen-pingfu.jpg Ezine Shanghaiist posted this report and picture on the case.

Chen Pingfu, a laid-off teacher turned street musician from Lanzhou, Gansu Province, was always something of an unlikely dissident. But when Chen began posting online about the injustices he suffered and saw around him, he was accused of “inciting subversion of state power” – the same charge that earned Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo eleven years in prison.

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Vietnamese authorities have detained a French mathmatics professor for “subversion” accusing him of being a member of  a political group it deems a terrorist organization.

According to Reporters Without Borders: “Pham Minh Hoang, know by the pen-name of Phan Kien Quoc (http://pkquoc.multiply.com), is a politically committed blogger whose articles on education, the environment and the defence of Vietnam’s sovereignty in its relations with China have been widely circulated online.”

But this week Radio Free Asia learned from Hoang’s wife that it was not his writings that they were holding him for instead they were accusing him of being a member of the Viet Tan party.

The Vietnam Government regards the Washington based Viet Tan organization a terrorist group dedicated to its downfall.

Hoang’s wife Le Thi Kieu Oanh  said she and her 55-year-old husband were interrogated at a police station in Ho Chi Minh City on Aug. 11.

“I didn’t know what the reasons were, but … the police came to the house and asked me and my husband to accompany them to the station,” she said.
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Hu Fayun Photo: RFA

Here follows translated extracts from an interview which Wuhan author Hu Fayun gave to RFA’s Mandarin service recently.

“When I was in high school, I wrote one line on the page of my diary that you have to start earning honor from a young age. Honor is really the feeling a person has about their own dignity…that means that they will see everything they do and say as important, and it demands that one live authentically. This is the same as a truth passed down to us from our parents and from a number of ancient traditions, namely, that one shouldn’t tell lies.”

He said he thought that the period since 1949 had been a very special one for literary development in spite of restrictions on freedom of speech.

“Everyone has misgivings when they start to write. A lot of people stop writing…because there are so many examples of people who got themselves into big trouble through writing. The psyche of any Chinese person is going to contain these sorts of fears. Will I, in speaking out or through my writings, bring disaster upon myself and my family. At certain times, [writing] can even result in death. Continue reading »