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Editorials Call for the Release of Ai Weiwei (Artist Who Designed the Beijing Bird's Nest Stadium)
China Digital Times ^ | 04/05/2011

Posted on 04/06/2011 9:22:14 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

One of China’s official newspapers has offered their opinion of international support for missing artist Ai Weiwei. But editorial boards around the world are continuing their support to Ai and calling for his release. From the Globe and Mail:

…He is an inconvenient patriot, the kind who demands better of his country. And so Mr. Ai denounced the stadium before the Games even began, rightly anticipating that the regime would suppress dissent in spite of the Games. His art celebrates, but it also laments, most notably in a memorial mural, made of thousands of children’s backpacks, to those killed in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake – victims on whose behalf he continues to campaign.

Why have the Chinese state and the Communist Party tightened the vise around Mr. Ai? Perhaps, as with the recent detention of journalists, it is a defensive measure, in the wake of recent revolutions in the Arab world.

And perhaps it is because Mr. Ai represents freedom. He cherishes it, even videotaping his regular encounters with the police. “When those in power are infatuated with you, you feel valued,” he has said.

From the Christian Science Monitor:

Ai is the latest dissident in China recently detained or jailed for simply speaking out against the Communist Party. The fact that the country’s most famous artist – Ai helped design the bird’s-nest stadium for the 2008 Olympics – would suddenly disappear is a sign of just how much the party fears the Chinese people might follow the Arab spring and demand political freedom.

Ai is creative in both his political comments, usually transmitted via Twitter to 72,000 followers, and his art. When police set up cameras outside his studio, for instance, he not only mocked it smartly on his Internet postings, Ai also made sculptures that resembled the cameras.

And the Wall Street Journal takes on the Obama administration for not doing enough to support Ai:

Mr. Ai has thus joined the growing ranks of China’s new “disappeared.” In February amid the popular Arab revolt, an online petition urged a similar Jasmine Revolution in China. The government has reacted by criminally detaining dozens, if not hundreds or thousands, of the country’s most prominent human rights lawyers, bloggers, democracy activists and others.

The detention of Mr. Ai is especially notable because of his national stature. The son of a famous poet, he is a prominent artist, film-maker and architect in his own right, a popular Web communicator, and an advocate for the rule of law and individual freedoms. He is also unafraid: In 2009, when Mr. Ai tried to attend the trial of another activist, the police beat him so badly he got a brain bleed that almost killed him. He continued to speak out.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague called on the Chinese government Monday to “urgently clarify Ai’s situation and well being” and called for his immediate release. Germany’s Foreign Minister did the same.

The U.S. State Department managed to roll out spokesman Mark Toner, who said the U.S. government was “deeply concerned” but added “our relationship with China is very broad and complex, but it’s an issue where we disagree and we continue to make clear those concerns.” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and President Obama have been mute.

In the New York Times, art critic Holland Cotter profiles Ai and calls him “China’s conscience”:

…The Chinese government asked Mr. Ai to collaborate with the Swiss architectural firm Herzog & de Meuron on the design for the Olympic stadium, known the Bird’s Nest. He did so. The result was a triumph.

Then something startling happened: He denounced the Olympics as a feel-good whitewash on China’s repressive, market-hungry government. And after the Sichuan earthquake in May 2008, which killed thousands of children who were crushed when their shoddily built schools collapsed, he became an intrepid antiestablishment activist.

As China’s official news channels broadcast upbeat videos of earthquake rescue operations, Mr. Ai was in Sichuan making his own films of the destruction, talking with distraught parents of dead or missing children and using his widely read daily blog to accuse the Sichuan officials of financial corruption that resulted in structurally faulty schools. His accusations of a cover-up extended to the highest levels in Beijing.

To anyone familiar with China’s hardball official politics, Mr. Ai’s aggressive words sounded suicidally aggressive and the silence from the government in Beijing was perplexing. But at this juncture, both parties were almost ceremonially enacting ancient roles. In Chinese culture, going back to Confucius, there has been a tradition of individual scholars and intellectuals denouncing rulers for wrongdoing that was bringing disharmony to society, and particularly if that wrongdoing was injurious to innocence.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aiweiwei; birdsnest; china

1 posted on 04/06/2011 9:22:19 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

MORE HERE FROM THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE:

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/outlook/7508452.html

China’s frantic campaign to crush the so-far nonexistent “jasmine revolution” has now swept up one of the country’s best-known artists. Ai Weiwei, a sculptor, filmmaker, architect and performance artist who helped design the “Bird’s Nest” stadium at the Beijing Olympics, was detained in the Beijing airport Sunday and had not been seen or heard from more than 24 hours later.

Ai had been pushing the boundaries of free expression in China. On his Twitter account, which has more than 70,000 followers, he was keeping track of the lawyers and dissident intellectuals who have been arrested in a far-reaching crackdown during the past two months. Now he is one of them.

According to a count by the Chinese Human Rights Defenders group, 26 political suspects have been arrested in China since February, and the government has restricted the movements of 200 more.

Another 30 have, like Ai, simply disappeared. They include a China-born Australian spy novelist and six lawyers from Beijing, Guangzhou and Shanghai who often take on human rights cases.

In addition to the arrests, police have been swarming downtown locations in Chinese cities on Sunday afternoons, and new restrictions have been imposed on foreign journalists. All of this has been prompted by the thinnest of threats: calls on Web sites outside of China for “jasmine” protests, including “strolls” through city centers. There have been no protests, but the regime’s security forces have reacted as if the eruption of a Chinese version of the Tunisian or Egyptian uprisings is imminent.

CLICK ABOVE LINK FOR THE REST


2 posted on 04/06/2011 9:23:52 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

AI WEI WEI, the famous Chinese artist who recently exhibited to acclaim at the Tate Modern, was on Sunday again barred from leaving the country.
3 posted on 04/06/2011 9:25:18 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
While channel surfing, I saw a show about Ai Weiwei on WMFE-TV (PBS-Orlando FL) last week. It was very interesting. The Chinese Gov't REALLY doesn't know what do do with him because he has such a HUGE following, especially on Twitter, which in one instance while being hassled and then "detained" by the "police" he actually sent it "LIVE" on the internet.

In another instance, he had spent TWO years building a multi-level fairly LARGE "studio complex" for himself and other "artists". The Chinese gov't BULLDOSED IT one day to show their "displeasure" with his "activities".

He turned it into an "event" on Twitter, I'm sure MUCH to the surprise of the people who ordered it's destruction.

If Ai Weiwei has "disappeared", IMHO, there is probably a MAJOR political "clean-up" in the making.

If you check your local PBS schedule, I'm sure it will replay sometime this month.

4 posted on 04/06/2011 9:43:54 AM PDT by musicman (Until I see the REAL Long Form Vault BC, he's just "PRES__ENT" Obama = Without "ID")
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To: SeekAndFind

C’mon China...let him go Weiwei all the way home.


5 posted on 04/06/2011 12:30:46 PM PDT by Fredgoblu
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To: SeekAndFind

Congratulations to the Western agents for discovering another activist and “famous” artist who 99.9999% Chinese have never heard about!


6 posted on 04/06/2011 7:15:15 PM PDT by Risuy
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