Concern for missing Chinese artist Ai Weiwei

Started by Savonarola, April 05, 2011, 10:13:05 AM

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Savonarola

Good news for people who like bad news from China:

QuoteConcern for missing Chinese artist Ai Weiwei 

Acclaimed artist's apparent detention draws international condemnation while his whereabouts remains a mystery.

The wife of a missing Chinese artist says Chinese police are questioning Ai Weiwei's friends and collaborators amid international concern over his apparent detention by authorities.

Ai, an outspoken government critic, has not been seen since apparently being taken into custody after he was barred from boarding a Hong Kong-bound flight at a Beijing airport on Sunday morning.

His disappearance comes as Chinese security services carry out a massive crackdown on lawyers, writers and activists following online calls for protests in China similar to those in the Middle East and North Africa.

Dozens have recently been taken into custody with little word from authorities about where they are being held, who is holding them or the crimes that they are suspected of having committed.

'No information'

Police searched Ai's home and studio shortly after his detention and removed computers and other items.

Ai's wife, Lu Qing, said friends and family were asking police for information about his whereabouts and that of an assistant, Wen Tao, who was detained along with him. So far, they had learned nothing, Lu said.

"I am very worried," Lu told The Associated Press news agency by telephone. "I felt something terrible was going to happen when they came to search the house and took away all those things."

Lu said that friends of Ai and people who have collaborated with him, are being contacted for questioning.

Police appear to be working their way down a detailed list of both Chinese citizens and foreigners associated with Ai, said Alison Klayman, an American filmmaker who has been working on a documentary about the artist

A Beijing police spokesman, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he had no information on Ai's case.

Ai is the son of one of China's most famous modern poets, and that stature, led many to believe he was protected from serious attack or formal arrest.

Among China's best-known artists internationally, Ai recently exhibited at the Tate Modern gallery in London.

His career spans protests for artistic freedom in 1979, provocative works in the 1990s, and a hand in designing the Bird's Nest stadium for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

He was stopped from boarding a flight to Seoul in December, shortly after being invited to attend the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo, Norway, honoring Liu Xiaobo, jailed Chinese dissident.

Liu is serving an 11-year sentence for subversion.

Ai said at the time that police blocked him at the boarding gate and showed him a handwritten note that said he could cause damage to national security by leaving.

International condemnation

On Monday, Mark Toner, US State Department spokesman, called for Ai's immediate release.

He said that Washington was "deeply concerned by the trend of forced disappearances, extralegal detentions, arrests and convictions of human rights activists for exercising their internationally recognised human right for freedom of expression.''

And William Hague, British foreign secretary, also expressed concern and said London was committed to engaging China on human rights issues.

On Tuesday, the European Union delegation in Beijing called on Chinese authorities "to refrain from using arbitrary detention under any circumstances".

Chinese activists are also increasingly alarmed about Ai's extended detention, and supporters in China and abroad launched their own online drive urging authorities to free him.

The online petition to "free Ai Weiwei" was launched on Twitition, a Twitter microblog site, which China's wall of Internet censorship stops most Chinese from seeing.

Enquiries about Ai on China's most popular homegrown microblogging site, Sina.com's "Weibo," have also been blocked.

There's a Doonesbury strip from the cold war where the US and USSR were going to have a prisoner exchange.  The Soviets would get a few radical priests and the leaders of the US Communist party.  Americans would get dissident writers, artists and ballet dancers.  I thought of that strip when I saw this article.  Radical priests and communists aren't the pariahs they were in Richard Nixon's America; but maybe we could send them our oil executives and bankers in exchange for their artists, writers and lawyers.
In Italy, for thirty years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love, they had five hundred years of democracy and peace—and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock

Ed Anger

Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

Josquius

Bad news, I do like that guy, he really does say the right things about the PRC.
He has a cool Confuscious style beard too, which is a plus.
Hope he's alright, relying on him being too big to just 'dissapear'. Hopefully.
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Eddie Teach

Quote from: Savonarola on April 05, 2011, 10:13:05 AM
but maybe we could send them our oil executives and bankers in exchange for their artists, writers and lawyers.

They can keep the lawyers, we have plenty.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

crazy canuck

Quote from: Peter Wiggin on April 05, 2011, 01:34:06 PM
Quote from: Savonarola on April 05, 2011, 10:13:05 AM
but maybe we could send them our oil executives and bankers in exchange for their artists, writers and lawyers.

They can keep the lawyers, we have plenty.

You could swap out your securities lawyers for a better breed.

Fate

Weird, I was watching a Frontline story about him the night before he was arrested.  :ph34r:

The Brain

Women want me. Men want to be with me.