Members of China’s Elite Denounce Censorship
[Updated 2/16; scroll down] This looks like very good news for China:
A dozen former Communist Party officials and senior scholars, including a onetime secretary to Mao, a party propaganda chief and the retired bosses of some of the country’s most powerful newspapers, have denounced the recent closing of a prominent news journal, helping to fuel a growing backlash against censorship.
The trigger for the protest letter, which was leaked to journalists, was the closing of a Chinese newspaper with an independent streak. Kudos to the New York Times for its excellent coverage to the China censorship story.
Not reported as prominently is a quiet protest movement in which millions of Chinese have resigned from the Communist Party (via the dissident Epoch Times).
Update 2/16: A partial climbdown by Beijing? Freezing Point will reopen, but without the leadership of its courageous editor, who said this:
“This is a ridiculous decision!” Mr Li was quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency.
“The soul of Bingdian has been extinguished. Only a shell is left. If the staff decided to protest, no-one will do the job. It will be an empty paper on 1 March,” he said.