Tuesday, 7 October 2014

This poet was arrested by Chinese authorities for supporting Hong Kong’s protests

Holding out an umbrella and sticking out your middle finger, while standing in front of the Taiwanese flag, is probably not what any Beijing resident should be doing right now, especially with ongoing “Umbrella Revolution”protests in Hong Kong. But that’s exactly what 29-year-old Wang Zang did.


A poet and human rights activist, Wang tweeted this photo out on Sept. 30.




謝兄更威武RT@njxwf :王兄威武!”@wang_zang: 【大陸淪陷區區民王藏黑衣光頭打傘撐香港:眼前黑暗,抗命的中指和拳頭不黑暗】 pic.twitter.com/kgeHxL8fOS


— 王藏 (@wang_zang) September 30, 2014




Inevitably, he was arrested by Beijing police. On Oct. 3, he was sentenced to a three-year term in prison. In a statement by Wang’s wife, Wan Li, police raided their home with a blank search warrant taking a computer, router and, “for reasons that were not immediately clear, a pair of spectacles,” according to the Telegraph.


Wang, whose wife said had been an activist since his university days, is one of at least 25 people in mainland China who have either been detained or imprisoned by Chinese authorities for supporting Occupy Central, one of the groups at the heart of the Hong Kong protests. Human Rights in China, a human rights advocacy NGO, has listed seven of them, including Wang.


Others include Wang Long, an activist in Shenzhen, who was detained after posting photos of the Hong Kong protests on Twitter, Facebook, and Weibo (the Chinese version of Twitter). And activist, Ding ding, was allegedly detained for involvement with the protests, according to city blog, Shanghaiist.




This poet was arrested by Chinese authorities for supporting Hong Kong’s protests

No comments:

Post a Comment