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The Power ShiftIs ripping up Mao’s portrait a crime?

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Cao Xiaodong (far right) was detained by the police on Thursday for for publicly ripping up Mao Zedong’s portrait in Henan. Photo: screenshot from Sina Weibo.

You sometimes wonder whether China’s Cultural Revolution is really over.

It does not appear to be for Henan’s Cao Xiaodong, who was illegally detained on Thursday for publicly ripping up Mao Zedong’s portrait with three friends in Henan’s capital city Zhengzhou last month.

The three other young men who participated were: Xiaodong, Ji Laisong, Lin Qilei , Cheng Shuaishuai. They are being sought by police.

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Chen Ying, wife of Cao Xiaodong, has been seeking help from Weibo, China’s twitter-like service. Chen Ying said her husband broke no law and deserved to be released. Chen Ying described Cao Xiaodong as a devoted social activist, who helped to build China’s first serviced apartment for HIV patients, brought them soymilk on his visits, and helped patients’ families find work in rural villages.

In a photo taken on October 25, the four men, each holding Mao’s portrait, can be seen ripping it in half. They appear calm and relaxed.

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Ji Laisong, one of the participants and a lawyer, told Free Asia they were protesting against Maoists in Zhengzhou, who often gather in Zijin Square – the place where the incident occurred.

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