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Ai Weiwei made the comments ahead of the opening of his exhibition It’s Always The Others in the Swiss city of Lausanne. Photo: EPA-EFE

Ai Weiwei attacks latest Chinese crackdown on free speech and sees little hope Communist Party Congress will bring changes

Exiled dissident artist paints gloomy picture in speech at opening of Swiss exhibition and warns authorities still do not trust their own people

Ai Weiwei denounced China’s crackdown on lawyers and free speech on Wednesday adding that he had little hope that the upcoming Communist Party Congress would lead to more freedoms.

The dissident artist spoke while inaugurating an exhibition in the Swiss city of Lausanne that includes some of his political works symbolising repression.

“They are not accepting what we call common values such as democracy and freedom of speech and the freedom of religious practice and independence of the press or independence of a judicial system or people having the right to vote,” Ai told a news conference.

“China has been booming and become very powerful in the economic sense but at the same time it doesn’t trust its own people,” he said. “After 60 or 70 years in power, still its own people are not trusted to have a chance to vote.”

Ai Weiwei’s installation Head features in the exhibition. Photo: EPA-EFE

Asked about the five-yearly leadership reshuffle of the ruling Communist Party set to begin on October 18, Ai said: “You have a party that functions more like a family. It doesn’t matter how many meetings they have, it’s always closed-door.

“So there’s no trust remaining in society.”

Human Rights Watch said on Wednesday that China has launched more rigorous investigations into rights lawyers and law firms that take on politically sensitive issues.

Ai, who lives in Berlin but returns to China regularly, voiced concern about two friends who are human rights lawyers “ruthlessly put in jail” for five and 10 years, respectively.

“So the danger is there but I have no fear for myself because I have been through everything and what I have done is not for myself. It’s for my father’s generation and my son’s generation,” the 60-year-old said.

The installation With Wind is one of the works that features traditional Chinese symbolism. Photo: EPA-EFE

The exhibition It’s Always the Others, will be on view at the Cantonal Fine Arts Museum in Lausanne until January 28, and brings together 46 works made in wood, jade, porcelain, bamboo, and silk, along with photographs and videos.

Dragon in Progress, a 50-metre-long bamboo and silk kite hung from the ceiling, transforms a traditional symbol of Chinese imperial power with quotes from imprisoned or exiled activists including Nelson Mandela, Edward Snowden and Ai.

A marble sculpture, Surveillance Camera with Plinth, depicts a camera set up outside his Beijing studio.

“I’m a free man, that means I can go and come back. Which is fine. They kept their promise, they didn’t touch me.

“But of course when a state is not really ruled by law you can see that anything still can happen at any moment because it’s unpredictable, you’re not protected by law.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Ai Weiwei criticises Beijing at Swiss exhibit launch
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