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The WeChat app is ubiquitous in China and used in everyday life. But a crackdown on dissent has caused activists to have access to the app restricted or cut off. Photo: Reuters

Winter Olympics: China restricts activists’ social media ahead of Beijing Games

  • Prominent rights activists have been detained in recent weeks and others report having their WeChat accounts closed or curbed in December and January
  • IOC says it ‘has neither the mandate nor the capability to change the laws or the political system of a sovereign country’ and must remain neutral on politics
Human rights activists and some academics in China have had their WeChat messaging app accounts restricted in recent weeks, multiple people affected said, as Beijing cracks down on dissent before the Beijing Winter Olympics.
China hopes to make next week’s Games a soft power triumph, although the lead-up has seen some Western powers launch a diplomatic boycott over Beijing’s rights record and cybersecurity firms warn athletes of digital surveillance risks.

For China’s ever-dwindling community of activists, the imminent arrival of the world’s best athletes has triggered a familiar clampdown.

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Australia, Britain, Canada join US diplomatic boycott of Beijing Winter Olympics over human rights

Australia, Britain, Canada join US diplomatic boycott of Beijing Winter Olympics over human rights

Eight individuals have told of their WeChat accounts being restricted in some form since early December, with some unable to use their accounts entirely and forced to re-register.

The restrictions came as authorities detained two prominent human rights activists, lawyer Xie Yang and writer Yang Maodong, while a third rights lawyer missing since early December is believed by relatives to be in secret detention.

“This storm of shuttering WeChat accounts is too strong and unprecedented,” said veteran journalist Gao Yu, whose account had features such as group chat messaging permanently disabled for the first time on December 20.

China routinely suppresses the social media accounts and physical movements of dissidents during politically sensitive periods such as Communist Party gatherings in Beijing or key anniversaries such as the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown.

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A major party congress will take place towards the end of this year when President Xi Jinping, China’s most authoritarian leader in a generation, is expected to further cement his rule with a third term.

The arrival of the Winter Olympics has presaged a clampdown similar to those surrounding other major events.

“The government now wants to make sure that people don’t cross the line online to poke the facade of a perfect Winter Olympic Games,” said Yaqiu Wang, senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch.

Tencent’s app WeChat is a mainstay of daily life in China, with users relying on it for a range of services, including payments and scanning health codes that permit entry to public venues.

“I know many people who’ve been banned from posting in group chats or posting WeChat Moments lately,” a Beijing lawyer whose account was restricted last month said on condition of anonymity.

Lawyer Xie Yang, seen outside a Xuzhou court in 2019, is believed to have been detained more than two weeks ago. Photo: AFP

Beijing-based writer Zhang Yihe said her WeChat group chat and Moments functions – similar to Facebook’s Wall or Instagram Stories – were restricted on January 8.

Tsinghua University sociology professor Guo Yuhua confirmed her account was permanently blocked the same day, while prominent legal scholar He Weifang said he encountered the same on January 9.

“Isn’t this equal to removing an individual from a public space?” said Zhang, adding she can now only send WeChat messages to individual users.

“Before and during the Olympics is a major sensitive period,” added a Beijing-based activist whose account was restricted twice in the past two months.

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Tencent, the owner of WeChat, did not respond to a request for comment.

In recent weeks, Chinese police have detained two prominent rights activists on suspicion of “inciting state subversion”, according to official notices shared with Agence France-Presse.

One of them, Yang Maodong, was unable to reunite with his wife in the United States before her death in early January.
Relatives of Tang Jitian, a human rights lawyer who vanished last month en route to an EU Human Rights Day event in Beijing, said they believed he was being held under a form of secret detention commonly used against dissidents, possibly in his home province of Jilin.

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Beijing residents both excited and concerned as the city gears up to host the Winter Olympics

Beijing residents both excited and concerned as the city gears up to host the Winter Olympics

“We don’t know where he is. I’ve reported him missing to the police but with no result,” said a relative who did not wish to be identified for fear of reprisal.

“They said it doesn’t meet the requirements for filing a [missing persons] case and that he had scanned the Jilin province health code.”

People arrested for national security offences in China can disappear for months at a time into incommunicado detention before authorities charge them or reveal their fate.

Neither Jilin or Beijing’s public security bureaus responded to requests for comment.

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The International Olympic Committee said in an emailed response that it “has neither the mandate nor the capability to change the laws or the political system of a sovereign country”, adding that it “must remain neutral on all global political issues”.

Beijing Games organisers said they “oppose the politicisation of sports” and were “not aware of these matters”.

Meanwhile, those still free lament mounting restrictions on speech under the current political climate.

“The space for public discourse is getting smaller and smaller,” He said.

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