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China academic's weibo blocked over 'rumours': Xinhua
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 10, 2013


China unchains 'Django' movie for audiences
Shanghai (AFP) May 12, 2013 - Chinese theatres on Sunday resumed showing Quentin Tarantino's "Django Unchained", a month after mysteriously yanking the film amid speculation state censors wanted further cuts over content.

China strictly censors films and other media for sexual and political sensitivities while also limiting the distribution of foreign films to protect the domestic industry.

"'Django Unchained' shows today, can everyone go see it?" said a posting on the official Chinese microblog for the film.

Movie theatres in the commercial hub Shanghai and the capital Beijing confirmed the return of the film, the story of a freed American slave who, supported by a bounty hunter, seeks to rescue his wife from a plantation owner.

It stars Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz and Leonardo DiCaprio.

"It's on and there are five screenings today," an employee of Beijing's UME cinema chain said, but declined to say what changes might have been made to the film.

The official Xinhua news agency said the film was previously suspended for "technical reasons", according to a report on Sunday.

A worker at the Yonghua Cinema City in a Shanghai shopping mall also confirmed the first day of screenings on Sunday, but said it would only show in the evening.

Chinese cinema fans, posting on the Internet, had speculated that nude scenes forced the initial suspension, while others cited the politically dangerous theme of underdogs rising up.

Foxx, who plays the freed slave, appears naked and hanging upside down in one scene. Tarantino's trademark use of graphic, but highly-stylised, violence is also evident in the film.

Many Chinese film buffs have already seen "Django Unchained" because pirated DVDs and downloads of the movie have been available in China for months. The US release for the film was late last year.

A prominent Chinese law professor had his social media account suspended, state media said Friday, after authorities vowed a renewed crackdown against "online rumours".

Several people have been arrested in recent weeks for posting material online on topics ranging from bird flu to mysterious deaths, but activists say that rumour charges are sometimes used to suppress political content.

He Bing, a professor at Beijing's University of Politics and Law, was blocked from posting further on China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo service "for deliberately spreading rumours", the official Xinhua news agency reported.

He had reposted claims about a murder dating from 2009, Xinhua added, citing China's State Internet Information Office (SIIO), a unit set up in 2011 to regulate the Internet in the country.

China strictly controls content which could threaten the ruling Communist party, but it is unusual for weibo account suspensions and cancellations to be reported by state media.

He Bing could not be reached for comment by AFP Friday.

The professor is an outspoken figure with more than 400,000 weibo followers and recently posted a survey asking users to say whether China would descend into chaos if the authorities renounced Mao.

It was prompted by reports in state media that new President Xi Jinping had said repudiating the founding father of Communist China would lead to chaos.

The post -- which was still available Friday -- had more than 10,000 responses, with one reading: "Repudiating Mao would be the start of China's rejuvenation".

Mao remains part of the ruling party's pantheon but presided over a terrible famine in the 1950s and the chaotic Cultural Revolution.

Li Chengpeng, a well-known commentator and critic who has more than seven million followers, told AFP that there were no rules to limit officials' ability to suspend accounts.

The last time he was stopped from posting himself came after he criticised traffic management during November's Communist Party Congress, he added.

"It's a turf war between authorities and ordinary weibo users,' Li said.

Another weibo account, in the name of Xiaoshanjunzi, was deleted entirely for spreading the same rumour as He Bing, the SIIO added according to Xinhua.

Xiaoshanjunzi's account could not be accessed Friday, but according to freeweibo.com, a website that tracks deleted Sina Weibo posts, the web user on Thursday posted: "Good morning China. Today's China really makes people worry."

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The appearance of a grand-daughter of Mao Zedong, founding father of Communist China, on a list of the country's richest citizens prompted online accusations of hypocrisy Thursday. Kong Dongmei, now in her early 40s, and husband Chen Dongsheng ranked 242th with personal wealth estimated at five billion yuan ($815 million) on a rich list released this month by New Fortune, a Chinese financial ... read more


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