China: activist filmmaker faces prison

ÜrĂŒmqi Road

Police in China have charged Chen Pin Lin, director of documentary Not the Foreign Force, with “picking quarrels and provoking trouble,” according to Chinese human rights monitors Weiquanwang and Civil Rights & Livelihood Watch. The charge, an offense under Article 293 of China’s Criminal Act, has been widely criticized for its elusive definition and use against dissidents and human rights defenders.

The film, also known as ÜrĂŒmqi Road in Chinese, depicts the nationwide protests against COVID-19 lockdown measures in China in 2022. The demonstrations erupted that November and quickly spread nationwide after a fire killed 10 people in ÜrĂŒmqi, Xinjiang, where lockdown policies had slowed down fire services. During the rallies, colloquially known as the “White Paper Revolution,” participants held a piece of blank paper over their heads as a symbolic protest against censorship. The protests ultimately prompted the Chinese government to lift all COVID-19 restrictions in December 2022.

Chen published the video via YouTube under the pseudonym “Plato.” It was republished by California-based China Digital Times in November 2023, one year after the demonstrations started, although it has since been removed from the latter patform. The film criticizes the Chinese government for attempting to blame foreign forces for the protests. “The more the government tries to mislead, forget and conceal, the more we should speak out, remind and remember,” Chen wrote in the caption for the video on China Digital Times. “Remember the White Paper Protests.”

From Jurist, Feb. 25. Used with permission.

See our last reports on the ongoing crackdown on dissent in China, and the White Paper Protests.

Image via YouTube

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