Wednesday, October 31st, 2012

Thousands March in Hong Kong to Demand the Release of Chinese Artist Ai Weiwei

April 25, 2011 by  
Filed under Arts Policy, Featured

HONG KONG (REUTERS).- Over one thousand protesters in Hong Kong took to the streets to demand the release of detained Chinese artist and human rights activist Ai Weiwei on Saturday, scuffling briefly with police.

The rally — the largest in a string of protests across the city in recent weeks — has underscored Hong Kong’s growing role as a hotbed of support for Ai with local pro-democracy activists and artists ratcheting up pressure on Beijing over its heavy crackdown on dissidents, human rights lawyers and protesters challenging Communist Party controls and censorship.

A pro democracy protester wears a mask of detained Chinese artist Ai Weiwe 580x388 Thousands March in Hong Kong to Demand the Release of Chinese Artist Ai Weiwei
A pro-democracy protester wears a mask of detained Chinese artist Ai Weiwei during a march in Hong Kong Saturday, April 23, 2011 as they demand release of Ai. U.S. diplomats will discuss recent disappearances and detentions of Chinese dissidents during human rights talks in Beijing next week, the U.S. State Department said. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung.

Protesters held up banners with the words “Who’s afraid of Weiwei” and banged on drums as they snaked their way through busy districts to the harbor-front Cultural Center, where they sang, performed and chanted for Ai’s release.

“It’s had a lot of impact,” said John Batten, a Hong Kong-based art critic and commentator who attended the rally. “The message is purely about freedom of expression … it’s not just Ai Weiwei, there’s a whole lot of repression that’s going on in China.”

Organizers said 2000 people showed up, marshaled by a heavy police contingent through busy streets. While the event was largely peaceful, brief skirmishes with police broke out as tempers flared.

Graffiti images of Ai have also been appearing across the former British colony which reverted to Chinese rule in 1997, in subways, streets and prominent public spaces, spray-painted by an anonymous artist and sparking a police investigation.

Ai’s detention in Beijing on April 3, after being prevented from boarding a flight to Hong Kong, has sparked criticism from Western governments, with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton saying she was “deeply concerned” about the clampdown.

Chinese authorities have been vague on Ai’s charges, only saying he’s under investigation for “suspected economic crimes” .

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