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An artist Ai Weiwei(艾未未)explains why Barack Obama should be talking about human rights during his first visit to China this week.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/222482
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    China,  China Earthquake + add
ras_menelik
  • added November 16, 2009

6 comments // My Ordeal

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    photo of Ai Weiwei’s brain, which was recently operated on to repair a subdural hematoma he received while being beaten by police in Chongqing.

    In the early morning hours of Aug. 12, I was asleep in a hotel room in Sichuan when violent banging on my door abruptly awakened me. Roughly 30 policemen barged into my room and began pushing me. When I argued with them and asked for their ID, they beat me. They pinned my arms and someone punched me in the head. A month later I nearly died from a brain hemorrhage. (Article continued below...)

    I had traveled to Sichuan province to be a witness in the trial of Tan Zuoren, who is accused of trying to overthrow China's government by inciting subversion. Tan had been trying to ascertain the names of the more than 5,000 schoolchildren who died in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. I wanted to be a witness in his trial because I too had been trying to look into this tragedy. In March, I asked on my blog for volunteers to join a citizens' investigation, because the government has refused to give us any information about the children. From the beginning I said, "Life has its own dignity. You cannot give us just numbers. What are their names? Who are their parents?" The volunteers made 200 phone calls to Sichuan government departments. The officials there told us that this information was a national secret. Nonetheless, we were able to publish the names of more than 5,000 of the children on my blog before the censors shut it down.

    In China, there is a long history of the government not revealing information, so it's difficult for the Chinese people to ever know the truth. It is vital that we try to bring that truth to life. But like most oppressive societies, China doesn't have an independent judicial system. When a witness is stopped from appearing in court by the police, it means our legal system is like the mafia. And there is no independent press to ask questions.

    This week President Obama will make his first visit to China to focus on the global economy and climate change. I'm very supportive of Obama because I believe he represents great hope for America and the world—but it's inconceivable to me that he would visit China and not put human rights on the agenda. What does it matter if China's economy grows when there are no basic protections for its citizens? Obama must be clear about the West's values of freedom and human dignity.

    I never made it to Tan Zuoren's trial—after the police beat me, they kept me in my hotel room until the trial was over. (Tan still awaits his verdict.) A month later I was in Munich for a solo art exhibition of my work. (I called it So Sorry, which are words favored by leaders who avoid responsibility for disasters. I created a frieze of schoolchildren's backpacks covering the front of the exhibition center.) The headaches I had been experiencing since my beating had gotten worse and I couldn't concentrate. When I checked into a hospital, I was told there was bleeding in my brain and I was near a fatal collapse. I was rushed into surgery. When I awoke, I felt almost like a normal person again. But I will not feel whole until I and my fellow Chinese can live freely.

    Ai Weiwei is a leading Chinese artist who helped create a modern national icon with his work (alongside the firm Herzog & de Meuron) on the design of Beijing's “Bird’s Nest” Olympic stadium.

    http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2009/11/ai-weiwei-earthquake-project-%E2%80%9Cmuyu-...

    ras_menelik
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    China is preparing for U.S. President Barack Obama's visit by arresting dozens of political dissidents and reform advocates, human rights activists say.

    Family members and activists told Saturday's Financial Times that four Chinese dissidents have been jailed ahead of Obama's visit, while at least 30 others who had been expected to apply for the right to protest have also likely been arrested.

    The British newspaper said activists are worried Obama will gloss over China's dodgy human rights record in order to reach accords with President Hu Jintao on such issues as climate change, the economy and bilateral trade.

    "We get the impression Obama doesn't want to talk about human rights on this trip, but it is precisely because of his visit here that these people are being rounded up and detained right now," Ai Weiwei, a Beijing artist and social commentator, told Financial Times.

    ras_menelik
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    Meanwhile, Chinese officials have handpicked six students from Shanghai's elite Jiaotong University to ask questions in a "town hall" meeting Obama plans to hold with young people Monday in Shanghai, activists told the newspaper.

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    ras_menelik
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    If to express oneself one needs a reason, let me say that to express oneself is the reason.

    http://www.socialtext.net/cdt/index.cgi?blogger_profile_ai_weiwei

    ras_menelik
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    Ai Weiwei's Art Projects:

    ras_menelik
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    I wish you luck , friend .

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    artemis6
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