Friday, October 30, 2009

China Is Trying a Tibetan Filmmaker for Subversion

China Is Trying a Tibetan Filmmaker for Subversion

By Andrew Jacobs
The New York Times
October 31, 2009

[Comment: We should all consider the incremental (or abrupt) shifts wherein peaceful political expression and petition are criminalized.]

EXCERPT:

CHONGQING, China — A self-taught filmmaker who spent five months interviewing Tibetans about their hopes and frustrations living under Chinese rule is facing charges of state subversion after the footage was smuggled abroad and distributed on the Internet and at film festivals around the world.

The filmmaker, Dhondup Wangchen, who has been detained since March 2008, just weeks after deadly rioting broke out in Tibet, managed to sneak a letter out of jail last month saying that his trial had begun.

“There is no good news I can share with you,” he wrote in the letter, which was provided by a cousin in Switzerland. “It is unclear what the sentence will be.”

As President Obama prepares for his first trip to China next month, rights advocates are clamoring for his attention in hopes that he will raise the plight of individuals like Mr. Wangchen or broach such thorny topics as free speech, democracy and greater religious freedom.

Sphere: Related Content

No comments:

Post a Comment