[ad_1]
Today, Pkl. Chinese woman arrested after throwing ink at President Xi Jinping 's poster. The action of the woman was broadcast via a live streaming service on Twitter social media.
As reported by AFP on Tuesday (17/7/2018), the detention of women was expressed by a network of British human rights activists (CHRD) based in the United Kingdom. The woman detained was identified by the CHRD as Dong Yaoqiong (28).
CHRD mentions that the Chinese authorities also arrested Dong's father and a Chinese artist who participated in the broadcast of his action via social media.
Dong Jianbiao, Dong's father, briefly confirmed the identity of his daughter by displaying the child's identity card. The father has also been known to publish a statement via social media that calls for the detention of his daughter as an "act of kidnapping as a bandit" and "illegal repressive action".
Since the statement was posted on Twitter, the father has disappeared. Local artist Hua Yong, who had called for Dong's release via social media, would also have disappeared. In 2017, Hua Yong was arrested for documenting the evictions of immigrants in Beijing
. The detention against Dong took place after he broadcast his action via Twitter live on July 4th. At that time, Dong threw ink at President Xi's poster at a location in Shanghai's financial district.
"Xi Jinping, I'm here waiting for you to stop," Dong cried in action.
In his action, Dong also made allegations that the ruling Communist Party in China was behind an orchestrated "control of the oppressive brain." Dong 's action video has been retweeted tens of thousands of times by other Twitter users.
CHRD stated that Dong would be arrested the same day after his action. Dong's Twitter account is known to have been removed a few hours after the action. Dong's latest chirping included photographs of uniformed men standing in front of his apartment
"(Chinese Authority) Remove Freedom of Expression to Protect Xi Jingping's Personality," said CHRD . accessible with special software to avoid censorship. The Chinese authorities themselves often punish those who are known to tarnish the image of their leader and the symbols of the Communist Party. dtc