Members of China’s Elite Denounce Censorship

[Updated 2/16; scroll down]   This looks like very good news for China:

A dozen former Communist Party officials and senior scholars, including a onetime secretary to Mao, a party propaganda chief and the retired bosses of some of the country’s most powerful newspapers, have denounced the recent closing of a prominent news journal, helping to fuel a growing backlash against censorship.

The trigger for the protest letter, which was leaked to journalists, was the closing of a Chinese newspaper with an independent streak.  Kudos to the New York Times for its excellent coverage to the China censorship story. 

Not reported as prominently is a quiet protest movement in which millions of Chinese have resigned from the Communist Party (via the dissident Epoch Times).

Update 2/16:   A partial climbdown by Beijing?  Freezing Point will reopen, but without the leadership of its courageous editor, who said this:

“This is a ridiculous decision!” Mr Li was quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency.

“The soul of Bingdian has been extinguished. Only a shell is left. If the staff decided to protest, no-one will do the job. It will be an empty paper on 1 March,” he said.

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  1. Almost as soon as that article hit the wire, i went over to Xinhuanet to see if there was anything and sure enough the CCP wasted no time in mounting a defense of their position. Between the criticism growing in the States and this new letter a response was bound to appear. sadly, it doesn’t seem that it reflects any desire to take their old friends’ words to heart.

    link to the original article (BBC also has something on it):
    http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-02/15/content_4181289.htm