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In the latest article, ‘My Mother’, published on 16 April, Wen Jiabao wrote a tribute to his mother who passed away in December last year.
The article was first posted on Macau Herald.
The article then was posted on his official WeChat account (学人scholar) and widely shared on the social media platform.
But, on 17 April, WeChat users noticed that they couldn’t share the article within their network. Users attempting to share the article got a message that read: “This article violates WeChat’s terms of operation”. No copies of the article turned up on searching the Twitter-like social media platform Sina Weibo. One Weibo user’s comment read: “On official account of ‘scholar’, an article ‘My Mother’, is worth reading”.
What he actually wrote? Virtually nothing.
In my mind, China should be a country full of fairness and justice, always with a respect for the will of the people, humanity, and human nature,” said Mr Wen’s article, which did not directly discuss China’s current political environment.
China’s ruling Communist Party (CCP) has sought to tighten control over how netizens discuss history on the country’s heavily controlled internet in the run-up to the 100th anniversary of the party’s founding, in July.
Crazy..