'Oh bother!' - China censors Winnie the Pooh

The move to ban the self-described "bear of very little brain" comes ahead of China's 19th Communist Party Congress.

A horizontal studio shot of the Disney character Winnie the Pooh shot on a blue background. Winnie the Pooh was originally created by English author A.A. Milne.


Pictures of Winnie the Pooh have been banned on Chinese social media as officials clamp down on politically-sensitive references to the bear.
Authorities have deleted online comments referencing "Little Bear Winnie" - Pooh's Chinese name" - leaving users with error messages telling them: "This content is illegal."
Stickers and GIFs featuring the bear, the most famous resident of Hundred Acre Wood, have also been removed from WeChat - a messaging app used by 889 million people in the country.
Some pictures of the AA Milne character and references using his English name are still permitted on the popular Twitter-like platform Weibo.
No explanation for the ban has been given by officials, but the bear has been compared to Chinese President Xi Jinping in the past and the crackdown comes in the run up to China's 19th Communist Party Congress.
Chinese social media users have been testing the boundaries imposed on the lovable creation of AA Milne.
"Poor Little Winnie," one Weibo user wrote. "What did this adorable honey-loving bear ever do to provoke anyone?"
In 2013, a similar ban was imposed in response to a popular comparison of a photo of President Xi and then-US President Barack Obama with Pooh and his friend Tigger.



 government blocks meme that compares Xi Jinping to Winnie the Pooh and  to !
The following year a photographed handshake between President Xi and Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe faced similar treatment.
The ruling Communist Party is highly sensitive to mocking depictions of its leader.



RT @benyunmowang I really should read Winnie the Pooh...  #APEC2014 #China #Japan @EleanorFreund@mwings17
It will be particularly eagle-eyed in the coming months as President Xi attempts to consolidate power ahead of an important twice-a-decade party conference.
The National Congress event is being held in autumn and will see elections for the most senior positions in China's ruling Communist Party and Politburo, its main policy-making committee.
By;Worldcoinsmoney.blogspot.com
CHINA.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Paul Kagame wins Rwandan election to secure third term

Saudi foreign minister reacts to UN: ‘We don't want to see Yemenis suffer’

Rolls-Royce safeguards 7,000 UK jobs after announcing £150m investment