Thursday July 17, 9:10 PM
China targets foreign entertainers after Bjork debacle
BEIJING (Reuters) - China will ban all entertainers from
overseas, Hong Kong and Taiwan who have ever attended
activities that "threaten national sovereignty," the government
said on Thursday, after an outburst by Icelandic singer Bjork.
Earlier this year, Bjork shouted "Tibet! Tibet!" at a
Shanghai concert having performed her song "Declare
Independence," which she has used in the past to promote
independence movements in other places such as Kosovo.
China has ruled Tibet with an iron hand since its troops
marched into the Himalayan region in 1950, and swiftly condemns
any challenge to its authority there.
"Any artistic group or individual who have ever engaged in
activities which threaten our national sovereignty will not be
allowed in," the Ministry of Culture said in a statement on its
website ( http://www.ccnt.com.cn ).
During performances, entertainers who "threaten national
unity," "whip up ethnic hatred," "violate religious policy or
cultural norms" or "advocate obscenity or feudalism and
superstition," will also be banned, the rules state.
The new rules come on top of Beijing banning pop festivals
and tightening approvals for outdoor events in the months
leading up to the Olympics, where it fears security threats
from unruly crowds and potential protesters.
Even encores need to be approved in advance, the ministry
added.
"Nothing that has not been approved will be allowed to be
performed," it said.
Though the issue burst into the international spotlight
after the Bjork case, which prompted an angry rebuke from
China, singers from the much freer and more open ethnically
Chinese societies of Hong Kong and Taiwan are more normal
targets of ire.
China banned the hugely popular Taiwan pop star Chang
Hui-mei for a year after she sang the self-ruled island's
anthem at anti-China President Chen Shui-bian's inauguration in
2000. China considers Taiwan its sovereign territory.
She was later forgiven, though, and allowed back into
China.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by David Fogarty)
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