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Spike in online censorship as Liu Xiaobo tributes pour in

Hong Kong Weiboscope project picks up increase in deleted posts as internet users resort to candle emojis and other indirect references to remember late Nobel laureate

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“RIP” and candle emojis were among the Liu Xiaobo tributes censored online in China. Photo: EPA
Eva LiandKinling Loin Beijing

The number of posts censored on China’s Twitter-like Weibo service surged after reports emerged of Liu Xiaobo’s death on Thursday night, according to a University of Hong Kong censorship monitoring project.

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HKU assistant professor Fu King-wa, who heads up the Journalism and Media Studies Centre’s Weiboscope project, said on Friday that almost all the posts censored were related in some way to Liu’s death.

“You can’t even find posts with the words ‘candle’ or ‘grey’ because they could suggest a linkage to commemoration or a sentimental mood,” Fu said.

Weiboscope monitors 120,000 influential media and individual accounts on the country’s biggest microblogging platform.

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As of 3pm on Friday, 45 messages were deleted on average for every 10,000 posts from the selected accounts, six times the rate of the previous week.

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