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‘Brutal chilling effect’: Chinese feminists fear for the future of #MeToo as leading activist faces judgment

  • Activists Sophia Huang Xueqin and Wang Jianbing face years in prison for ‘inciting subversion of state power’
  • ‘We don’t know where the boundaries of activism are’, advocate says, in a case that has attracted international attention

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Sophia Huang Xueqin, a prominent feminst journalist based in Guangzhou, had been detained since September 2021 on charges that she attacked China’s government and political system. Photo: handout
Yuanyue Dangin Beijing

Chinese feminists fear a chilling effect and more restrictions as the journalist who helped to ignite China’s #MeToo movement stood trial recently, and now faces years in jail.

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Journalist and feminist activist Sophia Huang Xueqin and her friend, labour activist Wang Jianbing, have been in detention for two years.

They stand accused of “inciting subversion of state power” and were tried in the southern city of Guangzhou on September 22, according to friends.

Under China’s criminal law, the charge could result in up to five years in prison, however a person deemed to be a “ringleader” could face a longer sentence. Authorities have yet to announce a verdict, which is not uncommon in such cases.

“It’s a great loss for the #MeToo movement in China and a sign of a brutal chilling effect,” said an anonymous feminist activist previously active in Guangzhou.
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The case has also gained international attention.

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