The Galion Inquirer

Chinese Nobel literature winner: censorship a must

LOUISE NORDSTROM,Associated Press

STOCKHOLM (AP) — This year’s Nobel Prize in lit­er­a­ture win­ner, Mo Yan, who has been crit­i­cized for his mem­ber­ship in China’s Com­mu­nist Party and reluc­tance to speak out against the country’s gov­ern­ment, defended cen­sor­ship Thurs­day as some­thing as nec­es­sary as air­port secu­rity checks.

He also sug­gested he won’t join an appeal call­ing for the release of the jailed 2010 Peace Prize lau­re­ate, Liu Xiaobo, a fel­low writer and compatriot.

Mo has been crit­i­cized by human rights activists for not being a more out­spo­ken defender of free­dom of speech and for sup­port­ing the Com­mu­nist Party-backed writ­ers’ asso­ci­a­tion, of which he is vice president.

His com­ments Thurs­day, made dur­ing a news con­fer­ence in Stock­holm, appear unlikely to soften his crit­ics’ views toward him.

Award­ing him the lit­er­a­ture prize has also brought crit­i­cism from pre­vi­ous win­ners. Herta Mueller, the 2009 lit­er­a­ture lau­re­ate, called the jury’s choice of Mo a “cat­a­stro­phe” in an inter­view with the Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter last month. She also accused Mo of pro­tect­ing the Asian country’s cen­sor­ship laws.

China’s rulers for­bid oppo­si­tion par­ties and main­tain strict con­trol over all media.

Mo said he doesn’t feel that cen­sor­ship should stand in the way of truth but that any defama­tion, or rumors, “should be censored.”

But I also hope that cen­sor­ship, per se, should have the high­est prin­ci­ple,” he said in com­ments trans­lated by an inter­preter from Chi­nese into English.

Mo is spend­ing sev­eral days in Stock­holm before receiv­ing his pres­ti­gious prize in an awards cer­e­mony next Monday.

He won the Nobel for his sprawl­ing tales of life in rural China. In its cita­tion, the jury said Mo “with hal­lu­ci­na­tory real­ism merges folk tales, his­tory and the contemporary.”

In address­ing the sen­si­tive issue of cen­sor­ship in China, Mo likened it to the thor­ough secu­rity pro­ce­dures he was sub­jected to as he trav­eled to Stockholm.

When I was tak­ing my flight, going through the cus­toms … they also wanted to check me — even tak­ing off my belt and shoes,” he said. “But I think these checks are necessary.”

Mo also dodged ques­tions about Liu Xiaobo, the jailed Peace Prize win­ner. Liu was sen­tenced to 11 years in prison in 2009 for co-authoring a bold call for end­ing China’s single-party rule and enact­ing demo­c­ra­tic reforms.

China’s recep­tion of the two Nobel lau­re­ates has been worlds apart.

While it rejected the honor bestowed on Liu, call­ing it a des­e­cra­tion of the Nobel tra­di­tion, it wel­comed Mo’s win with open arms, say­ing it reflected “the pros­per­ity and progress of Chi­nese lit­er­a­ture, as well as the increas­ing influ­ence of China.”

Although Mo has pre­vi­ously said he hopes Liu will be freed soon, he refused to elab­o­rate more on the case.

On the same evening of my win­ning the prize, I already expressed my opin­ion, and you can get online to make a search,” he said, telling the crowd that he hoped they wouldn’t press him on the sub­ject of Liu.

Some, how­ever, have inter­preted Mo’s Octo­ber com­ments as if he hoped the release of Liu would make the jailed activist see sense and embrace the Com­mu­nist Party line.

Ear­lier this week, an appeal signed by 134 Nobel lau­re­ates, from Peace Prize win­ners such as South African Arch­bishop Desmond Tutu to Taiwanese-American chemist Yuan T. Lee, called the deten­tion of Liu and his wife a vio­la­tion of inter­na­tional law and urged their imme­di­ate release.

But Mo sug­gested he had no plans of adding his name to that peti­tion. “I have always been inde­pen­dent. I like it that way. When some­one forces me to do some­thing I don’t do it,” he said, adding that has been in his stance in the past decade.

Mo is to receive his Nobel prize along with the win­ners in med­i­cine, physics, chem­istry and economics.

The Nobel Peace Prize is handed out in a sep­a­rate cer­e­mony in Oslo on the same day.

__

Asso­ci­ated Press writ­ers Gary Peach in Riga, Latvia and Alexa Ole­sen in Bei­jing con­tributed to this report.

AP News Posted by on Dec 6 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Comments are closed

Search Archive

Search by Date
Search by Category
Search with Google

Open M - F 9am to 4pm | 419-468-1117 | 129 Harding Way East Galion, OH 44833

We use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our Web site. For more information click here.
Click on the following for legal information: Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2010 - 2012, Ohio Community Media