Women's rights in China: Closure of feminist Douban channels sparks anger

Women's rights in China: Closure of feminist Douban channels sparks anger
Social media users created new Douban channels in the hope of resurrecting the feminist groups.
PHOTO: Reuters

Several Chinese feminist channels on the popular social networking forum Douban, were abruptly shut this week, triggering online anger and prompting calls for women to “stick together”.

Douban has closed at least eight feminist channels, citing extremism, and radical political views and ideological content, women’s rights supporter Zhou Xiaoxuan wrote on social media.

“I firmly support my sisters on Douban, and oppose Douban’s cancellation of feminist channels,” said Zhou, who in 2018 filed a sexual assault suit against a national television anchor, fuelling China’s #MeToo movement.

The groups mentioned in Zhou’s post were no longer accessible on Wednesday (April 14), but other feminist channels and content existed on Douban – one of China’s earliest online forums with discussion channels on a host of themes.

The owners of Douban did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The deleted channels included groups with links to the so-called 6B4T movement, a variant of feminism originating from South Korea that urges women to refrain from relationships with men, reject religion and stop buying products such as corsets that are hostile to the female gender.

The closures prompted social media users to create new Douban channels in hopes of resurrecting the groups, while the hashtag “women stick together” sprang up on Weibo, garnering almost 50 million views.

“We should stick together,” one Weibo user wrote. “Otherwise ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ will be our tomorrow.”

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China says it seeks to empower women and protect their rights, but it does not tolerate activities and discourse – online or offline – that it feels could agitate social order or signify defiance to its authority.

In 2015, authorities arrested five activists, later dubbed the “Feminist Five”, who were planning to demonstrate against sexual harassment on public transport. They were released a month later.

“Generally, online platforms conclude that the government dislikes feminism, so they tend to restrict feminism,” New York-based feminist activist Lu Pin said.

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