Xi just left before Fujian revolted? A group of websites attacking the Chinese Communist Party were blocked

Xi Jinping visited Fujian just last month, inspecting the armed police force to maintain stability internally, prompting speculation of a civil unrest. The Chinese Communist Party official recently claimed that Xiamen, Fujian recently investigated and dealt with a number of platforms and websites for allegedly “distorting the history of the Chinese Communist Party, attacking the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party, and defaming heroes and martyrs.

A group of websites in Xiamen, Fujian were purged for “attacking the CPC” and “historical nihilism”

According to the official microblog of the National Office of the Communist Party of China (CPC), Xiamen, Fujian, recently investigated a number of platforms and websites for allegedly “distorting the history of the CPC, attacking the leadership of the CPC, and defaming heroes and martyrs,” and interviewed the people in charge. The company also took measures to suspend updates and shut down the offending board.

According to the report, the Xiamen City, Fujian Province, the net letter department since February this year, the inspection found a number of illegal websites, a total of 43 times to clean up online harmful information involving historical nihilism.

Among them, the WeChat public number “History Nihilism” was accused of using the account name for malicious marketing.

“Suhong.com”, “Daidaihealth.com”, “Hundred War.com”, “DouSou.com” “Document Library”, “Santaihu.com”, “QiMen Stew Hypothesis” and other public weibo platforms were accused of distorting the history of the CPC, “New China” and attacking the CPC. “This year marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of the CCP.

This year is the so-called 100th anniversary of the founding of the CPC, and after Xi Jinping asked all people to learn the history of the Party and to develop a “correct view of Party history,” a new edition of the 2021 “Brief History of the Communist Party of China” (CPC History) was officially launched as the designated study material. Xi Jinping’s rule accounts for a quarter of the content, while the Cultural Revolution and the sins of Mao Zedong are also downplayed.

On February 20 this year, Xi Jinping called for “correct understanding and scientific evaluation of major events, meetings and figures in the history of the Party” at the “mobilization meeting on Party history study and education”. Xi also repeatedly stressed his opposition to historical nihilism.

According to a commentary published by the French Broadcasting Corporation, since Xi Jinping proposed to oppose historical nihilism, many netizens have asked the first question: Does the history of the CPC stand the test of history?

Authorities to regulate the Chinese Communist Party soldiers involved in the defamation of martyrs is said to have serious confrontation with the nation

In addition, according to the aforementioned official reports, the “Document Vision” website in Xiamen, Fujian Province, has been accused of slandering heroes and martyrs.

On May 1, 2018, the Communist Party’s first “Law on the Protection of Martyrs” took effect, specifying that those who distort, scandalize, desecrate or deny the deeds and spirit of heroes and martyrs will be punished and held criminally liable according to the law. The Amendment (XI) to the Criminal Law of the People’s Republic of China, which took effect on March 1 this year, specifically provides for insulting martyrs, which may be punished by up to three years in prison.

In February, following the official release of news and video of four Chinese soldiers killed in a clash on the India-China border, Qiu Ziming, who goes by the microblogging handle “Hot Pen Little Ball,” was criminally detained for questioning the true number of deaths on the Chinese side, followed by 19-year-old U.S. permanent resident Wang Jingyu and Pan Rui, the son of real estate businessman Pan Shiyi, who were also sought online for related comments. The same was true of the 19-year-old U.S. permanent resident Wang Jingyu and Pan Rui, the son of property developer Pan Shiyi, who were also sought online for their comments.

A number of other mainland netizens were also placed in administrative or criminal detention for making what officials accused of “defamatory remarks about heroes on the border.

On the twentieth anniversary of the South China Sea collision, on April 2, the Chinese Communist Party officially reported that another netizen had been criminally detained for insulting Wang Wei, the “air and sea guard.

In an interview with Radio Free Asia, Yao Cheng, a former officer in the Chinese Communist Party’s naval command, said that the so-called martyrs are only a unilateral recognition by the Party, and that in reality these people did not die defending the country, but rather defending the Party’s rule.

Yao Cheng believes that the Chinese Communist Party soldiers and the nationals have become seriously antagonistic. He cited the Sino-Indian border conflict as an example of the CCP authorities’ lack of confidence in their own regime by cracking down on civilian questions about the martyrs and events: “The CCP has a lot of things to say about this (the true number of people killed in action) that are done in secret and not made public, so they definitely don’t let the outside world talk, which is a consistent practice. The Chinese Communist Party uses high-handed methods to suppress the moment but not the world, the truth will be revealed to the world. The more the Communist Party suppresses, the more it shows that it has no self-confidence.”

Fujian Xiamen was used as an example of anti-communist or related to Xi Jinping’s internal worries?

It is worth noting that the official use of a number of platforms and websites to rectify this time, is in Xiamen, Fujian. Xiamen is the closest city to Taiwan on the mainland and is across the sea from Kinmen.

Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China, visited Fujian from March 22 to March 25.

According to official media reports, on March 25, Xi was in Fujian to promote cross-strait integration with “general benefits” to Taiwan. But the next day the official media also disclosed that Xi had visited the armed forces, mentioning the “preparation for war and warfare”.

The commentator Zheng Zhongyuan wrote an article in the Taiwanese media “Shangpao” that this is Xi Jinping’s “soft and hard” approach to Taiwan. The fact that Xi Jinping went to Fujian to inspect not the army, but the armed forces responsible for maintaining stability internally, accidentally reveals another intention and concern, which is to prevent civil unrest and civil unrest.

The company’s main goal is to provide a better solution to the problem. Xi Jinping’s concern is that if war breaks out, will there be chaos in Fujian and a rebellion among the people? After all, the Chinese Communist Party is only temporarily occupying the land of China, the red dynasty is not good governance, not the hearts of the people for a long time.