A Chinese cartoonist whose anonymous political satire earned him comparisons with Banksy — and the wrath of Beijing — has outed himself as a former law school…
A Chinese cartoonist whose anonymous political satire earned him comparisons with Banksy — and the wrath of Beijing — has outed himself as a former law school student who became politicised after watching a Tiananmen Square documentary in a dorm room.
Badiucao, whose subversive pieces regularly mock President Xi Jinping, has revealed his face and his personal story for the first time in the hope it will help protect him from the Chinese authorities.
He says he and his family have been under threat ever since he was forced to cancel a highly anticipated show in Hong Kong last year, with Chinese police allegedly telling relatives « there would be no mercy » if he didn’t pull out.
« I don’t think the Chinese Communist Party will ever forget or forgive its enemies, which in this case is me, » he told AFP from Melbourne, where he currently lives.
The artists subversive pieces regularly mock President Xi Jinping
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake, AFP
« The only way to defeat that kind of terror is to expose everything openly… so everyone around in the world can see what’s going in China, » he said.
Badiucao, 33, grew up in Shanghai and was considering a career as a lawyer until one night he and three friends began watching a downloaded Taiwanese drama.
Unbeknown to them, the file had « The Gate of Heavenly Peace » — a detailed documentary about the 1989 crackdown on Tiananmen square protesters — spliced in.
The group was transfixed.
None of the young men — all students at East China University of Political Science and Law — had ever heard of the uprising or its bloody ending, thanks to party censors and the « Great Firewall ».