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Jackie Chan: Rush Hour actor urges new law to protect China's 'national dignity' from insults

Martial arts film star has previously suggested it was not 'good to have freedom'

Chris Baynes
Friday 09 March 2018 22:20 GMT
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Jackie Chan attends a news conference during the National People's Congress in China this week
Jackie Chan attends a news conference during the National People's Congress in China this week (REUTERS)

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Jackie Chan has sponsored a bill urging Beijing to introduce laws to protect China’s “national dignity” from insults.

The martial arts film star is one of 38 top political advisers who signed a proposal calling for affronts to the country’s “history, heroes and martyrs” be punishable as crimes.

State media said the proposal had been put forward amid a “worrying phenomenon in Chinese society – similar to neo-Nazism in Europe – in which people make fun of martyrs and victims of historical atrocity”.

“They are the scum of Chinese people”, Foreign Minister Wang Yi was quoted as saying.

Last month two Chinese men were detained by police after they were pictured wearing Japanese World War II army uniforms at the site of one of the conflict’s worst atrocities.

Insulting the Chinese national flag, emblem and anthem is already punishable under the country’s law.

But the advisers want to extend legislation to criminalise “affronts to Chinese dignity, history, heroes and martyrs” and “actions by Chinese citizens that promote Japanese militarism and Nazism in China”.

The proposal was put forward by He Yunao, a history professor from Nanjing University, and co-signed by 37 other members of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).

“The individual has dignity, but the nation also has dignity”, said Mr He.

Mr Chan has not commented publicly on the bill, but the Hong Kong-born action star has previously spoken in favour of China’s authoritarian rule.

“I’m not sure if it’s good to have freedom or not”, he said in 2009.

“I’m gradually beginning to feel that we Chinese need to be controlled. If we’re not being controlled, we’ll just do what we want.”

The remarks incensed pro-democracy legislators in Hong Kong, but Mr Chan was rewarded for his support for China’s one-party rule by an invitation in 2013 to serve on the CPPCC.

The political consultative conference gives recommendations to the National People’s Congress, although many are never followed up.

This week Mr Chan was in attendance as a delegate at the congress, where state media reported “patriotic discussions” were taking place about protecting the country’s “national dignity”.

The Independent has contacted Mr Chan’s representatives for a comment.

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