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  • Recommended: Forbidden artist Ai Weiwei makes massive map of China out of baby formula
  • Recommended: Artist Ai Weiwei's answer to 81 days in China prison: Profanity-laced heavy metal
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In Behind the Wall, NBC News correspondents and producers examine events and trends in China, both big and small.

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  • 19
    Mar
    2012
    11:15am, EDT

    One tweet, 10,000 followers: Dissident artist Ai Weiwei slips, briefly, through China censor

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – The sudden appearance and rapid disappearance of dissident artist Ai Weiwei on China’s version of Twitter has provided a window into the zany, fast-paced and utterly incomprehensible world of social media censorship in the communist state.

    Ai told NBC News that he had been told that -- since new rules were introduced over the weekend on the mandatory real-name registration of every account on the Twitter-style Sina Weibo website -- his name was no longer being blocked on the site.


    “Before if you looked up my name on Sina Weibo you got a message that said that it was a ‘sensitive or illegal word being used,’” Ai told NBC News Monday. “Yesterday a friend told me that my name was no longer being blocked, so we thought we’d give it a try.”

    Ai, whose outspoken criticism of China’ ruling Communist Party and alleged tax-evasion led to his detention for 81 days last year, has had his name censored by China’s “Great Firewall” and his physical travel has also been restricted.

    So the sudden discovery that his name was suddenly viewable and searchable on Weibo spurred him to experiment.

    “I just wanted to see if this policy really applies. They [new internet rules] said if you use your real name and identity, you can open your own Weibo account,” Ai said, “so we tried and found that it worked.”

    "Ai Weiwei testing, 3/19/2012" would be Ai’s first and last post under his Weibo account.

    Account deleted
    In a little under two hours, 10,680 people flocked to follow him online before censors deleted his account.

    Though unsurprised by the number of followers he attracted in such a short time, he still can’t explain why he was suddenly able to open an account.

    “I have no idea. Some people said it may just be a mistake, I have no idea,” he said. 

    Read more news from Behind the Wall

    Curiously, the introduction of the new rules was followed shortly afterward by the banning of the Chinese term for “real-name registration.”

    Weibo users had been comparing notes regarding whose accounts had or hadn’t been suspended for not providing their real names. The blocking of “real-name registration” appeared to happen because the discussion of the topic became so widespread.

    Sildeshow: History of US-China relations

    Sina has provided some information about how many of its users have opted to register their Weibo accounts with their real identities. The last official statistic released was a week ago when the company announced that it anticipated 60% of its users would be registered by last Friday’s deadline.

    Earlier Monday, NBC News attempted to create a new Weibo account using an anonymous identity. While the site seemed to accept the information filled in, no confirming email required to start using the account ever showed up in our inbox.

    'Jasmine Revolution'
    However, some users who say they have not submitted any identification to Sina claim they have the ‘V’ badge that all users who verify their identity have on the site.

    China’s government is sensitive about the destabilizing potential of social media sites as seen in places like Egypt, Libya and most recently Syria.

    Chinese TV show 'Interviews before Execution' stirs controversy

    An anonymous call for a “Jasmine Revolution” early last year sparked a tightening of restrictions on such sites and increased calls by Chinese regulators and officials for real name registration.

    Another newly banned word was “Ferrari,” amid intense gossiping over the potential identity of the owner of a Ferrari who crashed their car early Sunday morning in Beijing, killing one and injuring two others.

    The topic that was quickly censored after users speculated that the victim could have been the child of a high-level Communist official.

    NBC News’ Bo Gu contributed research to this report.

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    11 comments

    "Testing..." BANNED. Oh, China. What are you so afraid of? You silly little dictatorship.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, ferrari, featured, censor, twitter, ai-weiwei, weibo, real-name-registration
  • 24
    Jan
    2011
    12:40am, EST

    Is China's 'Mr. Ferrari' slowing down at 60?

    By Eric Baculinao

    To some Beijing-based observers who have followed his legendary “rags-to-riches” story, Li Xiaohua was “Mr. Ferrari.”  Li burst into the public eye in 1992 as the first mainland Chinese to own an iconic luxury sports car.

    He broke old communist-era taboos by proudly showing off his wealth, shattered the stereotyped image of the impoverished Chinese, and foretold the rise of the country as a serious consumer of luxury.

    Eric Baculinao/NBC News File

    China's first Ferrari and Li on party screen display.

    The colorful ceremony in an ancient park to turn the ignition key of a flaming red 348TS worth $138,880, was a symbolic event.  It captured the spirit of a roaring new era ushered in by reformist leader Deng Xiaoping, who famously declared “to get rich is glorious.”

    Four years later, Li Xiaohua aimed even higher – literally -- by donating to astronomy research.  In another high-profile event, a minor planet discovered by a Chinese observatory was officially named after him.

    But as he recently celebrated his 60th birthday, the man -- who has immortalized his name both on earth and in the heavens -- was exhibiting the signs and circumstances of slowing down.

    To more than 400 party guests, he bowed and expressed his thanks, and introduced his 25-year-old daughter Li Xiang, who has come home after years of education in England and the United States.

    “I hope she can find a good husband, who can be an ordinary man, really just a simple man,” he said to laughter and applause.

    A 'profiteer' or a pioneer?
    Li Xiaohua represented the rough-and-tumble days of China’s capitalist experiment.  He was a foot soldier of Deng’s revolution, taking all its risks and rewards.

    Born to a poor family of six that shared windowless 75-square-foot housing in old Beijing, the teenager Li -- like the millions of urban youth sent to the farms by Chairman Mao’s Cultural Revolution -- ventured to the wilderness of China’s northeast frontier region, where he labored as a tractor driver.

    After eight years, he returned to Beijing, virtually penniless and jobless.  It was 1977, the eve of Deng’s reform era.

    Li later became a boiler worker.  And then a cook, while also buying and selling watches on the side.  For playing too early in the capitalist game, he was reportedly detained for a period of time, on charges of “profiteering.”

    Li Xiaohua (centre), daughter and guest.

    “I was busy cooking when they came to take me away.  It was really embarrassing,” he was quoted in one interview.

    American-made soda machine
    Li was released from detention in the early 80s, as the winds of Deng’s capitalist-style reform began blowing in force.  In southern China, he came across an American-made iced-drink dispenser that would change his life forever.

    With borrowed money, he bought the drink dispenser for $800 and took it to a seaside resort in North China.  The business of selling iced-drinks thrived in the hot summer and provided Li with the capital for a bigger business, a video movie parlor.

    By 1985, he had made his initial fortune and went to study in Japan, where he hit another “pot of gold.”  He became the exclusive distributor for a Chinese-invented hair growth lotion that proved a big hit among the Japanese.

    And when Hong Kong’s real estate slumped after Britain agreed to return the capitalist colony to communist China, triggering widespread fear and initial exodus, Li poured all the millions he had amassed into distressed properties.

    “I had nothing left, literally nothing, I only ate instant noodles,” he once told NBC News.

    The enormous investment returns from Hong Kong’s recovery were then plowed into even bigger lucrative infrastructure plays in Southeast Asia, and the rest was history.

    By 1992 when he bought his Ferrari, the riches that began with the humble drink dispenser, had transformed Li into one of the wealthiest in China.

    By 1997, his estimated worth was $300 million, compared with the $20 million owned by the lowly inventor of the magic hair grower.

    Li Xiaohua and his daughter at the party.

    Rise and fall of tycoons
    In 1999, Li was still one of the two or three richest Chinese, but his ranking would decline quite rapidly.

    He was listed as #23 in 2003, but by 2006 he was listed as #281.  By last year, he was totally excluded from the Rich List prepared by Hurun Report, which tracks the ranking of China’s wealthiest individuals.

    “We don’t see much information in the public domain about Li Xiaohua’s assets, and as a result, it’s difficult to quantify his wealth,” Rupert Hoogewerf, publisher of Hurun Report, told NBC News. Hoogewerf, who attended Li’s birthday as a long-time friend, described a man “who is still in business and still enjoys business.”

    “But I have the impression that he also wants to enjoy life more.  He has all the houses and all the cars in the world that he wants, so what else would he want?” Hoogewerf said.

    Ferrari to charity

    At the birthday party, hundreds of guests applauded a video presentation that featured Li’s philanthropic work.  He was once honorary president of China Charity Federation, and he equipped and built “Xiaohua Schools” around the country.

    “People should be caring, and should know how to love others and help others,” he was quoted as saying.

    No longer a novelty, his storied Ferrari has been donated to charity.

    In 1997 there were 200 Ferrari owners in China.  Today, they number 999.  China has become the fastest growing and potentially biggest luxury car market in the world.

    To many observers, the provocative image of a flamboyant Li Xiaohua with his red Ferrari will remain as one enduring symbol of China’s historic turning point.

    And as he recedes from the front row of billionaires, he will always be remembered as the most visible champion of China’s first generation of risk-takers from the ranks of the rusticated youths, who had nothing to lose as they boldly seized chances and helped shake and reshape China into what it is today.

    Researcher He Xin contributed to this report.

    26 comments

    Hat tip to Li Xiaohua, a man that went from rags to riches, experienced many wonderful things during his life, then decided to help less fortunate people. This man truly remember where he started, now maybe the other 999 Ferrari owners can find some extra money in their back pocket to do the same!!!

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    Explore related topics: china, cars, ferrari, luxury-market, millionaires-hurun-report

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Behind the Wall provides a dynamic look at China by examining news events and trends – both big and small – from NBC News correspondents and producers. Learn about China's developing economy, politics and the cultural trends that move its 1.3 billion people.

Eric Baculinao

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