A marigold and magenta mohawk adorning his shaven skull, Chinese punk rocker Shan Lin has a subversive message in a country that suppresses dissent — a rebel with a cause.
“The more anarchists the better, the more chaos and the more we love that! This country is so screwed up! There’s a reason our band is called The Demonstrators (示威者),” the 30-year-old said before taking the stage at the annual Beijing Punk Festival.
A T-shirt sold by the group SMZB set the tone for the event: The design shows one of the columns that line Tiananmen Square, the symbolic heart of Beijing and Chinese state power, emblazoned with the words “Chinese dream” — Chinese President Xi Jinping’s (習近平) catchphrase — and a pile of skulls at its base.
Photo: AFP
The crowd, a few hundred strong, made for an eclectic scene: Brightly dyed hairstyles mixed with more conservatively dressed students in the heart of 798, an industrial estate converted into a trendy art district.
Bouncing up and down, they pogoed together in a smoky mosh pit as Shan’s voice rose ever higher and he head-banged to a wall of screaming guitars.
It was a frenzied contrast to the sugary pop and bland rock that dominate China’s musical landscape.
Photo: AFP
“Protest is the spirit of punk. We’re talking about what we live every day,” said Lei Jun, a chubby singer in his 30s whose head is shaved and his arms striped with tattoos.
One of the festival organizers, he wore a dark T-shirt emblazoned with a three-word English obscenity involving the police.
Sex Pistols posters hang above the cash register in Lei’s little noodle restaurant in a narrow alley in old Beijing, but mainland China has a very different political system to Hong Kong, where major demonstrations have taken place in recent days. The country’s punks know that they cannot be as openly outrageous as Sid Vicious.
Some sing in broken English to express their most anti-establishment views — calls to fight the police “to the death” or tributes to the mothers of the students killed in the Tiananmen crackdown in 1989, while others use acronyms to disguise their denunciations of the Chinese Communist Party.
The Chinese punk bands may have copied the style of the original British punk scene, but their songs have distinctly local themes.
“They come from forced evictions, unemployed youths killing themselves, the fact there is no future, an education system that turns young people into worker robots, the way money rules,” Lei Jun said.
Punk first reached the country in the mid-1990s in Beijing and the central city of Wuhan after rock music — the symbol of the student protests of 1989 — was banned. In the early days, several of the first bands in the capital called themselves the “Army of Boredom.”
“Rock music was the music of hope, and social and political demands that people believed would succeed. Punk music comes from a disenchanted youth, at the bottom of the social order and who feel powerless as people focus on wealth,” said Nathanel Amar, an expert on Chinese punk at the French international research center CERI.
Twenty years later the themes have changed little, but there are still only an estimated 50-odd punk groups in China, and their audience is limited by censorship and lack of media access.
However, Amar said their small crowds gave them a certain freedom.
“The authorities seem to have decided that looking to ban them would just raise their profile,” he said.
However, there are other limits too. The vast majority of punk musicians have ordinary day jobs: Shan, of The Demonstrators, is a construction worker, and his guitarist smoothes down his hair when he goes back to work at an estate agency.
“It’s hard to have a real punk way of life. We have to earn a living and with the way the Chinese judge by appearances all the time, it’s hard to maintain a punk look,” said Lei Jun — whose festival was sponsored by footwear brand Doc Martens.
About 30 percent of the crowd were “committed fans who follow the punk ethic,” he said, while “70 percent just come to hear the bands and to slum it a bit before going home: one-day or one-week punks.”
Ren Kai (任凱), lead singer for the group Fire 6, worries about losing “authentic” fans to the wave of “egocentric entertainment where young people just navel gaze.”
However, most of their fans “live in the margins,” he said.
“There are no second-generation rich kids in this room,” he added, referring to the descendants of China’s new wealthy elite.
Wang Yuxin, 24, discovered punk a year ago and it was a revelation: “The pressure at home was too strong for too long and it oppressed me.”
“When I come to this kind of concert I feel free and unbound, I feel alive again,” she said, wearing leather boots and her hair in spikes.
Even so, things change afterwards, she said.
“When I go back home, I become well-behaved again. I’m a very sensible little girl,” Wang said.
Le Tuan Binh keeps his Moroccan soldier father’s tombstone at his village home north of Hanoi, a treasured reminder of a man whose community in Vietnam has been largely forgotten. Mzid Ben Ali, or “Mohammed” as Binh calls him, was one of tens of thousands of North Africans who served in the French army as it battled to maintain its colonial rule of Indochina. He fought for France against the Viet Minh independence movement in the 1950s, before leaving the military — as either a defector or a captive — and making a life for himself in Vietnam. “It’s very emotional for me,”
The Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) Central Committee is to gather in July for a key meeting known as a plenum, the third since the body of elite decisionmakers was elected in 2022, focusing on reforms amid “challenges” at home and complexities broad. Plenums are important events on China’s political calendar that require the attendance of all of the Central Committee, comprising 205 members and 171 alternate members with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) at the helm. The Central Committee typically holds seven plenums between party congresses, which are held once every five years. The current central committee members were elected at the
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi reaffirmed his pledge to replace India’s religion-based marriage and inheritance laws with a uniform civil code if he returns to office for a third term, a move that some minority groups have opposed. In an interview with the Times of India listing his agenda, Modi said his government would push for making the code a reality. “It is clear that separate laws for communities are detrimental to the health of society,” he said in the interview published yesterday. “We cannot be a nation where one community is progressing with the support of the Constitution while the other
CODIFYING DISCRIMINATION: Transgender people would be sentenced to three years in prison, while same-sex relations could land a person in jail for more than a decade Iraq’s parliament on Saturday passed a bill criminalizing same-sex relations, which would receive a sentence of up to 15 years in prison, in a move rights groups condemned as an “attack on human rights.” Transgender people would be sentenced to three years’ jail under the amendments to a 1988 anti-prostitution law, which were adopted during a session attended by 170 of 329 lawmakers. A previous draft had proposed capital punishment for same-sex relations, in what campaigners had called a “dangerous” escalation. The new amendments enable courts to sentence people engaging in same-sex relations to 10 to 15 years in prison, according to the