Two amateur computer coders yesterday pleaded guilty to “stirring up trouble and picking quarrels” in a case that highlighted a growing Chinese government crackdown on online activity.
Chen Mei (陳玫), 28, and Cai Wei (蔡偉), 27, created an online archive that stored articles that had been censored from the Chinese Internet, and an accompanying forum that allowed people to discuss them anonymously.
In court, prosecutors zeroed in on 2049bbs, the forum accompanying the archive.
They said Cai was responsible for building a Web site that had insulted the government, and Chen had paid for it, Chen’s mother, Wei Xiuwen, told reporters outside the court.
Family and friends believe what got them in trouble was archiving articles showing an alternative to China’s official narrative about its COVID-19 response just as the country started facing questions over its handling of the initial outbreak.
The case was tried at Wenyuhe People’s Court in the northeastern outskirts of Beijing.
The court said sentencing would come at a later date.
The charge “stirring up trouble and picking quarrels” is a catch-all charge often used for politically sensitive cases.
Chen’s mother, who traveled from northwestern Shaanxi Province to attend the hearing, said her son wore a full-body medical protective suit and had his hands cuffed and feet shackled.
She could tell which one was her son, as he is shorter than Cai, but was unable to make eye contact.
The only time her son spoke was to plead guilty, she said.
The two men have been held for more than a year since authorities detained them without warning in April last year, along with Cai’s girlfriend, Tang Hongbo.
Family and friends only knew something was wrong when they realized they had not had any contact with any of them three in days. Tang was later released after it became clear that she did not know about the others’ work online.
Their parents had not seen them for more than a year, as both lived in Beijing for work.
Throughout the process, the families pressed for the two to have access to their own lawyers, but the court appointed lawyers for them instead.
“If I can shoulder the consequences for him, I would,” said Cai’s father, Cai Jianli, from Guangdong Province in southern China.
The parents were not able to speak with their children.
Cai and Chen created the archive in 2018, keeping hundreds of censored articles. The forum saw discussions on sensitive issues that could not be freely discussed on the Chinese Internet, including the anti-government protests in Hong Kong and complaints about the Chinese Communist Party.
Forum users also discussed the pandemic after cases were first detected in Wuhan in late 2019.
Terminus2049, the archive itself, primarily housed articles that had been deleted from Wechat and Sina Weibo, popular social media platforms that are subject to regular algorithmic and human censorship.
While similar databases existed, most were blocked in China. Terminus2049 was available on Github, a code-sharing platform that is not blocked.
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