July 24, 2008
July 18, 2008
In a couple of weeks Beijing will turn into a party town
and Sanlitun is predicted to be the epicenter of the Olympic night
events.
The South
China Morning Post has however reported that the bar owners in
the area were asked to refuse service to black patrons. The article
reports:
Bar owners near the Workers' Stadium in central Beijing say they have
been forced by Public Security Bureau officials to sign pledges
agreeing not to let black people enter their premises.
"Uniformed Public Security Bureau officers came into the bar
recently and told me not to serve black people or Mongolians,"
said the co-owner of a western-style bar, who asked not to be named.
We checked twice just to make sure: This story comes from the SCMP
and not The Onion ... in 2008 ... as the world awaits the
ultra-harmonious "One World, One Dream" Olympics. Did you hear
that? That was the sound of our jaw dropping.
But something about this report doesn't gel. Could this possibly be
true? Could it possibly be enforced? Given the strong national ties that
China has built with African nations in the last two years coupled with
the fact that many Olympic athletes (and their families) hail from
African descent — not to mention that such a policy would be
despicable and horrendous PR for a country looking to improve its image
— it sounds like, perhaps, some racist in the Beijing government went
out on his own on this one.
We hope strong denials from Beijing are in the works.
Will Kobe Bryant be barred from enjoying a celebratory
drink in Beijing?
UPDATE: More
on the Beijing bar ban confusion
GEOFFREY YORK
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
July 18, 2008
BEIJING — Chinese police officials have forced some Beijing bar owners
to sign secret pledges promising to prohibit blacks from entering their
bars during the Olympics next month, a Hong Kong newspaper says.
The police denied the report Friday, and most bars denied any knowledge of
the pledges. But many African residents of Beijing say they are facing
harassment from police and discrimination from bars as the Olympics
approach.
“Bar owners near the Workers Stadium in central Beijing say they have
been forced by Public Security Bureau officials to sign pledges agreeing
not to let black people enter their premises,” the South China Morning
Post reported Friday.
It quoted the co-owner of a bar who said that a group of police had
recently visited his establishment to order it “not to serve black
people or Mongolians.”
Paramilitary policemen hold the Chinese national flag in front of the
National Stadium, also known as the Bird's Nest, at the Olympic Green in
Beijing on Friday.
(Joe Chan/Reuters)
Related Articles
Recent
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From the archives
* IOC says it's time for China to deliver on promises
* China seen as reneging on media-freedom vow
The Globe and Mail
In the famed Sanlitun bar district of Beijing, some bar owners have been
required to sign pledges agreeing to ban a variety of activities,
including dancing and serving black customers, the newspaper said.
Africans and Mongolians are often perceived as criminals in Beijing. Until
this year, a number of young African men were openly selling drugs in the
Sanlitun district, and many Mongolian women were working as prostitutes in
the city.
Both groups are among the targets of China's security crackdown in the
lead-up to the Olympics, along with thousands of Tibetans, Uyghurs,
migrant workers, petitioners and social activists who are seen as
potential troublemakers or protesters.
In a notorious incident last September, dozens of black people were
detained by police in a raid on bars in the Sanlitun district.
Witnesses said the police rounded up all the black people they could find,
up to three dozen in total, and beat some of them with rubber truncheons.
Grenada's ambassador to China filed a complaint to the Foreign Ministry,
saying that his son suffered a concussion and needed hospital treatment
after he was clubbed on the head by police during the raid.
Africans have been coming to Beijing for decades as university students or
traders. But many were forced to leave China this year because of new visa
restrictions that made it difficult to renew their paperwork.
In interviews Friday, a number of Africans said they are facing
discriminatory rules from Beijing's bars and nightclubs as the Olympics
approach.
A woman from Liberia, who is co-owner of a hair salon in Beijing, said she
was outraged when she visited a popular Beijing nightclub and found that
the entrance fee for black people was twice as high as for other
foreigners.
Even if they managed to enter the club, the black patrons were prohibited
from sitting at the tables, she said.
In another incident, she said, an African-owned bar was raided this week
by police with dogs, and the customers were required to provide urine
samples for drug tests.
“When the police come, you have to run,” she said. “I've lived in
Holland and the United States and it was never like this. There's no human
rights here. It's racist and it makes me feel very bad.”
If the police are now ordering bars to prohibit black people from
entering, it is highly unfair, she said. “Every race has good people and
bad people. You can't blame all blacks for drugs. If a person is not
causing a problem, you shouldn't bother them.”
Two Nigerian businessmen said they were required to show their passports
before being allowed to enter a Beijing nightclub last weekend. Black
people who could not produce their passports were barred from entering the
club, but other foreigners were not required to show their passports, they
said.
“This had never happened before to me,” one of the Nigerians said.
“I was very angry. This is racism.”
The Africans spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing more harassment from
the police if they are identified. The Nigerians, interviewed at a bar,
asked that the bar not be identified because they were worried that it
could be raided if the police learned that Africans congregate there.
SOURCE
ANOTHER ARTICLE:
Washington Post
|
China’s
Olympics PR and Why the Chinese Just Cannot Win
By
Chris Devonshire-Ellis
July
22, 2008
A lot of comment continues to appear in various media about the
Olympics, much of it negative. From reports in Hong Kong-based South China
Morning Post about “black people not allowed into Beijing bars,” to
issues over excessive clampdowns and visa issues, it seems whichever way the
Chinese turn, a media angle is there to criticize.
However,
much of the criticism is directed at issues that are not quite as they
initially appear. The article about black people in Beijing ’s bars, which
in the face of it appears racist, emanates from a different set of
circumstances. Regrettably, the bar street concerned (a rather seedy area to
be frank, populated by bars selling low cost happy hour beers, and a haunt
of students, rather than Beijing locals or businessmen) has long had
problems with drugs. The pushers and dealers are regrettably often Africans.
[Oh?] What the police actually asked bar owners in the area to do was to “look
out for black people behaving suspiciously on your premises, and if
necessary, ask them to leave.”
Given
the full context of the circumstances, it’s not as initially racist as it
appears. It’s not unreasonable for the police in any country to work and
make requests concerning security to bar owners and managers. Who are the
perpetrators of wrongdoing here; the Chinese police, trying to crack down on
drug abuse during a time when the city is full of tourists; or the drug
dealers, viewing the Olympics as a prime occasion to make more money than
usual? Yet it’s the Chinese police who get all the negative headlines.
Negativity
has also been directed at the heavy handed manner that China has again gone
about its traffic management during the Games. Commencing just a few days
ago, private vehicles in Beijing were restricted to even numbered license
plated cars on the streets one day, odd the next. Draconian? Hardly. It’s
a time proven way to widen road capacity during a busy period and also
assists with pollution issues. Years ago, when I lived in Athens , the
Greeks would do the same when the pollution got too bad. People would
grumble about if of course—it’s inconvenient and out of routine—but
faced between that and choking, putrid air and congested traffic, it’s the
lesser of two evils by far. Yet certain media take issue with it.
The
same applies to checking bags and having x-ray machines installed, for the
first time, on Beijing ’s subways. Passengers are required, rather like at
an airport, to put baggage through an x-ray machine, and not to take drinks
or food on the stations. Complaints aplenty, but why? Hong Kong’s
excellent MTR system has never allowed food and drink on the subway, and
surely the specter of some idiot with a vengeance carrying explosives into a
crowded underground space to blow himself up is a legitimate one given
today’s heightened security situation and tensions. These measures are not
unreasonable. The next Olympics, in 2012 are in London and I am sure that
similar measures will be in force on the underground system there.
Discussing
the issue with China-based PR experts, I hear a common thread: “When a
media situation becomes a no-win argument, it’s better just to say
nothing,” and common agreement that in handling the media as they are, the
Chinese are doing a very professional job, rather than a poor one, in their
management of such stories.
Continuing
a debate along such lines can make matters far worse, as was pointed out. In
the past, when China has tried to explain its position, it’s just dug
itself deeper into the mire. Consider Darfur . Much has been written about
the Chinese supply of arms and equipment to the government and thus adding
to the problems of the civil war. When attempting to explain their position,
the international media just went further on the offensive. Little matter
that the trucks and arms the government backed militia are using were sold
to the Sudanese [by whom?] well before the conflict erupted.
The perception has largely
been the Chinese have directly helped fund the conflict. Mia Farrow dubbed
the 2008 Games, “The Genocide Olympics,” and called for a boycott of an
event “organized by mass murderers.” [Whoa!]
The Chinese then just stopped
talking to the media, and instead limited their discussions over the Darfur
problem with other nations, behind closed doors. The issue has now dropped
quietly from the headlines.
I
live in Beijing , and I can advise the ambiance there is one of emerging
excitement and anticipation, and that the Games look as if they are going to
be a blast. It’ll be a great occasion, and one I do not want to miss. So,
when reading negative headlines about China , business, culture, and the
Olympics, especially at this moment when the international world is focused
on the country, consider these truisms: don’t believe everything you read
in the media, and sometimes you just can’t win. These have never been
truer about China , or about the Chinese, than they are right now.
* * * * *
JC's Response to this is:
Too bad the Chinese didn't have this kind of vision
when the British were turning their country into an opium den a century or
two, ago! Two people I know who live and work
in Shanghai are going back to their respective corners of the world, namely,
Belgium and Australia. After having lived in
China for five months in 2006, I'm not sure it is where I'd want to be
during the Games, when traffic will no doubt triple and getting things done
will slow down to a meager crawl. Better to watch the Games on CNN on my
small digital TV screen.
|
BLACKS
BANNED FROM BARS IN BEIJING DURING OLYMPICS!!! READ
ARTICLES NOW!
This should cause a real
flurry amongst Blacks around the world!
After working in China for five
months straight, in 2006, I'm really shocked by this!
Then, I took a good look at the facts. ALL THE SINGERS AT
THE CLUBS WHERE I WORKED IN SHANGHAI were black. The
musicians could be white, chinese or black, but the singer
had to be BLACK to authenticate the jazz/blues/r&b.
Amazing.
LISTEN
TO MUSICWOMAN TALK RADIO
The Chinese are racist from the word
"GO!" But they understand the fact that it takes
a BLACK WOMAN to make "the music" happen.
Sheeesh!
Funny, I was working toooo hard to
get some jazz gigs for many musicians in Beijing and
Tianjin during the Olympics, but nothing worked, nothing
happened.
The real rub is the number of
Chinese, males and females, who asked me about coming to
America. Everybody wants to come here. People hate living
in their own country. They all think America is the land
of opportunity. I've even started to write a book - WHAT
DOES AMERICA MEAN TO US?
How many of us watched BLACKS IN
AMERICA in the past two days?
Click the bold letters to read the
stories.
BLACKS
BANNED FROM BARS IN BEIJING DURING OLYMPICS!!! READ
ARTICLES NOW!
www.fyicomminc.com/gaianews/speech78.htm
|
No Blacks, Mongolians
Allowed At Beijing Bars: Report - July 19, 2008,
Printed on July 24, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/wire/92102
Hong Kong's English newspaper The South China
Morning Post Friday reported that Chinese authorities have issued a
secret ban on blacks, Mongolians and other "social
undesirables" from Beijing's bars during the Olympics.
As the content on South China Morning Post's site is
for subscribers only, here is an excerpt of the article c/o the
Beijing drinking blog Beijing Boyce:
Beijing authorities are secretly planning to ban
black people and others it considers social undesirables from entering
the city's bars during the Olympic Games, a move that would contradict
the official slogan, "One World, One Dream".
Bar owners near the Workers' Stadium in central
Beijing say they have been forced by Public Security Bureau officials
to sign pledges agreeing not to let black people enter their
premises....
Security officials are targeting Sanlitun, which
Olympic organisers expect to be a key destination for foreign tourists
looking for a party during the Games.
The pledges that Sanlitun bar owners had been
instructed to sign agreed to stop a variety of activities in their
establishments, including dancing and serving customers with black
skin, they said.
China's preeminent English-language media analysis
site Danwei didn't lend credence to the SMCP report, calling the
high-level ban "unlikely." However Jeremy Goldkorn writes on
Danwei that "it is highly plausible that some low level cops have
issued such instructions, especially with the current state of high
alert in Beijing making officials and government agencies paranoid and
very nervous about foreigners."
Further investigation by Beijing Boyce, who
interviewed Beijing bar owners on the alleged ban, found that
low-level Beijing cops have been visiting the capital city's watering
holes and warning owners and employees to keep their eye on black
patrons. According to an update Saturday on Beijing Boyce:
An owner said police met with Sanlitun bar reps and
told them to monitor black patrons. He said the police told the reps
that drug dealers are predominantly black in the area. He said the
police did not ask bar owners to ban blacks.
JC,
This
a article blog about Henry Li, who I told you about. A good friend
of both Matt
and myself, who help me out during my ban on entering the Den bar.
If anyone knows about this then Henry will. Will try to reach
him.
Carl
Hill [lived in China for 11 years]
April 19, 2007
Category: Centro, Neo, Public Space, Rui
Fu, Vogue
I’d heard from several sources that Beijing bar legend Henry Li
(Neo Lounge,
Vogue, and Public Space) was looking to sell his latest spot, Rui
Fu, and move
on to other projects. I ran into Henry at Centro on Tuesday and
indeed it is
true: the cavernous bar that mixes historical digs with what I once
dorkily
penned as the combined spirt of a “plush karaoke, generic hotel
casino, and
modernized opium den” is up for sale. (Incidentally, my review of
Rui Fu
inspired this angry letter). Although I had early reservations about
the place,
it was a regular stop for about two months, until the never-ending
theme parties
scared me off — honestly, how many times can I dress up as a
schoolgirl? Even
so, of Rui Fu there will always be the memories."
_______________________________________
You’d think with the horrible
reputation China has around the world concerning human rights
violations and the situation with Tibet, they’d be on their best
behavior during the Olympics.
Well…. not quite.
Bar owners in the epicenter of the
Olympic nightlife have been asked to sign pledges vowing
not to serve Black or Mongolian patrons, by uniformed police.
Bar owners near the Workers’
Stadium in central Beijing say they have been forced by Public
Security Bureau officials to sign pledges agreeing not to let black
people enter their premises.
“Uniformed Public Security
Bureau officers came into the bar recently and told me not to serve
black people or Mongolians,” said the co-owner of a western-style
bar, who asked not to be named.
I just hope there aren’t any acts
of violence once black visitors are rejected when they just want to
have a good time. I’m having visions of the opening scene in
“Menace II Society” (clip is not work safe).
SEE
VIDEO: HURRY UP AND BUY!
BLACK & WHITE? IT'S ENOUGH!
BLACK
PRESENCE IN CHINA
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