Beijing:
Chinese censors on Monday blocked web searches of a host of terms related to the blind activist Chen Guangcheng, from his name to "Shawshank Redemption", the prison-break film being compared to his case.
The activist fled house arrest in the eastern China a week ago with the help of supporters, slipping out under the noses of dozens of guards and into safety at the US embassy in Beijing, dissident Hu Jia and other activists have said.
The case figures to be a major embarrassment for China's government and a potential thorn in ties with Washington, and censors have sought to squelch all discussion.
Searches for Chen's name and the Chinese terms for "Shawshank", "blind person", "embassy", and Chen's home village of Dongshigu were all blocked on Sina Weibo, China's leading microblogging service.
Also blocked was "UA898", a United Airlines direct flight from Beijing to Washington, apparently after web users speculated online about the possibility the blind activist would gain US asylum.
On Monday, dissident Hu Jia told AFP that Chen was at the US embassy. The embassy and the State Department have refused to confirm or deny that.
Other blocked terms included the names of Chen's relatives and the Internet nickname of a woman, He Peirong, who reportedly helped him escape.
The searches triggered messages saying the results could not be displayed due to "relevant regulations".
40-year-old Chen is best known for exposing abuses of China's "one child" policy, including forced sterilisations and abortions.
After completing a four-year jail sentence in September 2010, he and his family were put under what Chen has called "illegal" house arrest at their home in Shandong province.
Some web users had used the Chinese characters for "Shawshank" to refer to the case.
"The Shawshank Redemption" was a 1994 film based on a novel by US author Stephen King, about a convict's escape from an American prison.
The pervasive web censorship system run by China's ruling Communist Party routinely blocks content deemed politically sensitive or embarrassing to the government.
None of China's print or other media have made any mention of the Chen affair.
The activist fled house arrest in the eastern China a week ago with the help of supporters, slipping out under the noses of dozens of guards and into safety at the US embassy in Beijing, dissident Hu Jia and other activists have said.
The case figures to be a major embarrassment for China's government and a potential thorn in ties with Washington, and censors have sought to squelch all discussion.
Searches for Chen's name and the Chinese terms for "Shawshank", "blind person", "embassy", and Chen's home village of Dongshigu were all blocked on Sina Weibo, China's leading microblogging service.
Also blocked was "UA898", a United Airlines direct flight from Beijing to Washington, apparently after web users speculated online about the possibility the blind activist would gain US asylum.
On Monday, dissident Hu Jia told AFP that Chen was at the US embassy. The embassy and the State Department have refused to confirm or deny that.
Other blocked terms included the names of Chen's relatives and the Internet nickname of a woman, He Peirong, who reportedly helped him escape.
The searches triggered messages saying the results could not be displayed due to "relevant regulations".
40-year-old Chen is best known for exposing abuses of China's "one child" policy, including forced sterilisations and abortions.
After completing a four-year jail sentence in September 2010, he and his family were put under what Chen has called "illegal" house arrest at their home in Shandong province.
Some web users had used the Chinese characters for "Shawshank" to refer to the case.
"The Shawshank Redemption" was a 1994 film based on a novel by US author Stephen King, about a convict's escape from an American prison.
The pervasive web censorship system run by China's ruling Communist Party routinely blocks content deemed politically sensitive or embarrassing to the government.
None of China's print or other media have made any mention of the Chen affair.
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