Bon Jovi's China fans livid on a prayer as tour cancelled

Two upcoming concerts in China by American rock group Bon Jovi - who have previously included imagery of the Dalai Lama in a show - have been suddenly cancelled, reports said on Tuesday. PHOTO: DAVID BERGMAN

BEIJING (REUTERS) - American rockers Bon Jovi have had their first ever tour of China unexpectedly cancelled, the Chinese promoter said on Wednesday, and it was not immediately clear why, though a music video of six years ago shows scenes from the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown.

Promoter AEG said in short statement on Weibo that the Sept 14 concert in Shanghai and Sept 17 concert in Beijing had been cancelled "for some reason". It provided no other explanation and the government authorities either declined to comment or could not be reached for comment.

The government forbids artists to performing content that "harms national unity" and vets set-lists and lyrics before approving concerts, as well as the artists themselves to ensure they have no objectionable connections, such as to human rights groups.

Bon Jovi's 2009 music video for We Weren't Born To Follow features brief images of the 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations around Beijing's Tiananmen Square, bloodily put down by the army. Public discussion of the event remains taboo in China.

The Financial Times, citing unidentified sources, said China had banned the concert after discovering a picture of the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, a man reviled by China, had featured in a video shown at a previous concert in Taiwan.

An official at the Ministry of Culture, responsible for the vetting process, said decisions about the concerts were being handled at the city level.

The Beijing Culture Bureau declined to comment. The Shanghai Culture Bureau did not answer calls seeking comment. The Foreign Ministry said it did not know anything about the case.

Fans reacted angrily on social media. "Another concert cancelled. Let's thank our country once more!" wrote one on Weibo. "The world's most populous country and second largest economy is scared of a few songs?" wrote another.

Lead singer Jon Bon Jovi had courted China last month by releasing a video of him singing in not bad Mandarin the classic love song The Moon Represents My Heart by the late Taiwanwaw singer Teresa Teng, which remains hugely popular in China. Among Bon Jovi's best known hits is Livin' On A Prayer.

In 2008 Icelandic singer Bjork infuriated the government by shouting "Tibet! Tibet!" after performing her song Declare Independence at a concert in Shanghai. China has ruled Tibet with an iron fist since "peacefully liberating" the Himalayan region in 1950, and it condemns any challenge to its authority.

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