Chinese dissident Ai Weiwei says West lacks moral authority to criticise Beijing on rights

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FILE PHOTO: Chinese artist Ai Weiwei poses during a photocall, amongst art pieces displayed in his exhibition \"Ai Weiwei: making sense\" at the Design Museum in London, Britain, April 4, 2023. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls/File Photo

Chinese artist Ai Weiwei was speaking in London as British Prime Minister Keir Starmer made a four-day visit to China.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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  • Ai Weiwei says the West lacks the standing to criticise China's human rights due to its own record, citing the Julian Assange case.
  • Keir Starmer's China visit, the first in eight years, aims to improve relations; he will raise human rights concerns including Jimmy Lai's case.
  • Ai Weiwei, hosting events for his book "Censorship", notes Western censorship he has experienced, but calls Starmer's visit "rational".

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LONDON - Ai Weiwei, the Chinese dissident whose activist art has made him Beijing’s best-known critic, said on Jan 29 the West should examine its own human rights record before condemning China, as the British prime minister visits his homeland.

Mr Ai, speaking to Reuters in London, said he has previously argued that Western leaders visiting China should openly denounce the country’s human rights abuses before striking business deals with the world’s second-largest economy.

“But today I changed my mind, completely,” Ai said.

“The West (is) not even (in a) position to accuse China. (They must) just check on their record (of) what they did on international human rights, (their) freedom of speech record.”

Mr Ai’s remarks come as Mr Keir Starmer

makes a four-day visit to China,

the first by a UK leader in eight years, aimed at improving relations despite concerns over espionage and human rights.

Mr Ai, in London hosting events for his new book, Censorship, said Western leaders raising issues such as human rights, free speech and censorship would be seen as deeply hypocritical and would “make people laugh”.

He pointed to how the West handled the case of Mr Julian Assange, who returned to Australia in June 2024 after a plea deal ended his imprisonment and a 14-year legal battle over the release of classified US military files.

As he arrived in Beijing on Jan 28, Mr Starmer said he would “raise the issues that need to be raised” on human rights with China’s president, Mr Xi Jinping, including the case of Jimmy Lai, a former Hong Kong media tycoon and British citizen

convicted in December

of national security crimes.

Mr Ai said he has also faced censorship in the West, including a London gallery’s decision to postpone one of his exhibitions in 2023 over a social media post about the war in Gaza.

“I think they (Western leaders) are shy even to talk about those things (human rights),” Mr Ai said.

Nevertheless, Mr Ai said that, based on business interests, Mr Starmer’s decision to visit to China was “rational and practical”.

He called it a “very good move” that would benefit Britain and be well received in China. REUTERS

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