Ten years' jail term for Chinese author of homoerotic novel sparks outcry

by Reuters
Monday, 19 November 2018 08:51 GMT

A map of China is seen through a magnifying glass on a computer screen showing binary digits in Singapore in this January 2, 2014 photo illustration. Picture taken January 2, 2014. REUTERS/Edgar Su

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The author was found guilty after she self-published a book that "obscenely and in detail described gay male-male acts"

BEIJING, Nov 19 (Reuters) - A Chinese court's 10-year jail term for an author of a homoerotic book found guilty of profiting from selling "obscene" literature has been met with disbelief among some internet users who question how the crime could warrant so severe a punishment.

The author, surnamed Liu, was found guilty on Oct. 31 by Wuhu county court in eastern Anhui province after she self-published a book that "obscenely and in detail described gay male-male acts", according to state media.

The court ruled that the strict sentence was enforced due to her having made 150,000 yuan ($21,600) by selling over 7,000 copies, the article said.

The case went viral on Chinese social media at the weekend as commentators asked how such a punishment made sense when some sexual assault cases often drew lighter sentences.

One user shared an article about a case from 2010 when a man was jailed for 18 months for imprisoning children and commented: "I don't understand the law, but there have been people who did things as inhuman as this and only get a year and a half.

"Why can't our vast and abundant China tolerate the word 'sex'?" the user added.

Some commentators suggested Liu's book should not be banned as gay erotic content known as "bl" or "BoysLove" is important for Chinese men to discover their sexuality.

"I also watch 'bl', because my family has traditional values," one user wrote about the case. "Seeing this news today, and based on this kind of criminal law, I expect we will have to wait thousands of years for homosexuality to be legalized."

Pornography has long been illegal in China, but in recent years, the Communist Party has intensified efforts to clear away what it sees as inappropriate content, introducing new legislation, rewards and punishments to help its aims.

Authorities on Saturday launched a campaign to "eradicate pornography and illegal publications" by offering heightened rewards of up to 600,000 yuan for reporting banned content to the police, starting from December.

In April, Weibo announced a decision to remove pornographic, violent or gay content, singling out manga animations that often depict raunchy gay male relationships, but then reversed its decision after widespread criticism. ($1 = 6.9 yuan) (Reporting by Christian Shepherd; Editing by Nick Macfie)

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