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Artist continues quest for real quake toll

Posted: Thursday, May 07, 2009 12:37 PM
Filed Under:

The cameras converged on Chinese artist Ai Weiwei as soon as the news broke. 

An official from the Sichuan provincial government announced a final toll for the number of children missing and killed from last year’s devastating earthquake: 5,335.

Although authorities have confirmed more than 69,000 people died in the quake – which struck in the middle of a school day on May 12, 2008 – until today they had not released any details about the children who died in thousands of collapsed school buildings.

VIDEO: Chinese artist documents victims of quake

It’s a highly sensitive topic here in China, where local officials have been accused of negligence in cases where schools caved in while surrounding buildings remained standing. Authorities have resorted to a harsh crackdown on families of the dead children and the media for trying to report or investigate the story. 

"I’m glad they try to be responsible now," said Ai, attributing it to "the tremendous pressure of the media or the public."

For months, the artist – who helped design the iconic Bird’s Nest Stadium featured prominently in the Beijing Olympics – has been contributing to that pressure. 

Image: Ai Weiwei's studio

Adrienne Mong / NBC News
Journalists interview Ai Weiwei in his Beijing studio on Thursday to get his reaction to the government's quake toll announcement.

Searching for answers
Since December, he’s been working with a small team of volunteers to document every child lost in the quake, and it’s raised his profile even higher. They have collected information on more than 5,200 names so far, and he expects the final number to be much higher than the official toll.

"We have to really re-evaluate the values of life in this society," he said in his studio in Caochangdi outside downtown Beijing. "We never really treat the human life or human rights in the way it should be…The basic public information should always be clearly revealed."

It would appear not everyone agrees. Postings on Ai’s popular blog updating the list of names are deleted by censors.  

But he remains unfazed.

"I have [the] rights to express my [opinions] on my blog," he said. 

Image: Names of earthquake victims
Adrienne Mong / NBC News
A list of names of young victims from last year's earthquake.

His volunteers have encountered worse. During field expeditions, they have been routinely harassed, searched, and detained, according to Ai, who also notes that parents of the dead children are treated far worse when they try to get to the truth.

And he says the "official" children’s death toll announcement will not halt the project’s momentum. "It doesn’t mean anything to us, because you don’t have the related information," Ai said to another journalist on his cell phone. "You don’t know who [the victims] are and which school they [lost] their life."

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Comments

Without commenting on the actual figures, Ai Wei Wei story highlights on the fact that China's civil society is developing in positive ways.

That citizens are engaging and working to bring to correct errors in the system is a big progression, and one that is both frustrating and encouraging to see

r
www.china-crossroads.com
Finally, someone is standing up for those who can't. Sadly, he'll probably get "silenced" by their repressive and backwards government.
How sad for the parents: grief compounded by persecution and repression of information.  One wonders exactly what the Party believes it will gain by not releasing information.  Do they think that the number really matters to public perception? It was a staggering tragedy at any number. Philip Pan's book Out of Mao's Shadow is an excellent and disturbing read on the Chinese Communist Party's lack of concern for anything but maintenance of its own absolute power.
Ai Wiewie is no doubt a brave man, or he missed the famous video of the tank running over the protester.

the question now is will the goverment set standards for school buildings to make them safer or will they stay the substandard construction that was such a contributing cause to the loss of life?

then these are China's problems, and we need to get our own house in order.
It is very positive that he is speaking out in the face of an oppressive government. People of character and courage, while few in number have moved whole nations in positive directions.  No country that suppresses the voices of its most gifted and humane citizens can ever reach its full strength.  There's a great spirit in China when people such as Ai Wiewie and his friends are willing to speak out about such an important issue.  
I hope we will see more of this progress in China's society as it begins to become wealthier. It's understandable that certain sacrifices must be made for the greater good when that greater good is feeding a billion mouths, but hopefully China will move beyond just feeding its citizens to giving them the same sorts of values and virtues that we have derived from being from wealthy nations without adopting our vices.
Thousands of school building collapsed during the middle of a school day and only 5,000 kids died? Was there an averga of only a few kids in each building at the time? I recognize that there will be survivors in building collapses, but if you are going to lie, give a reasonable number.
I agree with John from Cinci OH...

What Ai Wiewie did was great! He is a hero for bringing these things to public view!

However,we have problems of our own!!

We act as if China were one of our own states with this "overly sympathetic attitude" we have towards this "communist (not democratic) country!
Wow - he is very brave.  Human rights violations are so common in China, and it is nice to see that there are Chinese people that see this and are willing to stand up for what is right.  That is the only way anything changes.


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