For 7 months, Zhang Qiongwen lived with a secret. Zhou Bin, a dean at her university in southern China, abused her on several occasions, she says, masturbating in front of her and forcing her to kiss him. He threatened to prevent her and her classmates from graduating if she reported him, she says. Her friends warned her that if she reported the harassment it would ruin her reputation. Haunted by the incident, Qiongwen began thinking of suicide. But late last year, she broke her silence, posting an essay online titled, “A Must-Read for Female Students at Our School About Protecting Yourself From Predators.” Then she reported Bin to the police. “I couldn’t erase such a brutal thing from my mind,” Qiongwen said. “I didn’t want my silence to enable more crimes.” Chinese women are finding it difficult to organize a far-reaching #MeToo movement, going up against not just a male-dominated culture but also the ruling Communist Party itself, which often embraces gender equality as a propaganda theme. Government censors are trying to hobble the campaign, blocking the use of phrases like “anti-sexual harassment” on social media and deleting online petitions calling for greater protections for women. But #MeToo is testing the limits of a government that frowns on citizen-led movements, has a poor record of promoting women’s rights and controls all news media. @giuliamarchiphoto took this photo of Qiongwen. Visit the link in our profile to read more.

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ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 1月25日 12時47分


For 7 months, Zhang Qiongwen lived with a secret. Zhou Bin, a dean at her university in southern China, abused her on several occasions, she says, masturbating in front of her and forcing her to kiss him. He threatened to prevent her and her classmates from graduating if she reported him, she says. Her friends warned her that if she reported the harassment it would ruin her reputation. Haunted by the incident, Qiongwen began thinking of suicide. But late last year, she broke her silence, posting an essay online titled, “A Must-Read for Female Students at Our School About Protecting Yourself From Predators.” Then she reported Bin to the police. “I couldn’t erase such a brutal thing from my mind,” Qiongwen said. “I didn’t want my silence to enable more crimes.” Chinese women are finding it difficult to organize a far-reaching #MeToo movement, going up against not just a male-dominated culture but also the ruling Communist Party itself, which often embraces gender equality as a propaganda theme. Government censors are trying to hobble the campaign, blocking the use of phrases like “anti-sexual harassment” on social media and deleting online petitions calling for greater protections for women. But #MeToo is testing the limits of a government that frowns on citizen-led movements, has a poor record of promoting women’s rights and controls all news media. @giuliamarchiphoto took this photo of Qiongwen. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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