Disney removes Simpsons episode in Hong Kong showing forced labor camps in China
Several recent reports show that the dictatorship subjects the Uyghur population to slave-like conditions in factories.
The Financial Times reported that Disney has removed an episode of The Simpsons in Hong Kong showing forced labor camps in China. The episode, titled "One Angry Lisa" is also not available on Fox's website.
In the second episode of the 34th season of the popular cartoon series, Marge Simpson becomes obsessed with using her interactive exercise bike. One of the virtual circuits is done on a recreation of the Great Wall of China, and the instructor says:
According to a source cited by Axios, which has independently confirmed the news, publishing the episode would go against a Chinese national security law from 2020, which restricts certain liberties such as freedom of speech.
Axios suggests that there may be other motivations on Disney's part besides complying with a Chinese law that violates some fundamental rights:
Forced labor camps
Forced labor camps and their use to silence dissenters have been part of the communist dictatorship since its inception. A recent report from Sheffield Hallam University shows how the Chinese regime uses the Uyghur population in labor camps to manufacture cars. These are their main conclusions:
On the other hand, the U.S. Department of Labor published a report on forced labor in Xinjiang, a Chinese province where the Uyghur population lives. The report shows that
Disney has already removed in 2021 an episode of The Simpsons in which it made a joke about the repression of the pro-democracy movement in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.