
Enlarge / A sign outside Canada’s embassy in Beijing supporting Ukraine. It was later defaced, and posts about the incident were scrubbed from Chinese social media. (credit: Kevin Strayer | Getty Images)
“Artillery fire lights up the sky and breaks my heart. I hope my compatriots in Ukraine are taking care of themselves and their families, ” said a user on Weibo, often called China’s Twitter, on February 27. The message was quickly blocked, according to Free Weibo , a service of Great Fire, which tracks Chinese censorship online.
Two days later, a very different message appeared on Weibo : “I support fighting! America and Taiwan have gone too far. ” That, too, was blocked, according to Free Weibo.