In a packed basement venue in Manchester’s Chinatown, a banned Chinese comedian took the stage last night to roars of laughter and applause. The performer, whose name we are withholding over safety concerns, fled China after his material fell foul of state censors. Now, living in political exile, he tours diaspora communities across Europe.
The Foreign Office has quietly affirmed support for the principle of free expression, even as Whitehall treads carefully around Beijing’s protests. For the audience of mostly second-generation Chinese Britons, it was more than a show: it was a reclaiming of voice. ‘He says what we can’t say in WeChat groups without fear,’ one ticket holder told me.
The gig sold out in hours, with many travelling from as far as Glasgow. Yet behind the laughter lies a raw nerve. The comedian’s sketches skewer everything from the property bubble to the Party’s control over daily life.
Last year, his Weibo account was deleted; now he relies on encrypted messaging to book dates. The UK’s relative warmth stands in contrast to other nations that have muzzled exiled artists to curry trade favour. A Foreign Office source told me: ‘We champion freedom of expression as a universal value, including for those who cannot speak freely at home.
’ That position is tested each time Beijing issues a diplomatic note. For now, the show goes on. But for how long, no one can say.
The comedian plans a full UK tour next spring. If the applause is any measure, the demand is there. What is less certain is whether the political tolerance will hold.








