Wah, coba membelotnya ke indonesia....
From: Sunny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [dpr-indonesia] Outrage as China's leading lady defects to Singapore
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Friday, November 14, 2008, 6:27 AM








http://www.independ ent.co.uk/ news/world/ asia/outrage- as-chinas- 
leading-lady- defects-to- singapore- 1012508.html
 

Outrage as China's leading lady defects to Singapore 

By Clifford Coonan in Beijing
Wednesday, 12 November 2008 
 

REUTERS
Gong Li, star of Memoirs of a Geisha, is married to Singaporean tobacco tycoon 
Ooi Hoe Seong

 enlarge 




China's leading lady Gong Li, best known in Britain for her role in Memoirs of 
a Geisha, is being accused of treason by her irate countrymen for becoming a 
Singaporean citizen.

The 43-year-old actress embodies Chinese womanhood in the way Helen Mirren sets 
British hearts racing, or the way Catherine Deneuve is an icon in France, so 
her decision to take Singaporean citizenship was always bound to cause trouble.
State media ran images of the actress with her hand on her heart being sworn in 
at a ceremony alongside 149 others at the Teck Ghee Community Club in the 
island state, which has a large Chinese community. Her husband is the Singapore 
businessman Ooi Hoe Seong, whom she married in 1996.
Angry webizens said Ms Gong was betraying her Chinese roots. "She earned enough 
money in China, didn't she?" wrote one online commentator on Sina.com. "Then 
she becomes a foreigner! Why do we make her money for her, just so she can take 
the money and run." Another complained: "I'm disappointed in her. Why do rich 
and famous people all want to change their nationality? "
China Film Group said on its website that Ms Gong was viewed internationally as 
the pride of China, and that it could make Chinese audiences unhappy if she 
goes on to win prizes abroad as a Singaporean star. The actress was born in 
China's Liaoning province and for many years was the darling of the arthouse 
film circuit as the partner and leading lady of Zhang Yimou, an avant-garde 
director who later embraced the establishment and this year directed the 
opening ceremony of the Olympics. Ms Gong was his muse and starred in his 
earlier, better movies, including Red Sorghum and Raise the Red Lantern, as 
well as The Curse of Golden Flower in 2006.
China does not recognise dual nationalities, but travel restrictions forced 
many Chinese celebrities to take citizenship elsewhere. Others opt for Hong 
Kong citizenship, which is Chinese citizenship without travel restrictions 














      

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