Justin Bieber Banned From Performing in China for "Bad Behavior"


China is sending a message to Justin Bieber: it's too late to say sorry. 
As the 23-year-old Grammy winner wraps up his Purpose World Tour, Beijing officials have made it clear that the Canadian native is not welcome on the country's stages any time soon. 
According to multiple reports and translations, a Chinese Believer contacted the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Culture to inquire about why Bieber has not had any shows scheduled in the Chinese capital. 
"Justin Bieber is a gifted singer, but he is also a controversial young foreign singer," the bureau said in a statement shared online.

"In order to maintain order in the Chinese market and purify the Chinese performance environment, it is not suitable to bring in badly behaved entertainers," the statement continued. "We hope that as Justin Bieber matures, he can continue to improve his own words and actions, and truly become a singer beloved by the public."

The announcement did not refer to any conduct or occurrence specifically. Nonetheless, the vocalist has confronted some discussion in China now and again in his profession. In 2013, he got some flack for getting around the Wall of China on the shoulders of his bodyguards. The next year, he started backfire when he Instagrammed a photograph of Toyko's Yasukuni Shrine, a structure that is questionable in the nation since it respects Japanese offenders who submitted awful acts against China and different parts of Asia amid World War II. "Much thanks to you for your favors," he subtitled the shot. In the wake of learning of the altar's history, he issued a conciliatory sentiment. 

Right now, as per Bieber's site, the star has up and coming shows in Singapore, the Philippines, Hong Kong and Tokyo, yet nothing to beijing is recorded.

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