After Nobel to Liu Xiaobo, repression of other dissidents

From Asia News:

After Nobel to Liu Xiaobo, repression of other dissidents

The government is concerned that, spurred on by the prestigious award, Chinese human rights activists will organize new protests or demonstrations. Police unleash a wave of arrests and round the clock surveillance on virtually every “sensitive” home. Meanwhile, Liu Xia, wife of the author of Charter ’08, complains: “My house arrest is illegal.”

Beijing (AsiaNews) – The awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, a university professor and author of the democratic manifesto Charter 08, has unleashed a wave of repression against human rights activists in China. According to Chinese Human Rights Defender, police are currently holding at least a dozen people in detention or under house arrest: the government fears demonstrations in support of Liu and his wife, Liu Xia, currently illegally detained under house arrest.

The security officials are guarded the house of Liu in the last days, has increased considerably the number of policemen around the building. The police also follows the well-known constitutional expert Zhang Zuhua, who is accompanied in each shift. On 12 October, the activist in Beijing Fan Yafen was blocked by guards in the house: it had to give an interview. Currently, more than 20 agents are monitoring him.

On 11 October, even lawyer Pu Zhiqiang, who defends the human rights activists, was put under house arrest. Zhou Tuo, a Democrat, is one of the “four gentlemen of Tiananmen”; since October 9 he has been under house arrest and no contact has been made with him. But the repression has not remained confined to Beijing on 11 October in Deyang, Sichuan province, the activist Li Yu was detained and interrogated. Her crime is to have texted some friends to celebrate the new Nobel Laureate. The police ordered her “not to organize anything.”

Also in Sichuan the police have the houses of Mu Jiayu and Li Guohong, in Chongqing, under surveillance since the announcement of the prize. On October 12, Chen Yunfei was brought home after he tried to reach other dissidents. Liao Shuangyuan and Wu Yuqin, members of the Forum for Human Rights in Guizhou, disappeared on 8 October, they were in Beijing to attend a dinner in honour of Liu Xiaobo, when they were stopped by police. Wang Sen, a democracy activist from Sichuan, is under house arrest.

Meanwhile, Liu Xia has protested against the “illegal arrest” that the Chinese authorities have imposed on her in a message posted on Twitter. “I protest strongly against the government which has actually put me under house arrest illegally.” A few hours ago Xia Liu said, also on Twitter,  that Chinese authorities have stopped her meeting a Norwegian diplomatic delegation who came to check on her conditions of detention in her home in Beijing. The U.S. and European Union have called on Beijing to grant the woman freedom of movement.

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5 Comments

  1. Henry Belton says:

    I was once a strict free-marketer for completely open trade; their low wages were our gain in low prices.

    I now see China completely differently. For national security reasons, both parties posed embargoes against the Soviets. For human rights abuses, Cuba, South Africa and DPRK have been subject to sanctions. China, though, has won favor with republicans and democrats. We owe them trillions in bonds, they have built an advanced offensive capable military, and their abusive one child policy has made abortion and infanticide the norm. They somehow remain exempt from criticism, let alone active trade restrictions.

    Walmart thrives, dissidents remain imprisoned.

  2. nhaggin says:

    I can’t help but contrast the behavior of the Nobel committee with the tradition of naming cardinals in pectore.

  3. torch621 says:

    I still am a free-marketer, and I’m all for punishing China with trade sanctions for their frankly Satanic policy, let alone because I don’t believe in doing business with communists.

    Why not focus more on thriving eastern European nations like Poland?

  4. Random Friar says:

    At least Communists would sometimes have ideals. Contemporary China is nothing more than a heartless, dictatorial form of Capitalism gone berserk. And our lunge toward cheap imports has given China a huge manufacturing sector and a growing military prowess. God help us and China.

  5. sejoga says:

    Well I’m a strict free-marketer who knows that if you enforce an embargo on China the government officials will retain more and more of the wealth and the common citizen will be subjected to further poverty and fewer resources for opposing their regime. China won’t have to worry about its citizens texting news of the award when they’re too poor to own phones.

    Let’s not forget that the Christian martyrs of Rome still participated in the civic life of an immoral imperial regime. And I don’t think we should take the Pilate approach of washing our hands and saying “Let the blood be on your heads.” The liberalization of China’s economy is just one step towards greater respect for human rights.

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