China News
News from China with a focus on human rights and religious liberty
Saturday, May 15, 2004

Two cyberdissidents sentenced
Five years in jail for Yang Jianli, two years re-education camp for Liu Shui
 [RSF]

US-resident Yang Jianli was sentenced on 13 May to five years in prison for "espionage" and "illegally entering Chinese territory", after more than two years of imprisonment awaiting sentence.

Journalist Liu Shui was on 2 May sentenced without trial to two years in a re-education camp. Officially accused of seeking the services of several prostitutes, Liu was in fact sentenced for posting sensitive items on the Internet, particularly on the Tiananmen Square massacres.

Reporters Without Borders reacted angrily to the two sentences. "The Chinese authorities do not let up in their crackdown on free expression. To sentence Yang Li for spying for Taiwan and Lui Shiu for a moral issue is the height of absurdity, a clumsy cover for gagging political dissidents, the organisation said.

Yang, now 40, was expelled from China after taking part in the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations. He became a permanent resident of the US and created the 21st Century Foundation for China that works to promote democracy in the people's republic. The cyberdissident is also editor of the dissident online review Yibao (www.chinaeweekly.com).

He was arrested in April 2002 when he returned to China, using a friend's passport, to investigate industrial unrest in the north-east of the country. At the end of his trial, on 4 August 2003, the verdict was postponed.

Under Chinese criminal code, the authorities had four months to decide. The deadline passed five months ago, making the continued detention of Yang an infringement of Chinese law. As his sentence was pronounced Yang argued that his trial broke Chinese law and that he had been illegally detained for 164 days.

His wife, Christina Fu, a US national who lives with their two children in Massachusetts., told Reporters Without Borders, "I am very sad. I know my husband is not a spy. I also know that it could have been worse but I was hoping he would be expelled. His father is 90 and he can't be sure he will see him again. We are going to hold a press conference in Washington very soon to seek help from US and international authorities." She said no decision had yet been taken about an appeal but it was "probable".

Freelance journalist Liu Shui, 37, was arrested in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province in the south of the country. He worked for the Southern Metropolitan News and the Shenzhen Evening News. Sentenced to two years in a re-education camp, he was punished under a high-speed procedure used in cases of minor offences.

Liu was previously imprisoned 15 months after taking part in the Tiananmen Square demonstrations, for three years in 1994 for "counter-revolutionary propaganda", then briefly again in 1998. On 19 March 2004, another cyberdissident Ma Yalian was sentenced to 18 months in a work re-education camp.

 


10:40:19 AM    comments []

CHINESE GOVERNMENT ILLEGALLY TAKES UYGHUR FARMERS' LAND [RFA]
Authorities in the Uyghur region of Xinjiang in China’s northwest are refusing to honor 30-year land-use contracts in a village near Artush city, forcing poor farmers away from their livelihoods to make way for a major property development, RFA’s Uyghur service reports. The trouble began after a Chinese company from Beijing signed an agreement with the city government of Artush to displace the local farmers and build a hotel and tourist site in the area. A group of farmers’ houses were torn down. Other farmers are resisting attempts to move them, trying to avoid selling their land. [
more]
10:31:58 AM    comments []

TRAFFICKERS PREY ON TIBETAN GIRLS, WOMEN [RFA]
KATHMANDU—Chinese police and local authorities in Tibet near the Nepal border are colluding with local Tibetan and Chinese entrepreneurs in recruiting Tibetan girls and women to work as escorts, barmaids, and prostitutes, RFA’s Tibetan service reports. Most of the young women are lured with promises of a quick passage out of Tibet to India or Nepal, but many are sent home after they become pregnant or acquire communicable diseases.[
more]
10:29:56 AM    comments []

Two Outspoken Hong Kong Radio Hosts Quit. Two outspoken talk radio hosts critical of the Beijing and Hong Kong governments have gone off the air within 10 days of each other, raising new fears of censorship in the territory. [Associated Press headlines via GoUpstate.com]
9:52:41 AM    comments []





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Last Update: 6/1/2004; 10:56:52 AM

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