5 February 2008
Ching Cheong's release hailed, although it
is eclipsed by Hu Jia's
arrest and Lu Gengsong's sentencing
Reporters Without Borders is relieved that
Hong-Kong based
journalist Ching Cheong, a correspondent of
Singapore's Straits
Times newspaper, was freed on parole this
morning from a prison in
the southern city of Guangzhou where he was
serving a five-year
sentence on a spying charge. He arrived back
in Hong Kong at midday.
Arrested on 22 April 2005, he had just over
two years of his
sentence still to serve.
"Ching should
never have been arrested and imprisoned,"
Reporters
Without Borders said. "His release is very
welcome, especially as it
will allow him to celebrate the Chinese New
Year with his family,
but he is still not completely free. The
Chinese government should
continue down this road by releasing, before
the start of the
Olympic Games, all of the 32 journalists and
51 cyber-dissidents who
are currently held."
The press
freedom organisation added: "We pay tribute
to the
extraordinary efforts made by Ching's
family, his friends of the
Ching Cheong Concern Group and the
journalistic community in Hong
Kong, who always defended his innocence in
the face of the Chinese
government's unjust accusations."
Ching's
release must not be allowed to divert
attention from the
plight of human rights activist Hu Jia, who
has been held since 27
December on a charge of "inciting subversion
of state authority," or
from the four-year prison sentence passed on
4 February on writer Lu
Gengsong in the eastern city of Hangzhou on
the same charge.
Li Changqing, the former editor of Fuzhou
Daily, was freed on 2
February on completing a three-year sentence
for "spreading alarmist
reports."
Mak Chai-ming
of the Ching Cheong Concern Group told
Reporters
Without Borders he was "very happy" about
Ching's release and hoped
Ching would now be able to explain the
circumstances and reasons for
his arrest. The Hong Kong Journalists
Association said it hoped this
kind of arrest would not recur. The
management of The Straits Times
said it was "delighted by this long-awaited
release."
When a
Reporters Without Borders representative met
with Ching's
wife, Mary Lau, in Hong Kong in December,
she described his prison
conditions: "He is in a cell with 12 other
inmates, most of them
criminals serving long sentences. There are
two factories in the
prison. He has to work eight hours a day,
with additional hours
twice a week, until 9 pm. He makes police
uniforms. The prisoners
are not paid."
Lau added: "Ching
had a problem with high blood pressure
before his
arrest, but it flared up only two or three
times a year. Now he has
it all the time. He is suffering as result
of the military
discipline in the prison. He has lost 15
kilos since his arrest. You
already know that the first month, when he
was held in Beijing, was
extremely tough. The way he was treated
could be regarded as mental
torture."
Ching has had
heart and stomach problems, and doctors
reportedly
discovered a duodenal ulcer. He was
hospitalised on more than one
occasion, but the family was not told until
several weeks later.
The holder of a "British National Overseas"
passport, Ching was
arrested on 22 April 2005 while visiting
Guangzhou and was sentenced
on 31 August 2006 to five years in prison
and a fine of 60,000 euros
for allegedly spying for Taiwan. The
official news agency Xinhua
published a report claiming the Ching sold
business, political and
military information to Taiwanese agents for
millions of dollars
between 2000 and 2005.
Ching worked
from 1974 to June 1989 for the Hong
Kong-based daily
Wen Wei Po, which supports the Beijing
government. He resigned after
the Tiananmen Square massacre and set up an
independent political
magazine called Contemporary. He joined the
Singapore-based Straits
Times in 1996. He has written many articles
and books about the
Communist Party of China, Taiwan and Hong
Kong.
Reporters
Without Borders and the Hong Kong
Journalists Association
launched an appeal for Ching's release on 2
June 2005. The petition,
which can be accessed at
www.petition-chingcheong.org, had been
signed by more than 30,000 people.