¡¡
In order to win the
privilege of hosting
the 2008 Summer
Olympics, the
People¡¯s Republic of
China pledged to
improve its human
rights record. This
pledge included
specific commitments
to expand press
freedom and protect
such fundamental
rights as the right
to freedom of
expression as it is
guaranteed under
international law
and China¡¯s own
constitution.
On December 10,
2007, PEN American
Center, PEN Canada
and the Independent
Chinese PEN Center
launched ¡°We Are
Ready for Freedom of
Expression,¡± a
campaign aimed at
holding China¡¯s
leadership to these
commitments. PEN¡¯s
campaign
specifically called
on the Chinese
government to:
1
release all writers
and journalists
currently imprisoned
and stop detaining,
harassing, and
censoring writers
and journalists in
China;
2
end Internet
censorship and
reform laws used to
imprison writers and
journalists and
suppress freedom of
expression; and
3
abide by its pledge
that ¡°there will be
no restrictions on
media reporting and
movement of
journalists up to
and including the
Olympic Games.¡±
Seven months later,
we are unable to
report significant
improvements in any
of these areas.
What we have
witnessed instead
has been a grinding
and relentless
campaign to jail or
silence prominent
dissident voices,
including many of
our colleagues from
the Independent
Chinese PEN Center,
and new and brazen
efforts to restrict
or control domestic
and international
press. This report,
issued one month
before the Olympics
open in Beijing,
summarizes this
discouraging lack of
progress. It also
offers glimpses of
the vast, intricate
nature of the
suppression of human
rights in
China¡ªvisits to
families of targeted
dissidents,
interference with
personal cell phones
and computers,
waylaying
individuals on their
way to meetings and
banquets; niggling,
widespread
surveillance and
dogged harassment
often followed by
detention, arrest,
and in some cases,
very long prison
sentences.
In bidding for the
Olympic Games and in
offering the
requisite assurances
of its intentions to
protect and expand
basic human rights,
China invited just
this kind of
scrutiny. In turn
the nations of the
world, as they send
their
representatives to
the Beijing
Olympics, should not
shy away from
evaluating China on
the terms under
which it secured the
Games. With time
running out, we are
asking the
international
community to join us
in holding the
Chinese government
accountable for its
assurances that it
would safeguard and
expand the rights of
its people.
Jailing and
Silencing Writers
When we launched the
¡°We Are Ready¡±
campaign, PEN was
following the cases
of 40 writers and
journalists
imprisoned in China.
Though three of
these have since
been released, nine
more have been
detained:
1.
Wang Dejia:
Internet writer and
dissident, detained
December 13, 2007
and released on
January 12, 2008 on
condition that he
not write anything
¡°attacking the
leadership of the
Party and State,¡±
¡°inciting subversion
of state power,¡± or
any ¡°political
commentary.¡±
2.
Hu Jia:
Freelance reporter
and blogger, civil
rights,
environmental and
AIDS activist,
arrested December
27, 2007 and
convicted of
¡°inciting subversion
of state power¡± on
April 3, 2008. Hu is
now serving a 3
½-year sentence.
3.
Jamyang Kyi:
Prominent Tibetan
writer, reporter,
activist and singer
detained April 1,
2008.
4.
Zhou Yuanzhi:
Freelance writer and
member of the
Independent Chinese
PEN Center, detained
on May 3, 2008 and
released on May 15,
2008. Zhou is
forbidden from
traveling beyond his
home city without
police
authorization,
prohibited from
communicating with
strangers, and
banned from
publishing.
5.
Chen Daojun:
Freelance writer and
journalist, detained
May 9, 2008 and
charged with
¡°inciting splittism.¡±
6.
Guo Quan:
Writer and former
professor of
literature at
Nanjing Normal
University, detained
May 17, 2008 and
released May 28,
2008.
7.
Feng Zhenghu:
Rights defender,
online writer and
freelance
journalist, detained
on June 5, 2008 on
suspicion of
¡°intentionally
disturbing public
order and released
on June 15, 2008.
8.
Zeng Hongling:
Writer and retired
worker, detained
June 9, 2008 after
publishing articles
on her experiences
from the May 12,
2008 earthquake.
9.
Huang Qi:
Cyber-dissident,
writer, director and
co-founder of the
Tianwang Human
Rights Center,
detained on June 10,
2008.
Today, seven months
later, we are
following the cases
of 44 writers and
journalists who are
in Chinese prisons
in violation of
their right to
freedom of
expression. A
complete list of all
the writers PEN has
been tracking since
December 10, 2007,
is attached to this
report.
In addition to this
disturbing increase
in the number of
imprisoned writers
and journalists, the
Chinese government
has intensified its
ongoing harassment
of dissident voices
and writers. We are
particularly
distressed that many
of our colleagues at
the Independent
Chinese PEN Center (ICPC)
have been targeted
in this crackdown.
This past December,
authorities halted
ICPC¡¯s annual awards
dinner by paying
visits to members
and posting guards
outside the doors of
many to prevent them
from traveling to
Beijing. The
evening¡¯s two
scheduled honorees,
writers Liao Yiwu
and Li Jianhong,
were briefly held
under house arrest.
On June 4, the
distinguished
writer, dissident,
and former ICPC
president and
current board member
Dr. Liu Xiaobo was
manhandled by police
from the National
Security Unit of the
Beijing Public
Security Bureau, and
is now reportedly
under surveillance
at his home in
Beijing.
There is also
increasing evidence
of an organized
effort to restrict
movement of
dissidents and
writers to keep them
from meeting freely
with international
observers before and
during the Olympics.
On June 29, Teng
Biao and Li Baiguang,
two human rights
lawyers and ICPC
members living in
Beijing, were
detained in order to
prevent them from
meeting with U.S.
Congressmen
Christopher H. Smith
and Frank R. Wolf,
who had invited them
to dinner to discuss
human rights issues.
Li Baiguang was held
for three days in
Huairou, a Beijing
suburb, and Teng
Biao, whose passport
had been confiscated
by authorities
earlier in the year,
was released but
placed under house
arrest.
Setting Legal Traps
The majority of
writers and
journalists
currently imprisoned
in China have been
snared by China¡¯s
far-reaching,
zealous efforts to
restrict freedom of
expression on the
Internet. Of the 44
writers currently
imprisoned in China,
30 are being held
for writings they
posted on the
Internet or
disseminated
electronically,
including Shi Tao,
Wang Xiaoning, and
Li Zhi, who were all
convicted after U.S.
Internet provider
Yahoo! provided the
Chinese government
with their user
information. All
nine of the writers
detained since
December 10 (Wang
Dejia, Hu Jia,
Jamyang Kyi, Zhou
Yuanzhi, Chen Daojun,
Guo Quan, Feng
Zhenghu, Zeng
Hongling, and Huang
Qi) have been
targeted for their
online writings.
Three laws are
routinely misused to
try and sentence
writers,
journalists, and
cyberdissidents in
China: 1)
subversion; 2)
revealing state
secrets; and 3)
splittism or
separatism. Hu Jia,
a freelance reporter
and blogger, is
serving a 3 ½-year
sentence for
¡°inciting subversion
of state power¡± for
five articles he
published and two
press interviews.
Huang Qi, who was
detained on June 10,
is being held on
suspicion of
¡°illegally holding
state secrets¡± for
writings published
on his
organization¡¯s web
site. The splittism
charge, used most
often against
Tibetans and Uighurs,
has recently crossed
ethnic lines to
include Han Chinese
who publicly defend
Tibetan and Uighur
rights. Chen Daojun,
a freelance writer
and journalist
detained May 9,
2008, has been
formally charged
with ¡°inciting
splittism¡± for an
article he published
declaring respect
for the Tibetan
people, defending
their basic rights,
and condemning the
government¡¯s violent
crackdown on
protesters.
China¡¯s vast
Internet censorship
is a violation of
the right of its
citizens under
international law to
¡°seek, receive, and
impart information
and ideas through
any media and
regardless of
frontiers.¡± Its
vaguely-defined
subversion, state
secrets, and
incitement laws have
long been used to
prosecute writers
and journalists
simply for
practicing their
professions. Rather
than taking concrete
steps to ease
Internet
restrictions and
reform the laws
routinely misused to
jail writers and
dissidents, China
has continued to
brandish and wield
these weapons
against individual
writers in the weeks
leading up to the
Olympic Games. It
has also expanded
efforts to deny its
citizens access to
information on
sensitive subjects
on the Internet,
shutting down many
sites in the past
seven months,
including a site for
the Tiananmen
Mothers¡ªan
organization of
family members of
those killed or
imprisoned during
the 1989
crackdown¡ªand Uighur
Online, a site aimed
at promoting
understanding
between Han Chinese
and ethnic Uighurs.
Restricting the
media
When bidding for the
2008 Olympics, the
Chinese government
made a specific
promise to open up
the country to free
media reporting,
stating ¡°there will
be no restrictions
on media reporting
and movement of
journalists up to
and including the
Olympic Games.¡± The
unrest in Tibet and
the May 12th
earthquake, however,
have revealed just
the opposite: a
government intent on
controlling media
access to important
stories and on
restricting the
access its own
people have to
domestic and
international media
coverage.
During the crackdown
on protests in
Tibetan areas that
began in March,
government-instigated
interruptions in
telephone and
Internet service in
the Tibetan capital
of Lhasa and other
Tibetan areas
significantly
hindered the flow of
first-hand reports
and other
information as
violence spread and
the number of deaths
rose. A recent Human
Rights Watch report
confirms that
authorities are now
confiscating mobile
phones, cameras, fax
machines and
computers,
monitoring calls,
censoring and
blocking emails and
Internet content,
and harassing
Tibetans to prevent
them from relaying
information inside
and outside of
Tibet.
Since March, only a
few journalists have
been allowed into
Tibetan areas on
three
government-orchestrated
visits, always
chaperoned and
closely monitored by
Chinese officials.
Foreign journalists
who attempted on
their own to enter
the Tibetan
Autonomous Region
and neighboring
Tibetan areas in
Sichuan, Qinghai,
Yunnan and Gansu
Provinces have been
detained and turned
away. Meanwhile,
satellite broadcasts
focusing on events
in Tibet have been
jammed in Beijing
and other Chinese
cities, and foreign
news sites such as
the Los Angeles
Times, The
Guardian, The
Globe and Mail,
and the Canadian
Broadcasting
Corporation (CBC)
have been shut down
entirely or
selectively, leaving
China¡¯s citizens
without access to
the full story about
monumental political
and human rights
issues in their own
country.
We are now beginning
to see similar
controls exerted on
reporting from areas
affected by the May
12 earthquake. At
first the
government, of
necessity, allowed
an unusual level of
live coverage of
rescue efforts. But
now that attention
is beginning to turn
to questions that
are potentially
embarrassing for
Chinese officials,
there is a concerted
effort to rein
in¡ªand even black
out¡ªpress coverage.
In just one example,
on June 12, Agence
France-Presse
reported that at
least six foreign
media
representatives were
manhandled and
detained when they
tried to report from
collapsed schools in
Dujiangyan, Sichuan
Province. They were
reportedly told by a
police officer that
¡°You cannot report
anywhere in
Dujiangyan. You must
leave.¡± The six were
then ordered out of
the city, despite
the fact that they
held passes
explicitly stating
that reporting was
allowed in the area.
The world knows of
many of these
heavy-handed efforts
to restrict press
freedom because they
have been directed
at the international
media. Meanwhile,
China¡¯s domestic
media remains under
the thumb of the
Propaganda
Department of the
Chinese government
and must follow its
directives. Chinese
reporters are not
even included in the
pre-Olympic rules
that are supposedly
meant to allow
foreign journalists
to travel and report
freely. Those who
wander beyond the
official boundaries
have been punished.
On May 5, for
instance, Chang Ping
was dismissed from
his post as deputy
editor of the
magazine Nandu
Zhoukan (Southern
Metropolis Weekly)
after he published
several editorials
about Tibet that did
not toe the party
line.
Conclusion and
Recommendations
PEN American Center,
PEN Canada, and the
Independent Chinese
PEN Center are
seriously concerned
that rather than
improving, the
climate for freedom
of expression has
actually measurably
deteriorated over
the past year, in
full view of the
international
community. There are
more writers and
journalists in
prison in China
today than there
were seven months
ago, and dissident
writers and
journalists who are
not in prison face
serious restrictions
on their movements
and on their ability
to speak and publish
freely. Internet
censorship and other
laws such as
subversion and
inciting separatism
or splittism remain
in force and
continue to be used
specifically to deny
the
universally-guaranteed
right to freedom of
expression. China¡¯s
promises to allow
media to report
freely throughout
China have been
undermined by its
attempts to manage
international
coverage from Tibet
and
earthquake-affected
areas and by its
refusal to extend
any new protections
or freedoms
whatsoever to
Chinese journalists.
If the Olympics come
and go and there are
no improvements in
these areas, China
will only have
succeeded in
portraying itself in
the most
unflattering light
possible, thus
reinforcing doubts
about its
commitments to
fundamental human
rights.
With one month
remaining before the
Olympic Games open
in Beijing, however,
it is not too late
for China to make
good on the
commitments it
offered its own
citizens and the
international
community when it
announced its desire
to host the 2008
Games. When all is
said and done, it is
not by staging a
successful Olympic
Games, but by
honoring these
commitments that
China will bolster
its international
stature as a leader
among nations
We therefore
recommend
that the Chinese
government:
Release all writers
and journalists
currently imprisoned
and stop detaining,
harassing, and
censoring writers
and journalists in
China
End Internet
censorship, and
reform laws used to
imprison writers and
journalists and
suppress freedom of
expression; and
Abide by its pledge
that ¡°there will be
no restrictions on
media reporting and
movement of
journalists up to
and including the
Olympic Games.¡±
We further recommend
that nations
participating in the
Olympic Games:
Use every available
occasion to press
the Chinese
government to
release all writers
and journalists
imprisoned in China
before the Olympics;
reform laws used to
detain, harass, and
censor writers and
journalists; and
lift all
restrictions on all
media up to and
through the Olympic
Games;
Seek viable and
meaningful ways to
hold China
accountable to the
pledges it made in
securing the Olympic
Games to improve its
human rights record;
and
Secure clear
assurances from the
Chinese government
that no Chinese
citizens, Chinese or
foreign journalists,
athletes or
spectators will be
detained or
otherwise prevented
from expressing
their views
peacefully during
the 2008 Summer
Olympic Games.
¡¡
WRITERS IMPRISONED
IN CHINA
As of July 8, 2008
Chen Daojun
Freelance writer and
journalist, detained
May 9, 2008 by the
Public Security
Bureau of Jintang
County, Chengdu
City, Sichuan
Province and charged
with ¡°inciting
splittism.¡± The
charge most likely
stems from an
article Chen
published following
the Tibetan protests
in March which
declared respect to
the Tibetan people,
defended their basic
rights and condemned
the Chinese
government¡¯s violent
crackdown on
protesters. He has
also written
articles against
governmental
projects and the
politics of the
Beijing Olympics.
Chen is currently
being held at the
Detention Center of
the Public Security
Bureau of Jintang
County.
Chen Shuqing
Dissident writer and
leading member of
the Zhejiang Branch
of the banned China
Democracy Party (CDP),
arrested September
14, 2006 and charged
with ¡°inciting
subversion.¡± Chen¡¯s
case has twice been
handed back to the
police for lack of
evidence, but on
August 14, 2007 he
was sentenced to
four years in prison
and one year¡¯s
deprivation of
political rights.
His appeal was
rejected without
trial by the
Zhejiang High
People's Court on
October 29, 2007.
Chen is being held
at Qiaosi Prison in
Hangzhou City,
Zhejiang Province.
Guo Qizhen
Cyber-dissident
arrested on May 12,
2006 and charged
with ¡°inciting
subversion of state
power¡± for 34
articles he
published on
overseas web sites
attacking the
leadership of the
Chinese Communist
Party. Guo was
sentenced to four
years in prison and
three years¡¯
deprivation of
political rights on
October 17, 2006. He
is being held in the
No. 4 Prison of
Heibei Province in
Shi Jiazhuang City,
and is reportedly
nursing a broken leg
and is in a fragile
psychological state,
possibly due to
abuse.
Dawa Gyaltsen
Tibetan dissident
arrested in November
1995 for writing
pro-independence
pamphlets which were
posted in April 1995
as part of
widespread protests
against the Chinese
authorities. Dawa
was charged with
carrying out
¡°counter-revolutionary
propaganda¡± and is
now serving a
15-year prison
sentence. He is
currently being held
in the notorious
Drapchi Prison in
Lhasa. He was
reportedly severely
tortured under
interrogation, and
has suffered
numerous forms of
abuse in prison,
including beatings,
psychological
stress, and lack of
access to fresh air.
When he was first
arrested, he was
handcuffed and
thrown into a dark
room without food
for 10 days.
Jampel Gyatso
Monk from Drakar
Trezong monastery in
Qinghai Province,
where he was on the
editorial team of
the monastery¡¯s
journal, The
Charm of the Sun and
Moon. Jampel was
arrested on January
16, 2005 and
sentenced to three
years re-education
through labor (RTL).
He is currently
being held in Topa
RTL Camp at
Huangzhong Dzong,
near Xining.
Hada
Owner of the
Mongolian Academic
Bookstore and
founder and
editor-in-chief of
underground journal
The Voice of
Southern Mongolia,
arrested December
10, 1995 and
sentenced to 15
years in prison and
four years¡¯
deprivation of
political rights for
¡°inciting separatism
and espionage¡± on
December 6, 1996.
Hada is currently
being held at No. 4
Prison of Inner
Mongolia in Chi Feng
City, and is
suffering from
stomach ulcers and
coronary heart
disease.
He Depu
Dissident activist
and writer arrested
on November 4, 2002
and subsequently
sentenced to eight
years in prison and
two years¡¯
deprivation of
political rights for
¡°inciting
subversion.¡± He¡¯s
trial lasted a mere
two hours before he
was convicted on
charges that stemmed
from his
collaboration with
the banned China
Democracy Party (CDP)
and his internet
essays. He is
currently being held
in Beijing No. 2
Prison, and has
reportedly suffered
numerous abuses
there, including
beatings that left
permanent injuries.
He Yanjie
Freelance reporter
working as Qi
Chonghuai¡¯s research
assistant in the
investigation of
local corruption and
injustice prior to
his detention on
June 25, 2007. He
was formally charged
with ¡°blackmail¡± on
August 2, 2007, and
his case was handed
to the Tengzhou
People¡¯s
Procuratorate on
November 2, 2007 ¨C
one month later than
the law permits. He
was tried by the
Tengzhou City Court
in Shandong Province
on May 13, 2008, and
sentenced to two
years in prison. He
is currently being
held at the Tengzhou
City Detention
Center.
Hu Jia
Freelance reporter
and blogger, civil
rights,
environmental and
AIDS activist,
arrested December
27, 2007 at his home
in Beijing on
suspicion of
¡°inciting subversion
of state power.¡± Hu
was officially
charged on January
30, 2008 by the
Beijing Municipal
People¡¯s
Procuratorate, and
on March 7, his case
was submitted to the
prosecution. Hu
stood trial on March
18, and on April 3,
he was sentenced to
three and a half
years in prison and
one year's
deprivation of
political rights. On
May 8, 2008, he was
transferred from the
Beijing Municipal
Detention Center to
Chaobai Prison,
Hangu District,
Tianjin City, where
his health is
reportedly
deteriorating due to
prison conditions.
Hu Shigen
University lecturer,
political activist
and dissident
writer, arrested
September 27, 1992
and charged with
¡°counterrevolutionary
crimes¡± for planning
June 4 memorial
activities in many
of China¡¯s major
cities. Hu was a
founding member of
the China Freedom
and Democracy Party
(CFDP) and China
Free Trade Union (CFTU)
and has campaigned
for government
accountability for
the violent
suppression of the
Democracy Movement
in June 1989. He was
sentenced to 20
years in prison and
five years¡¯
deprivation of
political rights and
is currently being
held in Beijing No.
2 Prison. His
sentence has
recently been
reduced by a total
of two years. His
health is
deteriorating but he
is reportedly being
denied medical care
for a number of
conditions.
Huang Jinqiu (pen
name: Qing Shuijun)
Internet essayist,
writer and
journalist, arrested
on September 13,
2003 and sentenced
to 12 years in
prison and four
years¡¯ deprivation
of civil rights for
¡°organizing,
planning and
carrying out
subversive
activities¡± and for
writing
¡°reactionary¡±
articles on the
internet. Huang was
severely tortured
during the first two
years in jail. His
situation has
improved in the past
year and his
sentence has been
reduced by 22
months.
Huang Qi
Cyber-dissident,
writer, director and
co-founder of the
Tianwang Human
Rights Center,
detained June 10,
2008 in Chengdu,
Sichuan Province.
Huang was last seen
being forced into a
car by three
unidentified men,
and was later
confirmed to be held
by the police at the
Detention Center of
the Public Security
Bureau of Chengdu
City on suspicion of
¡°illegally holding
state secrets.¡± His
detention may stem
from his criticism
of the government¡¯s
handling of the May
12th
Sichuan earthquake.
Korash Huseyin
Editor of the Uighur-language
Kashgar Literary
Journal, arrested
for publishing
Nurmuhemmet Yasin¡¯s
short story "Wild
Pigeon" in late
2004. Chinese
authorities consider
the story to be a
criticism of their
government¡¯s
presence in the
Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region.
Huseyin was
sentenced to three
years in prison and
is due to be
released in 2008.
Jin Haike
Geologist and
writer, arrested
March 13, 2001 along
with Xu Wei, Yang
Zili, and Zhang
Honghai after
participating in the
¡°Xin Qingnian Xuehui¡±
(New Youth Study
Group), an informal
gathering of
individuals
concerned with
political and
economic
inequalities who
used the internet to
circulate relevant
articles. Jin was
finally sentenced on
May 28, 2003 to 10
years in prison on
charges of
subversion. He is
currently being held
at Beijing No. 2
Prison and is
suffering from
multiple medical
conditions whose
causes are still
unclear.
Kong Youping
Internet writer and
factory worker,
arrested December
13, 2003 after
posting five
articles and seven
poems on an overseas
website that alleged
corruption. Kong was
sentenced on
September 16, 2004
to 15 years in
prison for
¡°subverting state
power,¡± a sentence
that was reduced to
10 years on appeal.
He is currently
being held at
Lingyuan City Prison
in Liaoning Province
and is reportedly
suffering from high
blood pressure and
deteriorating
eyesight.
Dolma Kyab
Writer and teacher,
arrested on March 9,
2005 in Lhasa, Tibet
for allegedly
endangering state
security in his
unpublished book,
The Restless
Himalayas, which
was comprised of 57
chapters he had
written on various
topics: democracy,
sovereignty of
Tibet, Tibet under
communism,
colonialism,
religion and belief,
and so forth. Dolma
was charged with
¡°espionage¡± and
¡°illegal border
crossing¡± at a trial
conducted in
secrecy, and
sentenced to ten and
a half years in
prison. In July
2007, he was
reportedly moved
from Chushul Prison
in Lhasa to Seilong
Labor Camp in Xining,
and is seriously
ill.
Jamyang Kyi
Prominent Tibetan
writer, reporter,
activist and singer
detained April 1,
2008 in Qinghai
Province. Kyi was
reportedly escorted
from her office at
the state-owned
Qinghai TV in Xining
by plainclothes
police officers and
has not been seen
since April 7.
Police searched her
home and confiscated
her computer and
contacts lists. Her
whereabouts are
currently unknown.
Li Zhi
Internet writer and
financial officer in
the Dazhou municipal
government in
Sichuan Province,
arrested August 11,
2003 after posting
essays accusing
Sichuan officials of
corruption on an
overseas website. Li
was sentenced to
eight years in
prison and four
years¡¯ deprivation
of political rights
on December 10, 2003
on charges of
¡°subverting state
power.¡± Evidence was
supplied by Yahoo!,
which passed on his
user information to
the authorities. He
is currently being
held in Sichuan No.
3 Prison in Dazhu
County.
Lu Gengsong
Writer and human
rights activist,
arrested on August
24, 2007 after his
articles critical of
the authorities were
published online. Lu
was formally charged
with ¡°inciting
subversion of state
power¡± on September
29, 2007, and stood
trial before the
Hangzhou
Intermediate
People¡¯s Court on
January 22, 2008.
He was convicted,
and on February 5,
2008 he was
sentenced to four
years in prison and
one year¡¯s
deprivation of
political rights. In
a closed trial on
April 14, 2008, the
Zhejiang Provincial
High Court rejected
an appeal. He is
currently being held
in Xijiao Prison,
Hangzhou City.
Lu Jianhua
Research professor
at the Chinese
Academy of Social
Sciences, Deputy
Director of the
Public Policy
Research Center, and
Executive Director
of the China
Development
Strategy, arrested
in April 2005 on
charges of ¡°leaking
state secrets¡± to
Hong Kong-based
reporter Ching
Cheong. After a
secret trial lasting
only 90 minutes on
December 18, 2006,
Lu was convicted and
sentenced to 20
years in prison. He
is reportedly being
held incommunicado
in Beijing City
jail.
Lu Zengqi
Falun Gong member
and internet writer,
sentenced on
February 19, 2004 to
10 years in prison
for writing an
online publication
which ¡°tarnished the
image of the
government by
broadcasting
fabricated stories
of persecution
suffered by cult
members.¡± The
newsletter alleged
ill-treatment in
prison of a fellow
Falun Gong member.
Abdulghani Memetemin
Writer, teacher and
translator from the
Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region,
arrested July 26,
2002 after providing
information to the
East Turkestan
Information Centre (ETIC),
a Uighur rights and
pro-independence
group run by exiled
Uighurs in Germany.
Memetemin was
convicted in June
2003 by the Kashgar
Intermediate
People¡¯s Court of
¡°illegally providing
state secrets to
overseas
organizations¡± and
sentenced to nine
years in prison. He
was reportedly
denied legal
representation at
his trial and has
been tortured in
prison.
Ning Xianhua
Internet writer and
factory worker,
arrested December
13, 2003 after
posting online
essays supporting
the establishment of
trade unions and the
China Democracy
Party (CDP). Ning
was sentenced on
September 16, 2004
to 12 years in
prison for
¡°subverting state
power,¡± a sentence
that was reduced to
eight years on
appeal. He is
currently being held
at Shenyang Prison
in Liaoning
Province.
Qi Chonghuai
Journalist detained
June 25, 2007
following the
publication on the
Xinhuanet web site
of an article
alleging official
corruption in the
Tengzhou Communist
Party. Qi was
formally charged
with ¡°blackmail¡± on
August 2, 2007, and
his case was handed
to the Tengzhou
People¡¯s
Procuratorate on
November 2, 2007 ¨C
one month later than
the law permits. He
was tried by the
Tengzhou City Court
in Shandong Province
on May 13, 2008.
Immediately
following the
11-hour proceedings,
Qi was convicted of
¡°extortion and
blackmail¡± and
sentenced to four
years in prison. He
is currently being
held at the Tengzhou
City Detention
Center, and has
endured abuse at the
hands of court
policemen.
Shi Tao
Journalist, poet,
and member of
Independent Chinese
PEN Center, arrested
November 24, 2004
after he emailed the
government¡¯s plans
for controlling
media during the
15th anniversary of
the Tiananmen Square
massacre. Shi was
sentenced on April
30, 2005 to 10 years
in prison and two
years¡¯ deprivation
of political rights
for ¡°illegally
divulging state
secrets abroad¡±
after Yahoo!
supplied his user
information to
authorities. He is
currently being held
in
Deshan
Prison,
Changde
City, Hunan
Province.
Sun Lin (pen name:
Jie Mu)
Reporter for the
overseas Chinese web
site Boxun News,
arrested May 30,
2007 after writing
articles on
sensitive subjects
including crime and
police brutality.
His wife, writer He
Fang, was also
charged and given a
suspended sentence.
On June 27, 2008,
during a hearing in
which neither his
family nor lawyer
were present, Sun
was handed a
four-year prison
sentence for
¡°gathering crowds to
cause social unrest¡±
and ¡°illegal
possession of
firearms.¡± Before
his arrest, he had
documented several
instances of police
harassment. He is
currently being held
in the Detention
Center of Nanjing
City, Jiangsu
Province.
Tao Haidong
Internet writer and
editor, arrested
July 9, 2002 in his
home in Urumqi,
Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region
while in the process
of posting articles
on the internet. Tao
was found guilty of
¡°inciting subversion
of state power¡± and
sentenced to seven
years in prison and
three years¡¯
deprivation of
political rights. He
is currently being
held in Changji
Prison in Changji
City, Xinjiang
Uighur Autonomous
Region.
Tohti Tunyaz (pen
name: Muzart)
Ethnic Uighur
historian and
writer, arrested
February 6, 1998
while on a research
trip in Urumqi for
his studies at Tokyo
University, where he
was working towards
a Ph.D. in Uighur
history and ethnic
relations. Tunyaz
was sentenced on
February 15, 2000 to
eleven years in
prison and two
years¡¯ deprivation
of political rights
for ¡°stealing state
secrets¡± and
¡°inciting national
disunity.¡± He is
currently being held
in Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region
Prison No. 3 in
Urumqi.
Wang Xiaoning
Internet writer and
dissident, arrested
on September 1, 2002
and charged with
subversion for
articles published
online between 2000
and 2002. Wang was
sentenced to 10
years in prison and
two years¡¯
deprivation of
political rights on
July 25, 2003 after
Yahoo! supplied his
user information to
Chinese authorities.
He is currently
being held in
Beijing No. 2 Prison
and has reportedly
been tortured.
Wu Yilong
Internet writer and
China Democracy
Party (CDP)
activist, arrested
in June 1999 for
circulating
pro-democracy
articles on the
internet and for his
work with the
magazine Zai
Yedang (Opposition
Party). Wu was
sentenced to 11
years in prison on
charges of
subversion on
November 9, 1999. He
is currently being
held in Zhejiang No.
4 Prison in Hangzhou
City, Zhejiang
Province.
Xu Wei
Reporter for
Xiaofei Ribao
(Consumer Daily),
arrested March 13,
2001 along with Jin
Haike, Yang Zili,
and Zhang Honghai
after participating
in the ¡°Xin Qingnian
Xuehui¡± (New Youth
Study Group), an
informal gathering
of individuals
concerned with
political and
economic
inequalities who
used the internet to
circulate relevant
articles. Xu was
finally sentenced on
May 28, 2003 to 10
years in prison on
charges of
subversion. He is
currently being held
at Beijing No. 2
Prison, where he has
suffered
ill-treatment, and
has gone on hunger
strike several
times.
Xu Zerong
Research professor
at Zhongshan
University in
Guangzhou, arrested
June 24, 2000 and
sentenced on
December 20, 2001 to
13 years in prison
for leaking state
secrets and illegal
business activities
related to his
research on Chinese
military operations
during the Korean
War. Xu is
reportedly being
held in a section of
Xichuan Prison
reserved for elderly
and sick prisoners
and is suffering
from serious health
conditions.
Yan Zhengxue
Dissident writer,
painter and member
of Independent
Chinese PEN Center,
arrested October 18,
2006 for his
critical writings
published online on
overseas websites.
Yan was sentenced to
three years in
prison and one
year¡¯s deprivation
of political rights
for ¡°inciting
subversion of state
power¡± on April 13
2007. He is being
held in Shiliping
Prison in Quzhou
City, Zhejiang
Province.
Yang Maodong (pen
name: Guo Feixiong)
Dissident writer,
independent
publisher and civil
rights activist,
arrested on
September 14, 2006
and sentenced on
November 14, 2007 to
five years in prison
for ¡°illegal
business activity.¡±
Yang has endured
intense torture at
the hands of prison
authorities,
including beatings,
sleep deprivation,
stress positions,
and suspension by
his arms and legs
while attacked with
electric prods. The
abuse has reportedly
driven him to
attempt suicide.
Yang began a hunger
strike at Meizhou
Prison, Meizhou
City, Guangdong
Province on December
13, 2007 to protest
the deprivation of
his basic rights.
Yang Tongyan (pen
name: Yang Tianshui)
Dissident writer and
member of
Independent Chinese
PEN Center, arrested
without a warrant on
December 23, 2005 in
Nanjing and held
incommunicado until
January 27, 2006.
Yang was convicted
of subversion for
posting
anti-government
articles on the
internet and
organizing branches
of the China
Democracy Party (CDP),
and was sentenced to
twelve years in
prison. He is
currently being held
in Nanjing Prison in
Nanjing City,
Jiangsu Province,
and his diabetes is
reportedly worsening
in prison.
Yang Zili
Writer and computer
engineer, arrested
March 13, 2001 along
with Xu Wei, Jin
Haike, and Zhang
Honghai after
participating in the
¡°Xin Qingnian Xuehui¡±
(New Youth Study
Group), an informal
gathering of
individuals
concerned with
political and
economic
inequalities who
used the internet to
circulate relevant
articles. Yang was
finally sentenced on
May 28, 2003 to
eight years in
prison on charges of
subversion. He is
currently suffering
from numerous
ailments but has yet
to receive any
medical treatment.
Nurmuhemmet Yasin
Freelance Uighur
writer, arrested on
November 29, 2004
for the publication
for his short story
¡°Wild Pigeon¡± (¡°Yawa
Kepter¡±),
which Chinese
authorities consider
to be a criticism of
their government¡¯s
presence in the
Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region.
After a closed trial
in February 2005 at
which he was denied
a lawyer, Yasin was
sentenced to 10
years in prison for
¡°inciting Uighur
separatism,¡± and is
currently being held
in Urumqi No. 1
Prison. He has been
denied all visitors
since his arrest.
Yuan Qiuyan
Falun Gong member
and internet
publisher, sentenced
on February 19, 2004
to 10 years in
prison for
publishing an online
publication which
¡°tarnished the image
of the government by
broadcasting
fabricated stories
of persecution
suffered by cult
members.¡± The
newsletter alleged
ill-treatment in
prison of a fellow
Falun Gong member.
Zeng Hongling
Writer and retired
worker from Mianyang,
Sichuan Province,
detained June 9,
2008 by plainclothes
police from the
Public Security
Bureau of Mianyang
on suspicion of
¡°illegally providing
information
overseas¡± for
articles published
on an overseas
Chinese web site.
The articles, part
of a series entitled
¡°The Accounts of My
Personal Experiences
During the
Earthquake,¡± were
published along with
her own photographs
under a pen name,
Shanshan. Zeng is
currently being held
incommunicado at the
Detention Center of
the Mianyang Public
Security Bureau.
Zhang Honghai
Freelance writer,
arrested March 13,
2001 along with Jin
Haike, Xu Wei, and
Yang Zili after
participating in the
¡°Xin Qingnian Xuehui¡±
(New Youth Study
Group), an informal
gathering of
individuals
concerned with
political and
economic
inequalities who
used the internet to
circulate relevant
articles. Zhang was
finally sentenced on
May 28, 2003 to
eight years in
prison on charges of
subversion. He is
currently being held
at
Qiaosi
Prison in Zhejiang
Province. Zhang is
reportedly suffering
from several medical
conditions and has
been ill-treated in
prison.
Zhang Jianhong (pen
name: Li Hong)
Freelance writer,
playwright, poet and
member of
Independent Chinese
PEN Center, arrested
on September 6, 2006
and charged with
¡°incitement to
subversion of state
power¡± for his
critical articles
published on
overseas websites.
Zhang was sentenced
to six years in
prison on March 19,
2007. He is
reportedly suffering
from muscle
necrosis, a
condition that has
led to partial
paralysis and
continues to worsen
despite his transfer
to the General
Hospital of Zhejiang
Prison in Hangzhou
City. He applied for
medical parole on
May 31, 2007, but
that application was
denied. He has not
yet received a
response to a more
recent application.
Zhang Lin
Dissident writer,
pro-democracy
advocate and member
of Independent
Chinese PEN Center,
arrested January 27,
2005 for a number of
¡°subversive¡±
articles he had
written and
subsequently posted
on the internet
between August 2003
and January 2005.
Zhang was convicted
of ¡°incitement to
subversion¡± by the
Bangbu Intermediate
People¡¯s Court on
July 28, 2005 and
sentenced to five
years in prison and
four years¡¯
deprivation of
political rights. He
is currently being
held in Nanjiao
Prison in Hefei
City, and is said to
be very weak and
suffering from
several medical
conditions.
Zheng Yichun
Poet, professor and
freelance
journalist, arrested
December 3, 2004 in
connection with 63
articles he had
written for
foreign-based
publications and
websites. Zheng was
convicted of
¡°incitement to
subversion of state
power¡± on July 21,
2005 and sentenced
to seven years in
prison and three
years¡¯ deprivation
of political rights.
He is currently
being held in
Jinzhou Prison,
Jinzhou City,
Liaoning Province,
where he is
suffering from
diabetes and
cerebral thrombosis.
Zhu Yufu
Internet writer,
founder and editor
of the China
Democracy Party¡¯s
magazine, arrested
April 18, 2007 and
sentenced to two
years in prison on
July 10, 2007 after
pushing a policeman
during his arrest.
On March 28, 2008,
Zhu was re-tried by
the Hangzhou
Intermediate
People's Court, and
on April 9 he was
sentenced to an
additional two
years, four months
and 26 days¡¯
deprivation of
political rights. He
is currently being
held in Zhejiang No.
6 Prison in Haining
City, Zhejiang
Province. Zhu had
been previously
imprisoned and was
released in 2006
after serving seven
years for his
dissident activity.
RELEASED SINCE
DECEMBER 10, 2007
Ching Cheong
Hong Kong-based
correspondent for
Singapore¡¯s The
Straits Times,
arrested April 22,
2005 and sentenced
to five years in
prison on charges of
espionage after
Chinese authorities
claimed he received
state secrets from
academic Lu Jianhua.
Ching was released
on parole on
February 5, 2008,
two years before his
sentence was due to
expire.
Feng Zhenghu
Rights defender,
online writer and
freelance
journalist, detained
on June 5, 2008 by
police from the
Yangpu District
Branch of the Public
Security Bureau in
Shanghai on
suspicion of
¡°intentionally
disturbing public
order.¡± The charge
is believed to stem
from a collection of
articles Feng
published and
distributed alleging
wrongful convictions
by the Shanghai
courts, along with
other writings.
Police reportedly
raided his home and
confiscated written
materials and three
computers. Feng was
released on June 15,
2008, and his
belongings were
returned on June 18.
Guo Quan
Writer and former
professor of
literature at
Nanjing Normal
University, detained
May 17, 2008
following seven
articles he
published on
mainland Chinese web
sites that criticize
the government¡¯s
emergency response
to the May 12, 2008
Sichuan earthquake
and the safety of
certain
infrastructures.
Guo¡¯s computers were
confiscated by
authorities. He was
released from
administrative
detention on May 28.
Li Changqing
Deputy news director
of the Fuzhou
Daily, arrested
December 16, 2004.
After a series of
charges, Li was
finally sentenced to
three years in
prison on January
24, 2006 by the
Gulou district court
in southern China¡¯s
Fuzhou city for
¡°spreading false and
alarmist
information.¡± He was
released upon
expiration of his
sentence on February
4, 2008.
Wang Dejia (pen
name: Jing Chu)
Internet writer and
dissident, arrested
December 13, 2007 at
his home in Quanzhou
in Guangxi Province
on suspicion of
¡°inciting subversion
of state power¡± in
relation to his
online articles
critical of the
Chinese government
in advance of the
2008 Beijing
Olympics. Wang was
held at the
Detention Center of
Quanzhou County
before being
released on January
12, 2008, pending
trial, on condition
that he not write
anything ¡°attacking
the leadership of
the Party and
State,¡± ¡°inciting
subversion of state
power,¡± or any
¡°political
commentary.¡±
Yu Huafeng
Deputy
Editor-in-chief and
general manager of
the Guangzhou-based
daily Nanfang
Dushi Bao (Southern
Metropolis News),
arrested January 14,
2004 for alleged
financial
irregularities, and
sentenced to 12
years in prison. It
has been reported
that the evidence
presented in court
did not support the
charges, and it is
widely believed that
Yu¡¯s imprisonment
was part of a
targeted campaign to
silence the
newspaper, which is
known for its
aggressive reporting
on social issues and
official corruption.
Yu was released on
February 8, 2008,
after his sentence
was reduced for the
third time.
Zhou Yuanzhi
Freelance writer and
member of the
Independent Chinese
PEN Center, detained
by the National
Security Bureau of
Zhongxiang City,
Hubei Province on
May 3, 2008 on
suspicion of
¡°inciting
subversion¡± for his
critiques on social
issues and official
corruption. Zhou was
released on May 15,
2008 and is
forbidden from
traveling beyond his
home city without
police
authorization,
prohibited from
communicating with
strangers, and
banned from
publishing. These
restrictions could
last up to six
months under Chinese
law, during which he
could be formally
detained and
questioned at any
time.
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