New York, Toronto,
Stockholm, July 2,
2008!PEN centers
expressed
disappointment today
over the sentencing
of journalist Sun
Lin in Nanjing and
the detention and
harassment of
several writers and
PEN members to
prevent them from
meeting visiting
U.S. Congressmen
this week in
Beijing.
Sun Lin (pen name
Jie Mu), a reporter
for the overseas
Chinese web site
Boxun News, was
arrested on 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.
Meanwhile, several
lawyers and
activists were
detained on June 29
during visits by
U.S. Secretary of
State Condoleezza
Rice and two U.S.
Congressmen!Christopher
H. Smith (R-NJ) and
Frank R. Wolf
(R-VA). The move
comes just one week
after Beijing-based
lawyers Li Baiguang
and Li Heping
traveled to
Washington, DC to
accept the
"Democracy Award"
from the U.S.
National Endowment
for Democracy and
meet with President
Bush. Lawyer and
writer Teng Biao, a
third recipient of
the prize, was not
able to travel to
the U.S. because
authorities had
confiscated his
passport. The trio
and several others
were invited to dine
with the congressmen
to discuss human
rights issues in
China. Li Baiguang
and Teng Biao are
members of the
Independent Chinese
PEN Center (ICPC).
Li Biaguang was
reportedly detained
and held in Huairou,
a Beijing suburb,
for three days in
order to prevent him
from returning to
Beijing for the
dinner. Teng Biao
was initially
detained in Huairou
as well, but later
returned to his home
in Beijing and
placed under house
arrest. PEN has also
received reports
that several other
lawyers and
dissidents were
harassed in advance
of the dinner
meeting. Writer,
dissident, and
former president and
current ICPC board
member Dr. Liu
Xiaobo was among the
five others warned
against attending
the dinner.
"We are extremely
grateful to
Representatives
Smith and Wolf for
their efforts to
meet with our
colleagues in
Beijing, and
outraged at Chinese
government actions
to prevent that
meeting from taking
place," said PEN
American Center
Freedom to Write
Program Director
Larry Siems. "We
hope that the United
States will formally
protest this
flagrant
interference with
the right of China¨s
citizens to travel
freely and share
their views with
international
visitors, which we
understand our
colleagues have been
told was a planned
drill by police in
preparation for the
Olympics. China made
explicit commitments
to the world to
secure the Olympic
Games, and
restricting the
movements of
citizens seeking to
travel to Beijing
and meet
international
visitors during the
Games would clearly
violate those
commitments and the
spirit of the
Olympics."
PEN has also
received
confirmation that
Feng Zhenghu, a
Shanghai-based
rights defender,
online writer and
freelance journalist
who was detained on
June 5, 2008, was
released on June 15.
His detention was
believed to have
stemmed from a
collection of
articles he
published and
distributed alleging
wrongful convictions
by the Shanghai
courts, along with
other writings. On
June 18, authorities
returned his four
computers and 509
copies of the latest
issue of his
journal, which was
published on June 4.
PEN American Center,
PEN Canada, and the
Independent Chinese
PEN Center are among
the 145 worldwide
centers of
International PEN,
an organization that
works to promote
friendship and
intellectual
co-operation among
writers everywhere,
to fight for freedom
of expression, and
represent the
conscience of world
literature. On
December 10, 2007,
the centers launched
We Are Ready for
Freedom of
Expression, an
Olympic countdown
campaign to protest
China¨s imprisonment
of at least 44
writers and
journalists and to
seek an end to
internet censorship
and other
restrictions on the
freedom to write in
that country. For
more information,
please visit
www.pen.org/china2008,
www.pencanada.ca,
and
www.chinesepen.org.