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CHINA:
Writer Li Jianping tried for online pro-democracy
articles
New York, April 12, 2006 The Committee to Protect
Journalists is outraged by the prosecution of
Internet writer Li Jianping on charges of inciting
subversion for articles criticizing Communist
Party leaders and Chinese government actions. Li
was tried today in a proceeding that lasted less
than three hours, according to Agence France-Presse.
How can China, one of the world's most powerful
nations, continue to regard one citizen's
criticism as a threat to the authority of the
state said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper. Li
Jianping should be released immediately and
unconditionally in accordance with the Chinese
constitution and international law.?Zibo City
Intermediate Court in northeast China Shandong
Province is expected to deliver a verdict within
15 days, Li's lawyer Zhang Xingshui told AFP.
Li was detained by police in Zibo City on May 27,
2005 on suspicion of defamation for articles
criticizing party and government leaders,
according to court documents. The charge was later
upgraied to inciting
subversion of state authority,?which usually
results in a prison term of several years.
Prosecutors cited 31 articles that Li had written
for ChinaEWeekly, Democracy Forum, Epoch Times and
other overseas Web sites that are banned in
China.
Li told the court today that posting his essays
online did not constitute a crime, and his lawyer
argued that his actions were protected by the
Chinese Constitution, according to AFP.
In February, Liu Zhengrong, deputy chief of the
Internet Affairs Bureau of the State Council, told
reporters that no one was jailed in China for
expressing their views online. CPJ research shows
that Li was among at least 15 journalists jailed
for their online writings at the end of 2005.
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