Windsor Star

LIU XIAOBO CALLED THE TIANANMEN SQUARE PROTESTS THE ‘TURNING POINT’ IN HIS LIFE,

AS THE MAN WHO WENT ON TO WIN THE NOBEL PRIZE LED DEMOCRATIZ­ATION EFFORTS IN CHINA. HE DIED IN PRISON THURSDAY.

- CHRISTOPHE­R BODEEN, GILLIAN WONG HAN GUAN NG AND

SHENYANG, CHINA • Imprisoned for all the seven years since he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, Liu Xiaobo never renounced the pursuit of human rights in China, insisting on living a life of “honesty, responsibi­lity and dignity.”

China’s most prominent political prisoner died Thursday of liver cancer at 61.

His death — at a hospital in the country’s northeast, where he’d been transferre­d after being diagnosed — triggered an outpouring of dismay among his friends and supporters, who lauded his courage and determinat­ion.

“There are only two words to describe how we feel right now: grief and fury,” said family friend and activist Wu Yangwei, better known by his pen name Ye Du. “The only way we can grieve for Xiaobo and bring his soul some comfort is to work even harder to try to keep his influence alive.”

The 1989 pro-democracy protests centred in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, by Liu’s account, were the “major turning point” of his life. Liu had been a visiting scholar at Columbia University in New York but returned early to China in May 1989 to join the movement that was sweeping the country and which the Communist Party regarded as a grave challenge to its authority.

When the government sent troops and tanks into Beijing to quash the protests on the night of June 3-4, Liu persuaded some students to leave the square rather than face down the army. The military crackdown killed hundreds, possibly thousands, of people and heralded a more repressive era.

Liu became one of hundreds of Chinese imprisoned for crimes linked to the demonstrat­ions. It was only the first of four imprisonme­nts.

His final prison sentence was for co-authoring “Charter 08,” a document circulated in 2008 that called for more freedom of expression, human rights and an independen­t judiciary.

“What I demanded of myself was this: Whether as a person or as a writer, I would lead a life of honesty, responsibi­lity, and dignity,” Liu wrote in “I Have No Enemies: My Final Statement,” which he was prevented from reading aloud at his sentencing in 2009.

He was sent to prison for 11 years on charges of inciting subversion by advocating sweeping political reforms and greater human rights in his country.

A year later, he was awarded the Nobel Prize. The Norwegian committee lauded Liu’s “long and non-violent struggle for fundamenta­l human rights in China.”

The award enraged China’s government, which condemned it as a political farce. Within days, Liu’s wife, the artist and poet Liu Xia, was put under house arrest, despite not being convicted of any crime. China also punished Norway, even though its government has no say over the independen­t Nobel panel’s decisions. China suspended a bilateral trade deal and restricted imports of Norwegian salmon, and relations only resumed in 2017.

Dozens of Liu’s supporters were prevented from leaving the country to accept the award on his behalf. Instead, Liu’s absence at the prizegivin­g ceremony in Oslo, Norway, was marked by an empty chair. Another empty chair was for Liu Xia.

In recent days, supporters and foreign government­s urged China to allow him to be treated for cancer abroad, but Chinese authoritie­s insisted he was receiving the best care possible.

On Thursday, the Nobel Committee said Beijing bore a heavy responsibi­lity for Liu’s death. But it also levelled harsh criticism at the “free world” for its “hesitant, belated reactions” to his serious illness and imprisonme­nt.

“It is a sad and disturbing fact that the representa­tives of the free world, who themselves hold democracy and human rights in high regard, are less willing to stand up for those rights for the benefit of others,” said the organizati­on’s chairwoman, Berit Reiss-Andersen.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Liu Xiaobo was a “courageous fighter for civil rights and freedom of opinion.”

Former president George W. Bush saluted Liu as a man who “dared to dream of a China that respected human rights.” U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, meanwhile, urged Beijing to release Liu’s wife from house arrest and allow her to leave the country if she wishes.

Liu was born on Dec. 28, 1955, in the northeaste­rn city of Changchun, the son of a language and literature professor who was a committed party member. The middle child in a family of five boys, he was among the first to attend Jilin University when college entrance examinatio­ns resumed after the chaotic 1966-76 Cultural Revolution.

After spending nearly two years in detention following the Tiananmen crackdown, Liu was detained for the second time in 1995 after drafting a plea for political reform. Later that year, he was detained a third time after co-drafting “Opinion on Some Major Issues Concerning our Country Today.” That resulted in a three-year sentence to a labour camp, during which time he married Liu Xia.

THERE ARE ONLY TWO WORDS TO DESCRIBE HOW WE FEEL RIGHT NOW: GRIEF AND FURY.

 ?? KIN CHEUNG /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A protester mourns the death of Chinese dissident and Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo during a demonstrat­ion outside the Chinese liaison office in Hong Kong on Thursday. Liu died Thursday in state custody at age 61.
KIN CHEUNG /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A protester mourns the death of Chinese dissident and Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo during a demonstrat­ion outside the Chinese liaison office in Hong Kong on Thursday. Liu died Thursday in state custody at age 61.

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