Kuwait Times

Jailed Chinese lawyer force-fed medication

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When human rights lawyer Li Heping returned to his home in Beijing after a two-year incarcerat­ion, his wife did not recognize the frail white-haired man standing in her hallway. “He is only 46 years old, but I thought he was an old man,” Wang Qiaoling said. “He had lost 15 kilograms and looked completely different.” Wang, speaking on Li’s behalf because she said he remains under strict police control, alleges her husband was force-fed medication and sometimes chained for long periods during his detention in the neighborin­g city of Tianjin. Best known for defending blind lawyer Chen Guangcheng, Li also represente­d members of the banned Falun Gong spiritual sect, environmen­talists and victims of forced eviction.

The Beijing Global Law Firm partner was detained by police during the so-called “709 crackdown” in the summer of 2015, when some 200 legal staff and activists were rounded up. He was released earlier this month after a court handed him a threeyear suspended sentence following a secret trial, convicting him of inciting subversion of state power. In a 2014 photo, Li appeared youthful with plump cheeks and jet black hair. But in a video of Li emotionall­y reuniting with his wife and their daughter, he looked gaunt with thinning, grey-white hair.

Shortly after his arrest, “a doctor from the police investigat­ion team told him he needed blood pressure medicine. My husband has never had blood pressure issues and told the doctor he didn’t want it, but he was forced to take the pills six days a week,”Wang said. The side effects made “his muscles hurt, his vision blurred and he had trouble thinking clearly... He was kept drugged until shortly before his release,” Wang said. She also claims Li’s hands and feet were shackled together for the entire month of May in 2016, with a chain so short that he could not stand up or lie down. “They tried many ways to coerce him to confess,” she said.

Police in Beijing and Tianjin did not respond to requests for comment. Amnesty Internatio­nal has noted several cases of detainees in the 709 sweep saying they were force-fed blood pressure drugs. “It’s an ill-treatment method that is difficult to investigat­e as the medicines would only stay in their blood for a period of time,” Amnesty China researcher Patrick Poon said. Li went to a private doctor shortly after his release, who said his body was “damaged” and noted black spots on his face, Wang said. “The doctor could not confirm if he took blood pressure medicines, because it was 10 days after he was sentenced and there couldn’t have been medicine left in his blood,”Wang said. — AFP

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