Kuwait Times

Taiwanese activist pleads guilty to Chinese subversion charges

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A Taiwanese democracy activist pleaded guilty yesterday to charges of attempting to subvert Chinese government power during a trial in China that his wife called a “political show” and further soured cross-strait ties. Lee Mingcheh appeared alongside a Chinese codefendan­t named Peng Yuhua at Yueyang intermedia­te people’s court in central Hunan province, according to video footage posted on the court’s official social media account.

A shaven-headed Lee appeared nervous as he confessed to charges of “subverting state power”, stating that he had written and distribute­d online articles that criticized China’s ruling Communist Party and promoted democracy among other topics. “I know that my behavior definitely violated Chinese law,” said Lee, an NGO worker who was arrested during a trip to the Chinese mainland in March. “The television news I watched in prison has made me understand China’s developmen­t a little better. I know that my past thinking and the informatio­n I received was mistaken,” he said.

“This mistaken thinking led me to violate the law. I express my guilt and regrets.” The articles were written at the direction of Peng, who he had become acquainted with online and had met several times on the Chinese mainland, Lee said under questionin­g from a prosecutor. Taiwan’s presidenti­al spokesman Alex Huang said Taipei was “highly concerned” about Lee, including “his health and the rights he’s entitled to.”

“The government’s consistent stance is to ensure his personal safety and to make every effort we can to bring him home safely, under the premise of safeguardi­ng our nation’s dignity,” Huang said. The trial concluded Monday afternoon, but it is unclear when a verdict will be announced.

Big political show

His wife and mother travelled to Hunan for the trial and his supporters gathered outside the courthouse in Yueyang city. Both women were accompanie­d by officials from Taiwan’s semi-official Straits Exchange Foundation, which handles relations with the mainland. After the trial, his wife, Lee Ching-yu, showed reporters permanent tattoos on both her forearms that read, “I am proud of you, Lee Ming-cheh.”

“I knew I wouldn’t be able to bring anything into the courtroom with me, except for the expression in my eyes,” she said, her voice wavering. In a separate written statement, she said she was allowed to see her husband and that after “being lovers for more than 20 years, I can tell whether what he speaks is genuine or not.”“The world and I today witnessed this big political show, and also witnessed the difference between Taiwan’s core beliefs and values and that of China,” she said.

Lee has long supported civil society organizati­ons and activists in China, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal. He had shared “Taiwan’s democratic experience­s” with his Chinese friends online for many years and often mailed books to them, said the Taiwan Associatio­n for Human Rights. After Lee went missing Chinese authoritie­s confirmed he was being investigat­ed for suspected activities “endangerin­g national security”.

The language the two co-defendants used to confess their crimes sounded rehearsed, according to Patrick Poon, a China researcher at Amnesty Internatio­nal. The “language they used was so much like the Chinese government’s”, he said, calling it a “sham trial.” Frances Eve, researcher for the charity Chinese Human Rights Defenders, said the trial’s “phony transparen­cy” was an attempt to deflect attention from the serious denial of Lee’s due process rights. —AFP

 ??  ?? HUNAN: Lee Ching-yu, wife of Taiwanese activist Lee Ming-Che shows the tattoo words on her arms, which reads ‘Lee Ming-Che, I’m proud of you’ to the reporters at a hotel room after attending her husband’s trial at the Yueyang Intermedia­te People’s...
HUNAN: Lee Ching-yu, wife of Taiwanese activist Lee Ming-Che shows the tattoo words on her arms, which reads ‘Lee Ming-Che, I’m proud of you’ to the reporters at a hotel room after attending her husband’s trial at the Yueyang Intermedia­te People’s...

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