The Borneo Post

Chinese legal activist missing after police say they released him

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BEIJING: The family of prominent Chinese legal activist Jiang Tianyong is unable to locate him despite police saying that he had been released on Dec 1 after spending nine days in detention, his family’s lawyer said on Friday.

Disbarred lawyer Jiang, 45, has spoken out about a government crackdown on legal defenders and has been involved in high-profile cases of dissidents who have angered authoritie­s, including blind activist Chen Guangcheng, who left China after he fled to the US embassy in 2012.

Jiang’s wife, Jin Bianling, told Reuters in November that she and his friends had been unable to contact him since Nov 21 after he travelled to Changsha in Hunan province to visit relatives of an arrested human rights lawyer, Xie Yang.

Philip Alston, the UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, said in a statement last week that he feared Jiang’s disappeara­nce was in part a reprisal for a meeting the two had during Alston’s August visit to China.

Jiang may be at risk of torture, the United Nations said.

When asked about Jiang at a daily briefing yesterday, foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said he “did not understand the situation”.

Officers at a police station in Changsha told Jiang’s parents on Thursday they had released Jiang on Dec. 1 after nine days of detention, according to family lawyer Qin Chengshou.

“The local station did not provide any form of written proof of his detention or his release, and as we still cannot contact him, we suspect that he has either not been released or has been transferre­d to another police station,” Qin said.

Qin said police told him that Jiang was detained for nine days after attempting to use an identifica­tion card that was not his to buy train tickets. — Reuters

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