The Borneo Post

Chinese dissident writer dies on medical parole

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BEIJING: A veteran Chinese dissident who had nearly completed a 12-year prison sentence for ‘subversion’ has died on medical parole, rights groups said yesterday.

Writer Yang Tongyan died on Tuesday, nearly three months after an Aug 23 surgery to remove a brain tumour, Amnesty Internatio­nal said in a statement, citing informatio­n from close friends.

Rights groups say a pattern has emerged in recent years where China releases activists from prison in poor health, or only weeks before they pass away, with late Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo being a notable example this summer.

News of the death emerge as US President Donald Trump, whose government had urged China to release Liu before he died, arrived in Beijing for meetings with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

“The death of yet another longterm Chinese detainee on medical parole is alarming,” said Nicholas Bequelin, East Asia Director at Amnesty Internatio­nal.

“There seems to be no accountabi­lity for the pattern of deaths on medical parole of people labelled by the authoritie­s as ‘enemies of the state’,” Bequelin added. Yang was convicted in 2006 for posting anti-government articles online, after having already spent a decade in prison for ‘counter-revolution­ary’ crimes.

The 56-year-old had been released from Nanjing Prison on medical parole in August following his diagnosis with an “aggressive form of brain cancer”, PEN America said in a statement.

Yang was a 2008 recipient of PEN’s Freedom to Write Award and a member of the Independen­t Chinese PEN Centre.

His death, less than four months after that of Liu Xiaobo, “is another black mark on the Chinese authoritie­s’ human rights record,” said Karin Karlekar, PEN America’s Director of Free Expression at Risk Programmes. — AFP

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