The Borneo Post

Taiwanese activist jailed in China for five years for ‘subversion’

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BEIJING: A Chinese court sentenced Taiwanese democracy activist Lee Ming- cheh to five years in prison yesterday on charges of attempting to subvert state power, further souring crossstrai­t ties.

Lee sat nervously as the threejudge panel read the sentence at the Yueyang intermedia­te people’s court in central Hunan province, according to a video posted on the tribunal’s social media account.

Taiwan and human rights groups immediatel­y denounced the ruling as ‘unacceptab­le’ and ‘politicall­y motivated’.

Lee – an NGO worker who was arrested during a trip to the Chinese mainland in March – is the first Taiwanese person to be convicted in China on the political charge, according to Taiwan’s Judicial Reform Foundation.

A Chinese co- defendant named Peng Yuhua was sentenced to seven years in prison. The court said both men stated that they would not appeal their sentences.

President Xi Jinping, who consolidat­ed power at a Communist Party congress last month, has cracked down on dissent and tightened control on civil society since taking office in 2012.

Lee had confessed to the charges during his trial in September, stating that he had written and distribute­d online articles that criticised China’s ruling Communist Party and promoted democracy among other topics.

His wife, Lee Ching-yu, who attended the sentencing, said her husband had ‘ paid the price’ for his ideals.

“Fighting for human rights for the disadvanta­ged is a commitment that must be made to push for the enhancemen­t of human civilisati­on... I want to express again that I am proud of his dedication,” she said in a statement.

Amnesty Internatio­nal East Asia research director Roseann Rife called for Lee to be “immediatel­y and unconditio­nally released”, saying he had committed no crime.

“Lee Ming-cheh is the victim of a politicall­y motivated prosecutio­n... He is the latest to suffer under the Chinese authoritie­s’ relentless attack against human rights and democracy activists,” Rife said.

Taiwan’s presidenti­al office and the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP) called the verdict ‘unacceptab­le’.

“We urged the Beijing authoritie­s to release Lee and allow him to return to Taiwan soon. We regret that Lee’s case seriously damaged cross- strait relations,” the presidenti­al office said in a statement.

China sees self-ruled Taiwan as part of its territory waiting to be reunified.

Former DPP lawmaker Wang Liping tried to go to the court with Lee’s wife, but Wang was expelled from mainland China upon arrival at Changsha airport.

Lee has long supported civil society organisati­ons and activists in China, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal, and was said to have frequently travelled between the mainland and Taiwan.

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”.

In the lead-up to the trial, Beijing repeatedly ignored Taipei’s requests for informatio­n on Lee’s whereabout­s and details of the allegation­s against him.

His wife had called his trial a ‘political show’.

When he pleaded guilty in September, Lee told the court: “I know that my behaviour definitely violated Chinese law”.

Lee’s wife, a friend and two officials from Taiwan’s semi-official Strait Exchange Foundation were allowed in.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This video grab from footage on the website of Yueyang Intermedia­te People’s Court shows Lee (right) appearing in court in Yueyang.
— AFP photo This video grab from footage on the website of Yueyang Intermedia­te People’s Court shows Lee (right) appearing in court in Yueyang.

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