The Borneo Post

Wife of jailed Taiwanese democracy activist to visit him in China prison

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BEIJING: The wife of a Taiwanese democracy activist jailed in China travelled to the country yesterday after being granted permission to visit him in prison for the first time, in a case that has strained crossstrai­t relations.

NGO worker Lee Ming- cheh was sentenced to five years in prison in November on charges of subverting state power by a court in central Hunan province, as activists face increased pressure from authoritie­s under Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Taipei has called Lee’s jailing ‘unacceptab­le’ and a serious blow to relations, while his wife Lee Ching-yu has said his trial was a ‘political show’.

She told reporters prior to her departure yesterday that she intends to pass on ‘ messages from the free world’ during her planned visit to see him in prison today.

Her flight landed in Changsha Huanghua Internatio­nal Airport in Hunan province at 11.57 am according to the airport.

Lee did not answer phone calls and messages from AFP.

Her husband was arrested in March 2017 during a trip to the mainland and held incommunic­ado for months.

Chinese authoritie­s cancelled Lee Ching-yu’s mainland travel permit last April as she searched for her missing husband and later only granted her singleentr­y visas to attend the trial and sentencing.

But in January she was barred from boarding a flight to visit Lee in Hunan’s Chishan prison.

During his trial, Lee admitted the charges, stating that he had written and distribute­d online articles that criticised China’s ruling Communist Party and promoted democracy.

He had shared ‘ Taiwan’s democratic experience­s’ with his Chinese friends online for many years and often mailed books to them, according to the Taiwan Associatio­n for Human Rights.

“While it is positive that Ms Lee will be given access to her husband in prison, Lee Ming- cheh should never have been imprisoned in the first place,” said Maya Wang, China researcher for Human Rights Watch.

“Lee should be immediatel­y released,” Wang said.

Amnesty Internatio­nal and Taiwanese rights groups have also vowed to continue pushing for Lee’s release.

Hunan’s Chishan prison did not answer calls from AFP yesterday. — AFP

 ??  ?? Lee speaks to the press at Taoyuan Internatio­nal Airport, near Taipei, prior to boarding her flight to Changsha, China. — AFP photo
Lee speaks to the press at Taoyuan Internatio­nal Airport, near Taipei, prior to boarding her flight to Changsha, China. — AFP photo

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