The Freeman

Chinese gov't critic snatched during TV interview

BEIJING — A vocal critic of China's government has disappeare­d without a trace after security forces strong-armed their way into his home in the middle of a phone interview with a US-funded television network.

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Retired academic Sun Wenguang, who is in his mid80s, was speaking live to a Chinese-language TV show for Voice of America (VOA) when the authoritie­s suddenly showed up.

"The police are here to interrupt again," Sun said from his home in Jinan in the eastern province of Shandong, counting as many as eight intruders as he spoke in an audio broadcast on Wednesday.

"It's illegal for you to come to my home. I have my freedom of speech!" are the final words heard from Sun.

The dramatic recording highlights the increasing intensity of China's efforts to silence critics of its policies as the ruling Communist Party aggressive­ly nurtures a cult of personalit­y around President Xi Jinping.

Sun had written an open letter to Xi last month that criticized China's chequebook diplomacy in Africa, releasing it just as the leader embarked on a trip to the continent, according to VOA and online screenshot­s that could not be independen­tly verified by AFP.

"Listen to what I say, is it wrong?" Sun asked the security detail in the recording.

"People are poor. Let's not throw our money in Africa," he said, telling the intruders that "throwing money like this is of no good to our country and society" before the line went dead.

'REAL TYRANNY'

Sun, who is one of China's oldest activists, is kept under regular surveillan­ce.

He was a co-signer of the pro-democracy manifesto Charter 08 — a quickly censored document that landed co-author and Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo in prison. Liu died last year, the first Nobel winner to die in custody since Nazi Germany.

In 2009, Sun was viciously beaten by authoritie­s when he snuck past guards watching his building in an attempt to pay his respects to ousted Communist leader Zhao Ziyang — who opposed the use of force to quell the 1989 Tiananmen Square democracy protests — on the 10th anniversar­y of the former premier's death.

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 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE PHOTO ?? This file photo shows former professor Sun Wenguang talking at his home in Jinan in east China's Shandong province.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE PHOTO This file photo shows former professor Sun Wenguang talking at his home in Jinan in east China's Shandong province.

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