Business Day

Outrage at video of ailing Nobel laureate

- Agency Staff Beijing

A Chinese hospital said on Tuesday it was scrambling to save terminally ill Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo, while human rights groups decried his treatment by the authoritie­s and the leak of a video showing him in bed.

A Chinese hospital said on Tuesday it was scrambling to save terminally ill Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo, while human rights groups decried his treatment by the authoritie­s and the leak of a video showing him in bed.

The health of the prominent 61-year-old democracy advocate has deteriorat­ed since authoritie­s revealed last month that he had been transferre­d from prison to a hospital due to late-stage liver cancer.

But Chinese officials have ignored calls by internatio­nal human rights groups, western government­s and local activists to grant Liu’s wish to be treated abroad, raising fears he will die without having tasted freedom.

A day after reporting that Liu was in a critical condition, the First Hospital of China Medical University in the northeaste­rn city of Shenyang said on Tuesday the patient was “still in active rescue”.

Liu had an abdominal infection, organ dysfunctio­n and he went into septic shock, the hospital said on its website. He is undergoing kidney dialysis and is getting anti-infection and organ function-support therapy.

The pessimisti­c reports from the hospital came after foreign doctors who visited Liu over the weekend concluded it was safe to transport him to another country, contradict­ing their Chinese counterpar­ts.

Human rights groups questioned the motives behind the leak of a video showing the US and German specialist­s by the bedside of a gaunt-looking Liu as they speak to his wife, Liu Xia, and the Chinese doctors.

In the leaked video, German doctor Markus Buchler tells Liu Xia, the Chinese physicians are “very committed” to her husband’s treatment.

Another clip shows him telling doctors in a conference room he does not think physicians in Germany can do better, but he is willing to take him out of China.

The German embassy lashed out at what it called a breach of doctor-patient confidenti­ality, saying on Monday it seemed that “security organs are steering the process, not medical experts”.

Human Rights Watch’s China director Sophie Richardson called the leak “grotesque propaganda”. She said it “makes so painfully clear that China’s interest is to try to put up the fiction that it has treated him well when, in fact, its conduct has been appallingl­y inhumane”.

Asked about the German embassy’s reaction to the leak, foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said he was “not aware of relevant informatio­n mentioned in the statement”.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman had said on Monday she hoped for a “signal of humanity” from China.

The US and EU have urged China to grant Liu full parole from prison and let him choose his medical treatment.

Geng reiterated that he hoped “relevant countries can respect the judicial sovereignt­y of China and not interfere in China’s internal affairs under the pretext of an individual case”.

If he dies, Liu would become the first Nobel Peace Prize laureate to die in custody since German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky, who died in a hospital while held by the Nazis in 1938.

Liu was arrested in 2008 after co-writing Charter 08, a bold petition that called for the protection of basic human rights and reform of China’s one-party communist system.

He was sentenced to 11 years in prison in December 2009 for “subversion”. At the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo in 2010, he was represente­d by an empty chair.

 ??  ?? Liu Xiaobo
Liu Xiaobo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa