Albany Times Union

She told the truth about Wuhan, and is dying in jail

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China committed one act of barbarity when it prosecuted the citizen journalist Zhang Zhan for her revealing look at Wuhan in the first stages of what became a global pandemic. Zhang was sentenced in December to four years in prison on the specious charge of “picking quarrels and provoking trouble,” which China uses to suffocate free speech. Now her health has deteriorat­ed, and relatives say she is near death. China will compound the barbarity unless it sets her free and saves her life.

Zhang, a former lawyer, made an indelible contributi­on to our understand­ing of what happened in Wuhan. Over three months there, she posted 122 Youtube videos, the first of which she titled, “My claim for the right of free speech.” When she got to Wuhan on Feb. 1, 2020, she later recalled, “There was not a single soul. It felt as if I stumbled on a movie set right after the shooting was over and everybody has left the set.”

Her videos confirmed chaos inside a hospital. Ordered to stop filming, she moved around the city, posting what she witnessed.

Her arrest and imprisonme­nt are part of China’s larger coverup. In December 2019, officials in Wuhan attempted to hide informatio­n about the outbreak of a new disease; when eight doctors expressed concern about the sickness, they were reprimande­d. A second coverup occurred in early January 2020, when top Chinese officials remained silent, although they knew of human transmissi­on of the virus, and informed the public only on Jan. 20. A third coverup has involved their repeated attempts to frustrate investigat­ions into the origins of the pandemic and to blame it on sources outside China.

After she was detained in May 2020, Zhang went on a hunger strike and was force-fed through a tube. She is now reportedly eating very little, but not refusing food, to avoid being force-fed again. But her health has waned. Her brother, Zhang Ju, posted on Twitter on Oct. 30: “She is so stubborn. I think she may not live long.”

Zhang should be saluted for her intrepid attempts to record the chaos and cataclysm of Wuhan in those early weeks. She was a sentinel of a looming disaster. Her journalism was not a crime. She must not spend another moment behind bars. She must not be allowed to die.

The arrest and imprisonme­nt of citizen journalist Zhang Zhan are part of China’s larger coverup.

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