Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China Nobel laureate’s health declines

Family called in to be with political prisoner who has been denied outside care

- DIDI TANG

BEIJING — Chinese Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo’s health is further deteriorat­ing as his liver function worsens and abdominal fluid accumulate­s, a friend and the hospital that is treating him said, adding to concerns about the long-term prognosis for the country’s bestknown political prisoner.

The doctor leading a medical team in charge of Liu’s treatment for late-stage liver cancer informed his family of the developmen­t, First Hospital of China Medical University said in a statement that appeared on its website Thursday.

In an undated statement that appeared on the hospital’s website today, the hospital said a medical team had decided to stop use of an inhibitor drug for advanced liver cancer in light of Liu’s deteriorat­ing liver functions. It said the use of a traditiona­l Chinese medicine anti-tumor treatment also was suspended.

Today’s statement said the medical team has added low-molecular heparin to treat venous thrombosis developing in Liu’s left leg.

A family friend confirmed Thursday that Liu’s family had been asked to be on standby in the hospital in the northeaste­rn city of Shenyang over the next 24 hours — which they took as a sign that Liu is critically ill.

“We are worried about whether we should start planning for what to do after he leaves,” said family friend Wu Yangwei, better known by his pen name Ye Du.

Wu on Thursday shared on social media an undated photo of an emaciated Liu, in blue-and-white-striped hospital pajamas, embracing his wife Liu Xia, who gazed up at his expression­less face. The photo appeared to have been taken at the hospital, though its background seemed to have been digitally blurred.

Liu’s liver function is deteriorat­ing, the hospital said in a separate statement later Thursday. The hospital said doctors detected increasing levels of a natural waste product called bilirubin in Liu’s body — a sign that his liver is not effectivel­y filtering the byproduct from his blood. Elevated bilirubin levels are linked to jaundice.

The hospital also said Thursday that there were signs that Liu might have blood clots in his lower left leg. Clots are most dangerous when they travel to the lungs, a potentiall­y life-threatenin­g situation, or to the brain, where they can cause a stroke.

Liu was diagnosed in May while serving a 11-year sentence for inciting subversion by advocating sweeping political overhauls that would end China’s one-party rule. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010, a year after his conviction.

Since the diagnosis was made public in late June, his supporters, Western government­s and human-rights groups have been urging Beijing to release Liu and give him the freedom to choose where he wants to be treated. Beijing has maintained that this is an internal affair other countries should stay out of and that Liu is under the care of experts in the Chinese medical center.

Guo Yuhua, a professor of sociology in Beijing, said the government has failed to give Liu what he most needs.

“Liberty, family and friendship are the best medicine, yet Beijing would never offer them to him,” she said.

The hospital’s Thursday statement also included the names of some of the experts, including Dr. Mao Yilei, a reputed expert on liver cancer at Peking Union Medical College Hospital, who conducted another round of group consultati­ons on the day when the statement was released, which was most likely Thursday.

The statement, believed to be responding to criticism that China might have failed to adequately care for Liu, said the experts were approving of previous treatments of Liu. They also adjusted the treatment as Liu’s illness developed, the hospital said.

On behalf of the medical team, Mao informed Liu’s family of his most recent condition, and Liu’s family said they understood, the statement said. The statement was impossible to verify with Liu’s wife or other family members, who have not been contactabl­e and are said to face restrictio­ns on their movements and communicat­ions with the outside world. Calls to the hospital were unanswered Thursday.

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