Las Vegas Review-Journal

Eight-year sentence for activist in China

‘Ultra Vulgar Butcher’ Wu hit for subversion

- The Associated Press

BEIJING — A prominent activist who called himself the Ultra Vulgar Butcher as he mocked and pressured Chinese officials was given an eight-year prison sentence Tuesday for subversion, the harshest sentence handed down in a sweeping crackdown on rights campaigner­s.

The Tianjin No. 2 Intermedia­te People’s Court handed down the sentence after finding activist Wu Gan guilty of subverting state power. Wu will appeal the sentence, his lawyer Ge Yongxi told The Associated Press.

Wu had become known among rights advocates and lawyers for his attention-grabbing campaigns. In one, he posed for online portraits brandishin­g knives that he said he would use to “slaughter the pigs” among local officials who had done wrong.

In court Tuesday, Wu struck an irreverent note in his remarks following the sentence, saying he was “grateful to the party for granting me this lofty honor,” according to Ge, who was in court.

“I will remain true to our original aspiration, roll up my sleeves and make an extra effort,” Wu said, playing on well-known phrases Chinese President Xi Jinping often uses to exhort Communist Party officials to improve their work.

Wu was among the first activists and lawyers caught up in an intense crackdown by authoritie­s that began in 2015. His secretive one-day trial was held in August after a detention of more than two years.

Activists like Wu focused on individual cases instead of challengin­g Communist Party policy at the national level, making them a greater headache for local officials than for Beijing. But their ability to organize and bring people out on the ground apparently made authoritie­s nervous.

Human rights groups have said that the authoritie­s are persecutin­g Wu and that it is ironic that his fight for justice for others had cost him his own freedom.

“With extraordin­ary courage and disdainful words, Wu Gan set the tone for this so-called ‘trial’ against him,” said his friend and fellow Chinese activist Wu Yuren. “It will inspire more and more people to stomp on this government that seems powerful yet doesn’t have the authority of the people.”

The court said Tuesday in an online statement that Wu Gan had made many remarks online that “attacked state power.”

It accused him of hyping cases that “discredite­d state organs” by organizing illegal public gatherings, causing trouble, and making abusive comments online about other people. It said such actions were part of a series of criminal activities seeking to “overthrow state power and the socialist system.”

Wu had also worked as an administra­tive assistant at the Beijing Fengrui Law Firm, which had worked on sensitive cases and became the focus of the authoritie­s’ crackdown that began in July 2015. Hundreds of lawyers, activists and others were detained in a coordinate­d nationwide sweep that sent a chill through China’s activist community. Many were later released.

Vaguely defined subversion charges are leveled frequently against human rights activists and perceived political foes of the ruling Communist Party.

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