The Guardian (USA)

Citizen journalist detained over Wuhan reporting 'restrained and fed by tube'

- Helen Davidson in Taipei Additional reporting by Lillian Yang

A citizen journalist detained for more than six months after reporting on the Wuhan coronaviru­s outbreak has had a feeding tube forcibly inserted and her arms restrained to stop her pulling it out, her lawyer has claimed.

Zhang Zhan, a 37-year-old former lawyer, has been on a hunger strike at a detention facility near Shanghai. Zhang was arrested in May and accused of “picking quarrels and stirring up trouble”, an accusation frequently used against critics and activists inside China, after reporting on social media and streaming accounts. Last month she was formally indicted on charges of spreading false informatio­n.

In a blog post on Wednesday, Zhang’s lawyer, Zhang Keke, said he visited his client on Tuesday afternoon, and found her unwell and exhausted.

“She was wearing thick pyjamas with a girdle around the waist, her left hand pinned in front and right hand pinned behind,” he wrote. “She said she had a stomach tube inserted recently and because she wanted to pull it out, she was restrained.”

Zhang Keke said she was in “constant torment” from 24 hours a day of restraints, and needed assistance to go to the bathroom.

“In addition to headache, dizziness and stomach pain, there was also pain in her mouth and throat. She said this may be inflammati­on due to the insertion of a gastric tube.”

Zhang Keke said he told Zhang her family, friends, and lawyers had urged her to stop her hunger strike, but she refused. He said Zhang told him she had expected a court hearing in December, and now it appeared there were no plans to hold one, she didn’t know if she would survive.

Zhang was previously detained on similar accusation­s by Chinese authoritie­s in 2018, and again in 2019 for voicing support for Hong Kong activists. She denies the charge of falsifying informatio­n, telling her lawyer that all the informatio­n was gathered firsthand through interviews with Wuhan residents.

Zhang is among several Chinese journalist­s to have been arrested this year after travelling to Wuhan to report on the virus outbreak and response.

Chen Qiushi, a former lawyer turned journalist, was detained in January. Li Zehua, who travelled to Wuhan to report after Chen’s disappeara­nce, went missing in early February but was released in April. Wuhan resident Fang Bin who reportedly posted footage of overwhelme­d hospitals, and filmed police knocking on his door went missing at the same time but has not been seen since.

The Chinese government’s crackdown on activists, dissidents, and human rights works appears to have worsened this year.

On Thursday Chinese Human Rights Defenders ( CHRD) said this week alone authoritie­s had detained lawyer Tang Jitian, and placed under apparent house arrest lawyers Xie Yanyi, Li Heping and his family, Wang Quanzhang and his family, and the wife of lawyer Yu Wenshang. Posting videos of some of the police action at the lawyers’ homes, CHRD accused authoritie­s of turning “Human Rights Day into a field day for attacking human rights defenders”.

 ?? Photograph: Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD) ?? Zhang Zhan, who was detained in China over her reporting of coronaviru­s in Wuhan.
Photograph: Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD) Zhang Zhan, who was detained in China over her reporting of coronaviru­s in Wuhan.

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