The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Nobel widow go to Berlin after house arrest

- By Gerry Shih and Kirsten Grieshaber The Associated Press

China allowed Liu Xia to fly to Berlin, ending an eight-year house arrest that drew internatio­nal criticism.

BERLIN » In the fall of 2010, Liu Xia traveled to a prison in northeast China to tell her husband, the dissident intellectu­al Liu Xiaobo, that he had just been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. That was the last time she left home as a free woman. Until this week. China on Tuesday allowed Liu Xia to fly to Berlin, ending an eight-year house arrest that drew internatio­nal criticism and made the soft-spoken, chain-smoking 57-year-old poet with a shaven head a tragic icon known around the world.

As Liu Xia came off a plane Tuesday in Helsinki, Finland to transfer to a flight to Berlin, she spread her arms and grinned widely at a waiting photograph­er. Her plane from Helsinki landed in the German capital a few hours later and she was seen getting into a car at Berlin’s Tegel airport.

The release of Liu Xia, who was never charged with a crime, results from years of campaignin­g by Western government­s and activists and comes just days before the one-year anniversar­y Friday of Liu Xiaobo’s death. Liu’s 11-year prison sentence and his wife’s subsequent detention in her home had become glaring symbols of the authoritar­ian government’s determinat­ion to prevent the couple from becoming an inspiratio­n to other Chinese.

“Sister has already left Beijing for Europe at noon to start her new life,” wrote Liu Xia’s brother, Liu Hui, on a social media site. “Thanks to everyone who has helped and cared for her these few years. I hope from now on her life is peaceful and happy.”

Liu Xia arrived in Germany while Chinese Premier Li Keqiang is on an official state visit to the country, which is among the ones that urged Beijing to free her.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel meets regularly with dissidents during visits to China and had raised Liu Xia’s case with Chinese officials, including during a visit in May, people familiar with the matter said.

Liu’s close friends Gao Yu, a veteran journalist in Beijing, and Wu Yangwei, better known by his pen name Ye Du, said Liu Xia took a Finnair flight to Berlin on Tuesday morning. Wu said he spoke to Liu Xia’s older brother, Liu Tong.

“Liu Xia has been kept isolated for so many years,” Wu said by phone from the southern city of Guangzhou. “I hope that being in a free country will allow Liu Xia to heal her long-standing traumas and wounds.”

A Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoma­n, Hua Chunying, said Liu left for Germany to seek “medical treatment on her own accord.”

Liu Xia is an accomplish­ed artist and poet who reluctantl­y followed her husband into politics two decades ago. In 2009, China sentenced Liu Xiaobo to 11 years in prison on a charge of inciting subversion after he helped write Charter 08, a manifesto calling for political and economic liberaliza­tion.

Liu was awarded the Nobel prize on Oct. 8, 2010. As soon as Liu Xia returned home from visiting her husband in prison that month, she was confined in her fifth-floor apartment in Beijing and denied access to a phone and the internet.

At first, she was optimistic her confinemen­t would be brief, telling AP reporters at the time: “I believe they won’t go on like this forever.”

But the days turned into months, and then years.

Guards ate and slept outside her door, driving away well-wishers, activists, journalist­s and diplomats — a slow-burning ordeal worse than death, she said in a rare recording that emerged in May.

“If I can’t leave, I’ll die in my home,” Liu Xia told her close friend Liao Yiwu, a writer who documented their phone conversati­on in an essay published in May.

Liu’s friends said her psychologi­cal condition had steadily deteriorat­ed, particular­ly since the death of her husband.

“Xiaobo is gone, and there’s nothing in the world for me now,” Liu tearfully told Liao. “It’s easier to die than live. Using death to defy could not be any simpler for me.”

Liu’s release was rare good news for China’s beleaguere­d community of activists, who have been the focus of an expansive crackdown on civil society, rights lawyers and other independen­t groups the administra­tion of President Xi Jinping deems a threat to the ruling Communist Party’s grip on power. The last time China let a high-profile political prisoner leave was in 2012, when blind activist Chen Guangcheng was allowed to fly to New York after escaping from house arrest and hiding for six days in the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.

Authoritie­s are still holding Liu Xia’s brother, Liu Hui, who was convicted of fraud and imprisoned in a case supporters say was in retaliatio­n against the attention given the Nobel laureate.

“This is fantastic news, something we have all been hoping against hope for a long time,” said Hu Jia, a family friend and Beijingbas­ed activist. “But we still fear for Liu Hui, who is being kept in the country as a guarantee so that Liu Xia does not speak out abroad.”

China had criticized calls by Western government­s for Liu’s release as interferen­ce in its domestic affairs and insisted that Liu Xia was free.

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