Edmonton Journal

Nobel winner’s wife speaks up

Beijing house arrest ‘absurd and draining’

- ISOLDA MURILLO AND ALEXA OLESEN

BEIJING – Stunned that reporters were able to visit her, Liu Xia trembled uncontroll­ably and cried Thursday as she described how absurd and emotionall­y draining her confinemen­t under house arrest has been in the two years since her jailed activist husband, Liu Xiaobo, was named a Nobel Peace laureate.

In her first interview in 26 months, Liu Xia spoke briefly with journalist­s who managed to visit her apartment while the guards who watch it apparently stepped away for lunch. Her voice shook and she was breathless from disbelief at receiving unexpected visitors.

Liu said her continuing house arrest has been painfully surreal and in stark contrast to Beijing’s celebrator­y response to this year’s Chinese victory among the Nobels — literature prize winner Mo Yan. Liu said she has been confined to her duplex apartment in downtown Beijing with no Internet or outside phone line and is only allowed weekly trips to buy groceries and visit her parents.

“We live in such an absurd place,” she said. “It is so absurd. I felt I was a person emotionall­y prepared to respond to the consequenc­es of Liu Xiaobo winning the prize. But after he won the prize, I really never imagined that after he won, I would not be able to leave my home. This is too absurd. I think Kafka could not have written anything more absurd and unbelievab­le than this.”

Once a month, she is taken to see her husband in prison. It wasn’t clear when Liu Xia started regular visits with her husband or if they would continue following her interview. She was denied visits for more than a year after she saw him two days after his Nobel win and emerged to tell the world that he had dedicated the award to those who died in the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown.

Liu Xiaobo is four years into an 11-year prison term for subversion for authoring and disseminat­ing a programmat­ic call for democracy, Charter ’08. In awarding him the peace prize, the Nobel committee cited that proposal and his two decades of nonviolent struggle for civil rights.

Beijing condemned Liu’s 2010 award, saying it tarnished the committee’s reputation to bestow it on a jailed criminal. That fury was replaced with jubilation and pride this year, after the announceme­nt that Mo — who has been embraced by China’s Communist government — had been named winner of the Nobel literature prize.

The authoritar­ian government’s detention of the Liu couple, one in a prison 450 kilometres northeast of Beijing and the other in a fifth-floor apartment in the capital, underscore­s its determinat­ion to keep the 57-year-old peace laureate from becoming an inspiratio­n to other Chinese, either by himself or through her.

Rights groups have called her treatment the most severe retaliatio­n by a government given to a Nobel winner’s family.

Though she is forbidden to discuss the specifics of her situation with her husband, Liu says he knows that she is also under detention.

Liu was shaken to find several journalist­s at her door. Her first reaction was to put her hands to her head and ask several times, “How did you manage to come up? How did you manage?”

Around midday, the guards who keep a 24-hour watch on the main entrance of Liu’s building had left their station — a cot with blankets where they sit and sleep.

A poet, photograph­er and painter, Liu Xia said she spends her time reading and sometimes painting.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Liu Xia, wife of 2010 Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, reacts to an unexpected visit by journalist­s at her home Thursday.
NG HAN GUAN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Liu Xia, wife of 2010 Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, reacts to an unexpected visit by journalist­s at her home Thursday.

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