Vancouver Sun

Authoritie­s told dissident they’d bury him alive

U. S. ambassador says human rights climate ‘ getting worse’ as author reveals severe beatings

- BY TOM LASSETER Mcclatchy

BEIJING — When Yu Jie wrote a book in 2010 slamming Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabo as a cynical actor at the head of a heartless Communist party, it was unknown how Beijing’s authoritar­ian government might react.

Yu revealed the answer publicly this week: Chinese security officers dragged him from his home in December 2010 with a black hood on his head and then beat him until he convulsed with seizures.

The plaincloth­es men pummeled him in the head and face, Yu said in a statement released this week. They also kicked him in the chest, and a state security officer told Yu they could bury him alive and that no one would ever find out.

Chinese security continued to harass him off and on for more than a year after the beating, until earlier this month, when he fled China. He surfaced in Washington on Wednesday, where he gave a news conference and distribute­d his account.

Yu’s story is yet another incident in China’s continuing crackdown on dissidents and rights advocates that human rights organizati­ons describe as the worst in decades.

In the last four weeks alone, Chinese courts have sentenced three activists to between nine and 10 years in prison for subversion or inciting subversion of state power — a catch- all charge that has frequently boiled down to posting essays or poems calling for more freedom in China.

In comments aired Monday, U. S. Ambassador to China Gary Locke told the Charlie Rose Show on CBS, “The human rights climate has always ebbed and flowed in China, up and down, but we seem to be in a down period and it’s getting worse.”

Locke attributed that trend to unease by Chinese leadership over the recent revolts and political upheavals across the Arab world. Despite virtually no response to online calls last February for protests in China, the Chinese government unleashed a campaign of arrests and detentions intended to head off any effort to mimic the Arab Spring.

Chinese officials bristle at criticism of their record.

The day after Locke’s remarks, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin told reporters that there was nothing to worry about.

“China has attached great importance to promoting and safeguardi­ng the basic rights of the Chinese people, including the freedom of belief and speech,” Liu said. “China’s progress in human rights is obvious to all.”

Yu’s experience would seem to suggest otherwise.

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