Vancouver Sun

Labour activist found hanged in hospital

Family doubts Li Wangyang killed himself

- BY BARBARA DEMICK

BEIJING — In a tragic coda to the 23rd anniversar­y of the Tiananmen Square massacre, a veteran activist was found hanged in a hospital room Wednesday morning.

Li Wangyang, 62, was a labour activist from Hunan province who led workers in sympathy protests during the student demonstrat­ions in 1989 and served more than two decades in prison. He was on medical parole in Shaoyang, Hunan, when he was found early Wednesday morning hanging by a bedsheet from security bars over the window.

The family was telephoned at 6 a. m. and rushed to the hospital, where they saw Li’s body still hanging over the window, said brother- in- law Zhao Baozhu. He said they are skeptical about whether Li, who is blind and mostly deaf, could or would have killed himself.

“He could barely hold a bowl without his hands shaking. I can’t imagine how he could have tied his sheets into a knot,” said Zhao. He noted that there were guards assigned to the hospital to watch Li. “How could this happen when there were security guards watching him? We have many questions.”

The family was not permitted to take photograph­s of the body, but they were told that there would be an autopsy.

Fellow pro- democracy activists called for an investigat­ion of the death. They noted that Li, despite his poor health, seemed in good spirits. The night before he had asked his family

to bring him a radio so that he could improve his hearing. An interview in which he called on the “whole nation to observe June 4” aired on a French radio network on Sunday, the day before the anniversar­y of the Tiananmen Square crackdown. On Monday, he told a friend he was optimistic that “China’s constituti­onal democracy will be achieved.”

“Although Li was ill, he was very energetic,” read a statement released Monday by a group of friends calling themselves the Committee to Investigat­e Li Wangyang’s Death. Comparing him to South Africa’s Nelson Mandela, they wrote, “How could a strong- willed pro- democracy veteran like Li Wangyang, who had served 22 years in jail, take his own life?”

To his supporters, Li was one of the unsung heroes of 1989, gaining fewer accolades than the elite university students who demonstrat­ed in Beijing and receiving a harsher punishment. A cement factory worker, he was one of the early union organizers in China.

On June 4, 1989, he glued a big poster on a traffic sign in Shaoyang calling for workers to go on strike in support of the democracy protests. Two days later, he organized a memorial for the victims of the massacre.

He was convicted of spreading counterrev­olutionary propaganda and received a 13- year sentence. Harsh treatment in prison led to the deteriorat­ion of his health, and upon emerging he started campaignin­g for restitutio­n. As a result, he received another 10- year sentence.

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