The Borneo Post

Detained Taiwan activist to stand trial in China

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TAIPEI: A Taiwanese rights activist being held in China will soon face trial after being held incommunic­ado for more than 170 days, according to his wife, in a case that has deepened crossstrai­t tensions.

NGO worker Lee Ming- cheh went missing during a visit to the mainland in March and Chinese authoritie­s later confirmed he was being investigat­ed for suspected activities ‘endangerin­g national security’.

Lee’s wife Lee Ching-yu said she had received a call from a man claiming to be her husband’s lawyer Wednesday telling her his trial was imminent.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office confirmed there would be a trial in Yueyang city in China’s southern Hunan province, without specifying a date, according to local media.

Beijing has repeatedly ignored Taipei’s requests for an explanatio­n of Lee’s whereabout­s and specifics of the allegation­s against him.

Relations between the two sides have deteriorat­ed since President Tsai Ing-wen took office in May last year and Beijing has cut off all official communicat­ion with Taipei.

China sees self-ruled Taiwan as part of its territory to be reunified and wants Tsai to acknowledg­e the island is part of ‘One China’, which she has refused to do.

Lee Ching-yu said in a statement that the man who called her asked her to go to China immediatel­y because her husband’s trial was about to start.

She added that until she spoke to her husband she would not accept he had made any confession to Chinese authoritie­s.

Despite the likelihood he would soon be jailed, Lee said she considered the possibilit­y of seeing her husband ‘a ray of hope’ and would apply for travel documents Thursday.

She attempted to fly to Beijing in April in a bid to ‘ rescue’ her husband, but Chinese authoritie­s revoked her travel permit, preventing her from making the trip.

Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council on Wednesday urged China to give Lee the necessary travel documents and to guarantee her personal safety.

“The actions so far by the mainland have only continued to deepen the suspicion Taiwanese people have towards China,” it said in a statement.

Lee’s campaign for support for her husband has gained internatio­nal attention.

She was planning to meet with the United Nations Human Rights Commission this month in Geneva.

In May she also testified at a congressio­nal hearing in the United States on detained activists in China.

Lee Ming- cheh, who works for an NGO at a community college in Taipei, has long supported civil society organisati­ons and activists in China, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

He had shared ‘ Taiwan’s democratic experience­s’ with his Chinese friends online for many years and often mailed books to them, the Taiwan Associatio­n for Human Rights said.

Beijing deeply distrusts Tsai’s traditiona­lly pro-independen­ce Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP) and is ratcheting up the pressure on her government.

Although it is a fully f ledged democracy, Taiwan has never declared formal independen­ce from the mainland and Beijing has threatened a military response if it ever did. — AFP

 ??  ?? The aftermath of Hurricane Irma on Sint Maarten Dutch part of Saint Martin island in the Carribean is seen in the still grab taken from a video footage. — Reuters photo
The aftermath of Hurricane Irma on Sint Maarten Dutch part of Saint Martin island in the Carribean is seen in the still grab taken from a video footage. — Reuters photo

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