The Borneo Post

Chinese rights lawyer charged with ‘inciting subversion’

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BEIJING: A prominent Chinese human rights attorney has been charged with ‘inciting subversion of state power’ and will be held in isolation far from his home, his lawyer said yesterday.

Yu Wensheng, 50, was initially charged with ‘disrupting a public service’ after he was detained by a dozen police officers as he left his Beijing apartment to walk his son to school on Jan 19.

But on Saturday police in the eastern city of Xuzhou, Jiangsu province, added the more serious subversion accusation, which carries a maximum prison sentence of 15 years, five times longer than the first charge, according to defence lawyer Huang Hanzhong.

Police also told his family members that Yu will be held under ‘ residentia­l surveillan­ce at a designated place’, Huang told AFP.

Best known for suing the Beijing government over the city’s once chronic pollution, Yu has been a persistent voice for reform despite an increasing­ly severe crackdown on activism under President Xi Jinping.

Hours before his detention, he had circulated an open letter calling for five reforms to China’s constituti­on, including the institutio­n of multi- candidate presidenti­al elections.

It is unclear why Xuzhou police became involved although in recent years, other rights lawyers’ cases were handled by jurisdicti­ons far from defendants’ hometowns.

Under ‘residentia­l surveillan­ce’ rules in cases concerning national security, suspects can be held for up to six months incommunic­ado in unofficial jails without access to lawyers.

The Xuzhou public security department could not be reached for comment yesterday.

“I don’t know if Beijing police will remain involved. After Yu is transferre­d, I will go to Xuzhou to make a request with authoritie­s to meet him,” Huang said.

Patrick Poon, China researcher at Amnesty Internatio­nal, said Yu faces a ‘ high risk of torture and other ill-treatment’.

“The purpose of placing him under residentia­l surveillan­ce with the charge of ‘ inciting subversion’ is to silence him for at least six months,” Poon said, while noting that police often slap arbitrary charges on human rights defenders.

Yu had said that in 2014 authoritie­s imprisoned and tortured him for 99 days for allegedly ‘disturbing public order’.

Beijing has stepped up its crackdown on civil society since President Xi Jinping took power in 2012, tightening restrictio­ns on freedom of speech and detaining hundreds of activists and lawyers.

For several days beginning on July 9, 2015, more than 200 Chinese human rights lawyers and activists were detained or questioned in a police sweep that rights groups called ‘unpreceden­ted’. — AFP

 ??  ?? People visit the West Lake, one of China’s most scenic tourist sites, in Hangzhou, China’s eastern Zhejiang province. Heavy snow hit central and eastern China last week. — AFP photo
People visit the West Lake, one of China’s most scenic tourist sites, in Hangzhou, China’s eastern Zhejiang province. Heavy snow hit central and eastern China last week. — AFP photo

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