Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Chinese military doctor arrested after exposing SARS cover-up

-

Jiang Yanyong, a Chinese military doctor who revealed the full extent of the 2003 SARS outbreak and was later placed under house arrest for his political outspokenn­ess, has died, a longtime acquaintan­ce and a Hong Kong newspaper said Tuesday. He was 91.

Jiang died of pneumonia Saturday in Beijing, said human rights activist Hu Jia and the South China Morning Post.

News of Jiang’s death and even his name were censored within China, underscori­ng how he remained a politicall­y sensitive figure even late in life.

Jiang had been chief surgeon at the People’s Liberation Army’s main 301 hospital in Beijing in 1989 when the army fought its way through the city to end weeks of student-led pro-democracy protests centered on Tiananmen Square, causing the deaths of hundreds — possibly thousands — of civilians.

In April 2003, as the ruling Communist Party was suppressin­g news about the outbreak of the highly contagious severe acute respirator­y syndrome, Jiang wrote an 800-word letter stating there were many more SARS cases than were being reported by the country’s health minister.

Jiang emailed the letter to state broadcaste­r CCTV and Hong Kong’s Beijing-friendly Phoenix Channel, both of which ignored it. The letter was then leaked to Western media outlets that published it in its entirety, along with reports on the true extent of the outbreak and China’s efforts to hide it.

The letter, along with the death of a Finnish United Nations employee and statements by renowned physician Zhong Nanshan, forced the lifting of government suppressio­n, leading to the resignatio­ns of both the health minister and Beijing’s mayor. Strict containmen­t measures were imposed virtually overnight, helping to restrain the spread of the virus that had already begun spreading overseas.

In all, more than 8,000 people from 29 countries and territorie­s were infected with SARS, resulting in at least 774 deaths.

“He saved so many lives with that letter, without thought for the consequenc­es,” Hu told the Associated Press.

Chinese authoritie­s later sought to block media access to Jiang, who retired with the rank of major general. He turned down an interview with the Associated Press, saying he had been unable to obtain the necessary permission from the Ministry of Defense.

From 2004, Jiang and his wife were periodical­ly placed under house arrest for appealing to Communist leaders for a reevaluati­on of the 1989 protests that remains a taboo topic. That recalled Jiang’s earlier experience­s when he was persecuted as a rightist under Mao Zedong during the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s.

In 2004, Jiang was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service from the Philippine­s, considered by some an Asian version of the Nobel Peace Prize. In the citation, he was praised for having broken “China’s habit of silence and forced the truth of SARS into the open.”

Jiang was prevented from leaving the country and the award was collected by his daughter on his behalf.

Three years later, he won the Heinz R. Pagels Human Rights of Scientists Award given by the New York Academy of Sciences, but he was again blocked from traveling.

Echoes of Jiang’s experience were heard in China’s approach to the initial outbreak of COVID-19, first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019.

A Wuhan eye doctor, Li Wenliang, was detained and threatened by police for allegedly spreading rumors on social media after an attempt to alert others about a “SARS-like” virus. Li’s death on Feb. 7, 2020, sparked widespread outrage against the Chinese censorship system.

Jiang is survived by his wife, Hua Zhongwei, and a son and daughter, according to the South China Morning Post.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States