Los Angeles Times

Chinese activists, lawyer on trial

The first of four to face the court is found guilty of subversion, reportedly because of his comments online.

- By Julie Makinen julie.makinen@latimes.com Twitter: @JulieMakLA­T

BEIJING — China is putting three human rights activists and one lawyer on trial this week in the eastern city of Tianjin, and on Tuesday the court handed down the first verdict, finding one defendant guilty of subversion and imposing a threeyear suspended prison sentence.

Authoritie­s have tried to give the proceeding­s an air of transparen­cy by handpickin­g a few news outlets from Hong Kong and Taiwan to be present in the courtroom. But family members of the accused have complained that they have not been allowed to contact the defendants during their year-plus detention and that the defendants were not allowed to choose their attorneys.

Zhai Yanmin, 55, was sentenced Tuesday after a three-hour trial. The staterun newspaper China Daily said he had posted comments on the Internet that “harmed national security and social stability” and “organized protests to disturb the public order.”

The three others who will stand trial this week are Zhou Shifeng, director of the Beijing-based Fengrui Law Firm, and two other activists, Gou Hongguo and Hu Shigen.

The four are among approximat­ely 300 human rights activists and lawyers detained in a crackdown that began last summer. About 20 remain in custody.

Last year, a number of state-run news outlets ran identical articles accusing Zhou and his lawyers of forming a “major criminal gang that organized and planned the creation of an uproar in more than 40 sensitive cases and that seriously disturbed social order.” The lawyers also sought to undermine the Communist Party and enrich themselves, the report claimed.

On Tuesday, foreign reporters who tried to enter the courtroom at the Tianjin Municipal No. 2 Intermedia­te People’s Court found roads near it sealed off, and they were met by a large number of police.

Some journalist­s were then taken by bus to a nearby hotel where they were allowed to watch a “live transcript” from the trial projected onto a screen.

On Monday, the eve of the trials, a videotaped confession made by another detained attorney from the Fengrui firm, Wang Yu, aired on a website affiliated with Hong Kong’s Oriental Daily News.

Wang was well known for taking up sensitive cases, representi­ng feminists, members of the spiritual movement Falun Gong (which China has banned and declared an evil cult) and a professor from the Uighur ethnic minority who was sentenced to life in prison in 2014 on charges of separatism.

In the video, Wang renounced her legal work and blamed “foreign groups” for instilling dangerous notions in her. She pledged that she would no longer accept awards from foreign organizati­ons. “I am Chinese, and I only accept the Chinese government’s leadership,” she said roboticall­y.

Friends and associates of Wang have said they believed the confession was made under duress, like a number of other broadcast confession­als in the last two years. Wang was arrested in January and was accused of subverting state power.

The U.S. Embassy in Beijing released a statement Monday saying the United States “remains concerned by the Chinese government’s continuing efforts to harass, intimidate and prosecute defense lawyers and human rights activists for their work.”

China Human Rights Defenders, an advocacy group, said in a statement on the eve of the trials that “the use of ‘national security’-related charges to target human rights lawyers and activists has become a hallmark of [Chinese leader] Xi Jinping’s reign.”

It accused authoritie­s of “grossly” abusing their power in handling the detainees, “disregardi­ng Chinese laws and violating internatio­nal human rights convention­s.”

A consistent theme running through the recent trials and confession­als has been statements from the accused saying they were influenced by foreigners, and pledging to stay away from them in the future. The confessors have painted human rights lawyers as troublemak­ers who should be avoided — perhaps to discourage ordinary citizens from seeking out their assistance.

In his final statement to the court on Tuesday, Zhai said he wanted to remind the public to be aware of the “true meaning behind the slogans about democracy and human rights,” reported the South China Morning Post, which was allowed to send a reporter into the courtroom. He also pledged he would not talk to any foreign media or media “hostile” to Beijing.

Zhai’s wife, Liu Ermin, told the paper she had received no official notificati­on of the verdict and never had access to the government-appointed lawyer, nor was she able to attend her husband’s hearing.

According to China Human Rights Defenders, Zhai had been detained several times since 2014 on suspicion of “picking quarrels and provoking trouble” by rallying for the release of detained human rights defenders. He was also held by police in 2014 for supporting the Hong Kong democracy protests. He participat­ed in the 1989 pro-democracy protests as a student, the group said.

A taped confession by Zhai was aired by Chinese state-run media in June 2015, in which he expressed remorse for working with people petitionin­g the government.

He apologized for causing “terrible, negative social influence” and “disturbing the social order.”

Zhai apparently is eligible to return home, given his suspended sentence, but will also have his “political rights” suspended for four years. Like other released activists, he will probably be subject to heavy surveillan­ce by police.

Liu told the Post that she wanted to appeal, calling the outcome “totally unacceptab­le.” If authoritie­s silence him, she told the paper, “how is that different from being dead?”

 ?? Gerry Shih Associated Press ?? FAN LILI, wife of Gou Hongguo, is supported by Li Wenzu, left, wife of another imprisoned activist, at a protest outside the Tianjin court. Guo is among 300 human rights activists and lawyers detained in a crackdown that began last summer. About 20 are...
Gerry Shih Associated Press FAN LILI, wife of Gou Hongguo, is supported by Li Wenzu, left, wife of another imprisoned activist, at a protest outside the Tianjin court. Guo is among 300 human rights activists and lawyers detained in a crackdown that began last summer. About 20 are...
 ?? CCTV ?? ZHAI YANMIN arrives at the Tianjin court. His “political rights” will be suspended for four years.
CCTV ZHAI YANMIN arrives at the Tianjin court. His “political rights” will be suspended for four years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States