San Francisco Chronicle

Reporter jailed in Yahoo e-mail case is released

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BEIJING — A Chinese reporter who was sentenced to prison in 2005 after Yahoo disclosed details of his e-mail has been released, a writer’s group announced Sunday.

Shi Tao was released Aug. 23, 15 months before the end of his sentence, the Independen­t Chinese Pen Center said in a statement. There was no indication why Shi was released early.

Shi was arrested in 2004 and sentenced to prison the following year on charges of disclosing state secrets. He had sent details of a government memo about restrictio­ns on news coverage to a human rights forum in the United States.

Human rights activists and U.S. legislator­s criticized Yahoo for disclosing details of Shi’s e-mail to the Chinese government, which led to his conviction.

Yahoo, based in Sunnyvale, said it was obligated to comply with Chinese government demands for informatio­n. But at a U.S. congressio­nal hearing in November, 2007, the company’s chief executive, Jerry Yang, apologized to Shi’s family.

Shortly later, Yahoo settled lawsuits brought by the families of Shi and Wang Xiaoning, a dissident who was sentenced to prison on subversion charges after the company’s Hong Kong affiliate disclosed contents of his e-mail account to Chinese authoritie­s.

Also in 2007, the World Associatio­n of Newspapers gave Shi its Golden Pen of Freedom award.

Yahoo turned over control of its e-mail and other services in China to a local partner, Alibaba Group, in 2005. The U.S. company bought a 40 percent stake in Alibaba.

Yahoo closed its e-mail service in China last month and recommende­d users switch to a service run by Alibaba.

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