The Sentinel-Record

Escape of blind activist to overshadow US- China talks

- BRADLEY KLAPPER AND MATTHEW LEE

WASHINGTON — Less than a week before annual U. S.- Chinese diplomatic and economic talks, relations between the powers risked sharply deteriorat­ing Saturday with an escaped Chinese activist reportedly under American protection and a U. S. fighter jet sale to Taiwan now being considered.

Fellow activists say Chen Guangcheng, a blind lawyer who exposed forced abortions and sterilizat­ions as part of China’s one- child policy, fled house arrest a week ago and has sought protection at the U. S. Embassy in Beijing.

Neither the U. S. nor Chinese government has confirmed the reports, but the saga looks set to overshadow this coming week’s Strategic and Economic Dialogue in the Chinese capital. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Treasury Secretary

Timothy Geithner are leading the U. S. side at the talks beginning Thursday.

A potential further complicati­on is a letter from the White House director of legislativ­e affairs, Rob Nabors, to Sen. John Cornyn, R- Texas, explaining that the Obama administra­tion would consider selling new U. S. warplanes to Taiwan. A sale would infuriate China, which considers the island nation an integral part of its state even after their split more than six decades ago.

Chen’s status and the fighter jets represent the latest strains in Washington and Beijing’s upand- down relationsh­ip in recent years. President Barack Obama has sought to “pivot” American military might and diplomatic energy toward Asia to improve America’s standing in the region and check the expansion of Chinese power, and achieved mixed results.

The two issues underscore the fundamenta­l disconnect between the world’s No. 1 and No. 2 economies, the top importer and exporter, and the biggest military and the fastest developing, on issues from human rights and Taiwan to currency policy and combating nuclear- armed North Korea and potentiall­y nuclear- armed Iran.

A Texas- based activist group that has been active in promoting Chen’s case said China and the U. S. were discussing the fate of the 40- year- old.

“Chen is under U. S. protection and high- level talks are currently under way between U. S. and Chinese officials regarding Chen’s status,” said a statement from the Chinaaid Associatio­n. It cited a source close to the situation.

The U. S. Embassy in Beijing declined comment. Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai said he had no informatio­n on Chen’s case.

The case is so sensitive that officials in Washington have been ordered not to say anything about it at all. That was underscore­d on Friday and Saturday by the absolute refusal of the White House to speak out on the matter and the State Department pretending that nothing unusual was afoot.

After making several public appeals this year for Chen’s release, State Department spokeswoma­n Victoria Nuland would say only that “we have spoken out about his case in the past.”

“We have always had concerns about this case,” she said Friday, adding: “I don’t have anything current on this issue today.”

The top U. S. diplomat for Asia, Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell, originally was due in Beijing in the coming week, but he arrived early Sunday in the capital and did not speak to reporters. Earlier, department officials in Washington had ignored or declined to respond to questions about indication­s that Campbell had been dispatched earlier than planned ahead of the talks to smooth things over with the Chinese.

Chinaaid’s founder, Bob Fu, said Chen’s case was a benchmark for the United States and its human rights image around the world.

In February, a former regional chief of police, Wang Lijun, visited a U. S. consulate to raise concerns about the murder of a British businessma­n and possible links to powerful Chinese politician Bo Xilai. Wang expressed interest in seeking asylum with the U. S., but was turned away, raising eyebrows among Republican lawmakers in the United States.

Chen’s case has become an embarrassm­ent for Beijing. Fu and Chinese- based activists say he slipped away from his intensely guarded home on the night of April 22. His wife and 6- year- old daughter are still there.

Chen recorded a video as a direct address to Premier Wen Jiabao, condemning the treatment of him and his family and accusing local Communist Party officials by name. Activists sent the video Friday to the overseas Chinese news site Boxun. com, which posted part of it on Youtube.

If Chen is in the U. S. Embassy or with U. S. officials at another location, it is not known how he would be able to leave or where he could go without Chinese permission. There was no extra security outside the U. S. Embassy in Beijing on Saturday.

In 1989, Fang Lizhi, whose speeches inspired student protesters throughout the 1980s, fled with his wife to the U. S. Embassy after China’s military crackdown on the pro- democracy movement. He was forced to stay there for 13 months before China eventually let the couple leave the country. Once China’s leading astrophysi­cist, he died April 7 at age 76 in Tucson, Ariz., where in exile he was a physics professor at the University of Arizona.

Chen is widely admired by rights activists in China who last year publicized his case among ordinary Chinese and encouraged them to go to Dongshigu village and break the security cordon. Even Hollywood actor Christian Bale tried to visit, but was roughed up by locals paid to keep outsiders away

A self- taught lawyer blinded by fever in infancy, Chen served four years in prison for exposing forced abortions and sterilizat­ions in his and surroundin­g villages. Since his release in September 2010, local officials confined him to his home. Amnesty Internatio­nal and other human rights groups say he was abused over the last 18 months.

But Washington will have to weigh its response at a time it is seeking China’s help on many issues around the world, from trying to restrain North Korean and Iranian nuclear ambitions to forcing Syria’s government into observing a cease- fire. There are also debates about currency and trade policy considered highly relevant to U. S. and global economic recovery.

Alongside Russia, China has brushed aside American pressure to raise the pressure on Syria despite repeated U. S. warnings that those in opposition will end up on the wrong side of history. China has shielded North Korea from tougher internatio­nal action despite the reclusive communist government’s continued nuclear activity and a series of provocatio­ns that nearly plunged the Korean peninsula into war two years ago

The overtures have left Obama vulnerable to charges that he is being naive or too accommodat­ing to China. Republican critics, including likely presidenti­al nominee Mitt Romney, say the administra­tion hasn’t pressured China enough on issues vital to U. S. economic and strategic interests.

Since Obama took office, China’s booming economy has driven global growth while the U. S. has struggled to emerge from its worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

Greater Chinese assertiven­ess has resulted in clashes with the U. S. over naval vessels in the Yellow Sea and American exporters trading with Taiwan; with Japan over fishing rights; and with Southeast Asian nations over claims to the resource- rich South China Sea.

But Washington has pushed back. To ease concerns posed by the threat of China- backed North Korea, the U. S. has strengthen­ed military alliances with South Korea and Japan. By speaking out against China’s maritime claims, it has improved ties with Southeast Asian nations fearful of an expansive and potentiall­y belligeren­t Beijing.

U. S. relations with Vietnam and the Philippine­s in particular have benefited. Even reclusive Myanmar, long an internatio­nal pariah protected by China’s diplomatic sway, has initiated democratic and human rights reforms to improve its standing with the U. S. and the West. The U. S. also has led talks on a new regional trade pact that would exclude China.

With the Iraq war over and combat operations in Afghanista­n ending over the next couple of years, Obama has recalibrat­ed U. S. focus on Asia and its booming markets such as China, India and Indonesia. More than half of the world’s population lives in Asia, which is seen as the future center of the world economy.

Previous rounds of the U. S.China dialogue have been hailed as productive and have included new educationa­l and scientific exchanges. But they haven’t resolved points of contention over Taiwan, Tibet and human rights.

U. S. arms sales to Taiwan particular­ly rankle China, and the irritation could grow worse with the emergence of the White House letter.

China has 2,300 operationa­l combat aircraft, against only 490 for Taiwan. In September, the U. S. turned down a Taiwanese request for 66 relatively advanced F- 16 jet fighters, while agreeing to help Taiwan upgrade its existing F- 16 fleet. Critics accused the White House of yielding to pressure from China.

China and Taiwan split amid civil war in 1949. Despite improving relations over the past four years, China still threatens to attack across the 100- milewide Taiwan Strait if the democratic island seeks to declare independen­ce.

 ??  ?? ACTIVIST: In this image made from video, blind legal activist Chen Guangcheng is seen on a video posted to Youtube on Friday by overseas Chinese news site Boxun. com. “I am now free. But my worries have not ended yet,” Chen said in the video that was...
ACTIVIST: In this image made from video, blind legal activist Chen Guangcheng is seen on a video posted to Youtube on Friday by overseas Chinese news site Boxun. com. “I am now free. But my worries have not ended yet,” Chen said in the video that was...

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