A year after trial of Liu Xiaobo, journalists sentenced to jail in Xinjiang and Tibet
Organisation:
One year ago a Beijing court handed down a jail sentence of 11 years to Liu Xiaobo (刘哓波), the Chinese authorities thus sending a very tough Christmas Day message to the international community which had pleaded for him. At the end of a travesty of a trial from which his wife, his supporters, the foreign press and diplomats were banned, China’s most renowned prisoner of opinion was found guilty of “subversion of state power”. Since then, and despite the dissident being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, the authorities continue to view him as a “criminal”.
We call on the authorities in Beijing to reopen Liu Xiaobo’s legal file to allow a review of his trial for “subversion of state power”. We urge President Hu Jintao, ahead of his visit to the United States in January, to do everything possible to secure the release of Liu Xiaobo and his supporters, including his wife Liu Xia, who is currently under house arrest in Beijing.
Trial of Liu Xiaobo on 23 December 2009: http://en.rsf.org/chine-verdict-for-liu-xiaobo-25-12-2009,38561.html
Special file on Liu Xiaobo: http://en.rsf.org/liu-xiaobo.html
Meanwhile in Xinjiang and Tibet, judges continue to hand down very harsh prison sentences to journalists for what they write.
We have just learned that Memetjan Abdulla, a journalist working for the Uyghur service of Chinese national radio and manager of the Uyghur website Salkin, was sentenced to life imprisonment in April this year for translating and posting articles on the plight of Uyghurs in the country. Gulmire Imin, a young woman also working for the website, was handed down the same sentence for “revealing” state secrets “organising a demonstration” and for “separatism”.
Radio Free Asia said this very harsh sentence, pronounced after a secret trial in Urumqi, was also intended to punish him for answering questions from foreign journalists and translating or posting a series of articles on Salkin. The authorities also accused Memetjan Abdulla of having provoked ethnic unrest in Xinjiang in July 2009, after Uyghur workers died in a factory in Shaoguan. He also reportedly translated into Uyghur and posted on Salkin, an appeal by the (banned) World Uyghur Congress to demonstrate abroad against this incident.
For more information about Memetjan Abdulla, held since September 2009: www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/journalist-12212010162519.html
Other journalists and webmasters sentenced in Xinjiang: http://en.rsf.org/china-uyghur-journalist-and-website-24-07-2010,38016.html
Last May, Reporters Without Borders sent an open letter to Zhang Chunxian, the new secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in Xinjiang: http://en.rsf.org/china-open-letter-to-the-xinjiang-s-20-05-2010,37527.html
In Tibet, Sungrab Gyatso, a monk at the Mu-ra monastery was found guilty of having fomented demonstrations. This editor of the Tibetan magazine Rewa-kang-lam (Hope in March), was sentenced to three years in prison after a trial, on 16 December 2010, before a court in Kanlho. The Tibetan Center for Human Rights and Democracy (based in Dharamsala, India) said this defender of Tibetan culture has been in prison since March 2010. Reporters Without Borders calls for his release.
The organisation is very concerned about the plight of Tashi Rabten, editor of the Tibetan magazine Shar Dungri, who has been secretly imprisoned since 6 April this year. He is reportedly being held in harsh conditions in a prison in Barkham, Ngaba region, in Sichuan province. His colleague, Druklo, was released in May this year.
Fore more information: http://en.rsf.org/china-two-young-tibetan-writers-arrested-09-04-2010,36973.html
Published on
Updated on
20.01.2016