Wife of Jailed Activist Targeted and Harassed
Published May 15th, 2008
Human Rights in China is deeply concerned by the Chinese authorities’ continuing misuse of the law to persecute Yuan Weijing (č˘äźé), the wife of jailed blind activist and barefoot lawyer Chen Guangcheng (éĺ čŻ).
Most recently, a Chinese court on May 14 upheld a decision by Beijing authorities to prohibit Yuan from leaving the country in August 2007 to receive an award on her husbandâs behalf in the Philippines.
The court delivered this ruling in a lawsuit brought by Yuan to challenge the decision of the Beijing authorities. When the court heard Yuanâs lawsuit on May 5, 2008, it held the hearing behind closed doors, and Yuan was unable to attend because she was confined to her home by local authorities. The court closed the hearing, sources said, on grounds that the case involved âstate secrets,â including Yuanâs status as a criminal suspect, and the invalidation of her passport. Yuan plans to appeal the court ruling as well as the invalidation of her passport and her classification as a criminal suspect.
âPoliticizing the law, especially by invoking the vague and broad state secrets law as the basis for targeting activists and their families, is simply unacceptable,â said Human Rights in China Executive Director Sharon Hom. âParticularly during this pre-Olympics period, when the eyes of all the world are on China, the authorities must stop the ongoing harassment of Yuan Weijing and investigate those responsible.â
âThe authorities cannot deny Yuanâs right under international human rights law â including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights â to freely leave and return to her country simply by labeling her a âcriminal suspectâ without any foundation,â Hom said.
Wednesdayâs ruling by the Beijing Municipal Chaoyang District Peopleâs Court was issued in the lawsuit Yuan filed to challenge an administrative review decision by the Beijing General Station of Exit and Entry Frontier Inspection. The administrative decision had barred Yuan from going to the Philippines in August 2007 to receive the Ramon Magsaysay Award on Chenâs behalf.
Chen is serving a sentence of four years and three months for âintentional damage of propertyâ and âorganizing people to block traffic.â The authorities have been harassing Yuan, a young mother, since her husbandâs detention in 2006. She lives under the strict surveillance of more than 10 men, her son has been sent away to live with grandparents, and she has not been allowed to visit her husband for eight months. At the time of the 2007 decision barring her from traveling to the Philippines, she was reportedly beaten, her passport was revoked, and she was forced to return to her home in Shangdong Province. www.hrichina.org
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