Chinese Nobel laureate's wife slams 'illegal house arrest' Beijing (AFP) Oct 13, 2010 The wife of jailed Chinese Nobel Peace laureate Liu Xiaobo slammed the government on Wednesday for keeping her under "illegal house arrest" after Washington and Brussels called for her release. Liu Xia has been largely confined to her home since Friday when the Nobel Committee in Oslo awarded this year's prize to her dissident husband for advocating political reform and respect for human rights in one-party China. "I strongly protest against the government for my illegal house arrest," Liu Xia said on her Twitter account, calling her situation "very hard to take". The United States and the European Union have both urged Beijing to let her move freely again, on top of their calls for Liu Xiaobo to be released from prison after he was sentenced last December to 11 years on subversion charges. China, meanwhile, has reacted with fury to the award, directing the brunt of its anger at Oslo by cancelling ministerial meetings and a Norwegian musical scheduled to be staged in the country next month. Oslo criticised the decision to cancel the official delegations and said Norway wanted to continue its positive relationship with China. "If this decision is the consequence of the awarding of the Nobel peace prize, we consider this an inappropriate reaction," Norwegian foreign ministry spokeswoman Ragnhild Imerslund told AFP. Liu Xia said earlier that two Norwegian diplomats had attempted to visit her on Tuesday but were turned back at the entrance to her apartment block, in comments that were confirmed by the Norwegian embassy. The diplomats were "outside the gates of her compound, (having come) to check on her condition", embassy spokeswoman Tone Helene Aarvik told AFP, refusing to provide more details. Liu Xia has said she hopes to travel to Norway to accept the award for her husband, who co-authored "Charter 08", a bold call for political reform. She told the Apple Daily that Liu would not plead guilty or strike a deal with Chinese authorities in order to leave the country to collect his award. Liu Xia has been communicating via Twitter -- blocked in China and only available by proxy -- after her mobile phone was cut off earlier in the week. A replacement phone has now also been cut off, she said in a tweet late Tuesday. "I had the phone for only a day and already it has been cut off by the hoodlums," she said. In her latest tweet, she added her confinement was taking a toll on her family. "My elderly 77-year-old mother came over to see me today because I did not phone my family yesterday. (They're) concerned." One of her husband's lawyers said Wednesday they also had no way of reaching her. "We can't contact her at the moment. We are just waiting and hopefully we can find a way to get in touch soon," attorney Shang Baojun told AFP. Beijing police declined to comment on the situation when contacted by AFP. Liu Xia has been under house arrest since the award was announced, except for a weekend trip under police escort to the prison in northeastern China where her husband is jailed. The controls are apparently aimed at preventing her from talking to reporters as part of a huge campaign by the government to stifle news of the prize in China's media and on the Internet. Other dissidents and attorneys have also been under close surveillance since the award was announced. Li Fangping, a prominent rights lawyer, told AFP he was being followed, adding police had accompanied him right to his train carriage in Beijing as he boarded to go to China's east to work on an AIDS discrimination case. According to activist group Chinese Human Rights Defenders, Zhang Zuhua, who drafted Charter 08 with Liu, has also been followed by police. Rights lawyer Pu Zhiqiang, meanwhile, has reportedly been held under soft detention at home. Calls to Zhang went unanswered and a recorded message said Pu's number did not exist. Rights watchdog Reporters Without Borders, meanwhile, said 1984BBS, a chat forum used by many journalists, had been closed under pressure from the police. On Tuesday, Shang said Liu Xia wanted to ask a higher court for a retrial of her husband. A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman refused to comment on her case when asked about it at a regular news briefing on Tuesday.
Share This Article With Planet Earth
Related Links China News from SinoDaily.com
China says Nobel won't change nation's political system Beijing (AFP) Oct 12, 2010 China said Tuesday that the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Liu Xiaobo would not influence the country's political system, as the United States urged Beijing to lift restrictions on the activist's wife. The comments came as Liu's lawyers said they were considering asking for a retrial of the jailed dissident, the co-author of a manifesto calling for bold democratic reforms in the communist stat ... read more |
|
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement |