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Liu dedicates Nobel to 'lost souls' of Tiananmen: NGO

Wife of Chinese Nobel winner detained in Beijing: US group
Washington (AFP) Oct 10, 2010 - The wife of the Chinese activist Liu Xiaobo, who won the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize, is being detained in her Beijing home, the spokeswoman for a US based rights group said Sunday, citing a reliable source in Beijing. "She is currently under de facto house arrest back in her apartment in Beijing," said Beth Schwanke, legislative counsel for the US-based group Freedom Now, speaking of the dissident's wife, Liu Xia. Schwanke said that she learned of the arrest of Liu Xia, whom she said is being held incommunicado, from a reliable source in China. "We have a source who is able to confirm that this is absolutely accurate," she said.

A second group, Human Rights in China, announced Sunday that it also had received word of Liu Xia's arrest and said in a statement that it "strongly urges the international community to press the Chinese authorities to immediately release Liu Xia from house arrest, free Liu Xiaobo, and free all prisoners of conscience incarcerated as a result of exercising their right of freedom of expression." Schwanke told AFP that after it was announced Friday that her husband had been awarded the Nobel prize, Liu's phone was taken away by Chinese authorities and she was detained. The detention took place after Liu Xia had been taken to see her husband in prison and permitted to tell him that he had won the Nobel.

"She was taken there on Saturday and she was allowed to see him on Sunday," the spokeswoman said. "After she returned to Beijing they told her that she would not be allowed to leave her apartment," Schwanke said. "I understand that he cried and said that this is for the martyrs of Tiananmen Square," said Schwanke. "After that, she was taken back to Beijing and she was put under de facto house arrest," she said. "She's not allowed to leave her apartment and her phone has actually been destroyed. Liu, the first Chinese citizen to win the Nobel Peace Prize, is a 54-year-old writer imprisoned since December after authoring Charter 08, a manifesto signed by thousands seeking greater rights in the communist nation.
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Oct 10, 2010
Liu Xiaobo, the first Chinese citizen to win the Nobel Peace Prize, has dedicated his award to the "lost souls" who died in Tiananmen Square, an international rights group said on Sunday.

The US-based group Human Rights in China (HRIC) quoted Liu Xiaobo's wife Liu Xia, which said she spoke to him shortly after learning that he had been awarded the prestigious honor.

"This award is for the lost souls of June Fourth," the group quotes Liu Xiaobo as telling Liu Xia, referring to the 1989 crackdown by the Chinese goverment on student activists.

"He said that it was due to their non-violent spirit in giving their lives for peace, freedom, and democracy," Liu Xia was quoted as saying, adding that her husband had been moved to tears as he finished speaking.

earlier related report
Chinese activists savour dissident's Nobel win
Beijing (AFP) Oct 9, 2010 - China's rights community on Saturday savoured the Nobel Peace Prize given to jailed dissident Liu Xiaobo but warned the award could spell trouble after police rounded up activists celebrating the win.

Authorities detained dozens of Liu's supporters in Beijing, Shanghai and other cities on Friday night as they gathered to toast his prestigious award, rights activists and a journalist from a Hong Kong newspaper told AFP.

"Last night some people were taken in by police. They don't want people gathering and celebrating over this," well-known human rights lawyer Teng Biao told AFP. "This is a big headache for the government. They don't want people to know this matter."

Seven Chinese intellectuals have signed an open letter congratulating Liu on his award, calling him a standard-bearer for non-violence in China, one of them told AFP.

The awarding of the prize to Liu -- the co-author of a bold manifesto calling for political reform in communist-ruled China -- offers "hope and support for a peaceful transformation in China," the letter says.

A Hong Kong-based rights group said the laureate's wife, Liu Xia, had arrived in the northeastern province of Liaoning, where her husband is imprisoned.

The couple were expected to meet Sunday morning but it was unclear where, the Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy said in a statement citing Liu Xia's brother.

AFP made several attempts to contact Liu Xia on her mobile phone to confirm her whereabouts but the calls were not answered.

One of her husband's lawyers, Shang Baojun, who defended the Nobel laureate in his subversion trial, said he hadn't been able to reach her. "I have no way of knowing where she is," Shang told AFP.

Beijing kept up its denunciation of the decision to award the prize to Liu, issuing a harsh commentary in state media accusing the Nobel committee of arrogance and prejudice.

An editorial in the English and Chinese versions of the Global Times newspaper said the committee had "disgraced itself" and suggested the peace prize had been "degraded to a political tool that serves an anti-China purpose".

"The Nobel committee once again displayed its arrogance and prejudice against a country that has made the most remarkable economic and social progress in the past three decades," the newspaper said, alluding to the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, who won the prize in 1989.

"Neither of the two are among those who made contributions to China's peace and growth in recent decades."

News of the granting of the award to Liu -- whom Beijing has repeatedly branded a criminal following his December 2009 jailing for 11 years for subversion -- was carried by Chinese-language state media, but only in the form of the government's angry reaction.

Internet searches using the key words "Nobel Peace Prize" and "Liu Xiaobo" brought up no results on Chinese web portals Sina and Sohu, while similar searches on Weibo, a Twitter-like service, also drew a blank.

Some web users got around the army of censors by not mentioning Liu's name in their postings on Weibo.

"A Chinese netizen won the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize," one web user said.

Another web user described the award as the "October 8 dynamite prize" -- a reference to Alfred Nobel's invention -- and posted a photo of Liu and details about his detention.

Friday's evening news on China Central Television made no mention of Liu while broadcasts on Liu by international television networks CNN and French TV5 were blocked by government censors.

Leading human rights lawyer Mo Shaoping, who heads the firm that defended Liu, told AFP China should be proud of one of its citizens winning the Nobel Peace Prize.

"Very few Chinese have been awarded Nobel Prizes, not only the peace prize but even the other prizes like in the sciences," Mo said.

"Liu Xiaobo was educated in China and although he is in prison, he lives on the Chinese mainland. This makes him unique and special. This is why Chinese should take pride in this and be proud of him."

Mo said the award would be a "huge encouragement and support for those who share the basic views" of the jailed dissident.

But the Global Times editorial sounded a defiant note, saying China would resist attempts to "impose Western values" on the country.



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SINO DAILY
Some Chinese dissidents cry foul on Nobel
Washington (AFP) Oct 9, 2010
Liu Xiaobo has instantly achieved global icon status by winning the Nobel Peace Prize but some dyed-in-the-wool Chinese dissidents are crying foul, seeing the award as a victory for a more moderate, accommodating brand of activism. Liu, the first Chinese citizen to win the Nobel Peace Prize, is a 54-year-old writer imprisoned since December after authoring Charter 08, a manifesto signed by t ... read more







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