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by Staff Writers Hong Kong (AFP) April 6, 2012 A Chinese dissident who wrote a book critical of the country's leadership has said he fled into exile after being warned against publishing a biography of a jailed Nobel laureate. Yu Jie, a writer who in 2010 published "Wen Jiabao: China's Best Actor" despite threats of jail time, fled to Washington with his family in January after he was "subjected to torture" and faced restrictions on publishing. In an interview aired Friday on Hong Kong broadcaster RTHK, Yu said that his decision to flee Beijing was also prompted by his urge to pursue a book project on fellow dissident Liu Xiaobo, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010. "The secret police told me I will be jailed if the book is published," he said. "(I fled)... to make sure the biography can be published overseas," the 38-year-old told RTHK without saying when the book will be released. He described the decision to flee as "painful" and said he believed he would not be able to return to Beijing within the next five years. The writer said he had been warned against criticising the Communist Party or speaking out against China abroad. Yu has previously said he came under tighter surveillance after Liu won the Nobel Prize. He has also complained that he was forbidden from publishing or practicing his religion. He is a member of a Protestant church which is not authorised by the Chinese government. Liu, 56, is the only Nobel Peace Prize winner in prison. He wrote a bold manifesto for democracy called Charter 08 and was jailed for 11 years for subversion on Christmas Day 2009. Human rights groups frequently voice concern about Chinese dissidents who remain in the country including prominent rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng. Gao, who has defended some of China's most vulnerable people including Christians and coal miners, was detained in February 2009 and had been held largely incommunicado by authorities except for a brief release in March 2010. Gao's brother said last week that was allowed to meet with him in a remote jail for the first time in nearly two years, allaying fears for his well-being.
China rights couple hear trial verdict on Tuesday Ni and Dong Jiqin, who have long helped victims of government-backed land grabs, were detained in April last year as authorities rounded up scores of activists amid online calls for protests similar to those in the Arab world. In a brief December trial they were charged with "picking quarrels, provoking trouble and willfully destroying private and public property" -- charges lawyers and supporters say were trumped up to silence them. "Our lawyer told me the verdict will be read by the Beijing Western District court on Tuesday morning," daughter Dong Xuan, 27, told AFP. "They are not guilty and should be released, but I fear that my mother will be sentenced to at least three years as a repeat offender. I am hoping that my father will be released for time served." The couple's lawyer last visited them in February, she said. Ni, 51, remains ill and is suffering from fever, a swollen neck and has trouble speaking. Ni spent much of the trial lying on a bed in the courtroom due to her poor health and needed a respirator to breathe. The couple have provided legal assistance to numerous families around China who have been forcibly evicted from their homes in government-backed land requisitions, a major cause of unrest in China. Their battle to oppose the land grabs began in 2001 after their courtyard home in central Beijing was requisitioned and marked for demolition. Trained as a lawyer, Ni was sentenced to a year in jail in 2002 for "obstructing official business," and for two years in 2008 for "harming public property" -- charges brought against her as she tried to protect her home. She was also disbarred in 2002. In January, Dong Xuan was barred by police from leaving China to collect a 100,000-euro (131,000) human rights award for her mother in the Netherlands. She says she remains under police surveillance. Ni's case has been championed by numerous Western governments, including the United States and the European Union, which sent representatives to meet with her during her brief period of freedom in 2010.
China News from SinoDaily.com
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