World

China serves prominent activists lengthy jail terms

Activists Xu Zhiyong and Ding Jiaxi were sentenced to 14 and 12 years in prison, respectively

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A Chinese court on Monday sentenced two prominent rights activists to lengthy jail terms of over ten years each, after years in pre-trial detention for the crime of "subversion of state power."

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Activist Xu Zhiyong, 50, was sentenced to 14 years in prison and 55-year-old Ding Jiaxi to 12 years, after a trial which New York-based Human Rights Watch said was "conducted behind closed doors and riddled with procedural problems and allegations of mistreatment."

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The two activists had played key roles in the New Citizens' Movement, which advocated greater transparency into officials' wealth, civil rights and education equality.

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Both had been previously imprisoned for their activism.

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Why were the activists arrested?

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Ding was taken into police custody in December 2019, shortly after attending a secret gathering of activists in southern China's Fujian province. Xu was also reportedly at the gathering.

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Ding's wife Luo Shengchun, who is US-based, said she was worried he might have faced torture while detained. His lawyer Peng Jian told the court he was routinely tortured to extract a confession, the Reuters news agency reported.

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Luo has pursued the case with US State Department officials.

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"I will not let them put Ding Jiaxi and Xu Zhiyong in jail so easily," she was quoted by Reuters as saying.

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Luo added that the activists' lawyers were "forbidden" from publishing court verdict documents and that they "do not dare to reveal" the charges under which the duo was sentenced.

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Xu was detained shortly after Ding in February 2020. He had just published a series of blog posts criticizing Chinese President Xi Jinping for what he said was a heavy- handed approach to crises including the Covid-19 pandemic and the Hong Kong protests.

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Authorities have prevented the lawyers from contact with foreign media, Luo said.

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China's activists' state of affairs

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Yaqiu Wang, senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch, called on international governments to push for the activists' release.

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"The cruelly farcical convictions and sentences meted out to Xu Zhiyong and Ding Jiaxi show President Xi Jinping's unstinting hostility towards peaceful activism," said Wang.

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Since Xi's ascent to power over a decade ago, China has been criticized for a dramatic clampdown on dissent. A July 2015 crackdown, known as "709" cases, saw hundreds of lawyers detained.

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Beijing has rejected any criticism of its human rights record, maintaining that those jails are criminals punished for breaking the law.

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