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Hu Jia — down, but not out

p2pnet news | Freedom:- Even under house arrest, imprisoned blogger Hu Jia keeps up his, “fearless campaign against Beijing’s abuse of human rights,” says the Independent.

He was jailed yesterday but nonetheless, he’s “likely to become the poster-boy for critics of the Olympics,” says the story.

Hu was incarcerated for three-and-a-half years after being tried for subversion after criticising ruling Communist Party.

His case became an international cause célèbre for many human rights groups which, “contend that the Communist Party is rounding up dissidents to silence criticism of the government before the Olympics in Beijing in August,” said the New York Times.

It’s, “deeply disturbing”, the BBC has US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice saying her UK counterpart, David Miliband, declaring it a, “most concerning development,” says the BBC going on Amnesty International called it “a warning” to Chinese activists who raised human rights concerns publicly.

“Earlier this week, the rights group accused China of a ‘wave of repression’ against activists and dissidents ahead of the Beijing Olympic Games,” says the story.

As far as Hu Jia, a Budhist, was concerned, “the door to his apartment was always open to fellow Chinese who shared his desire for greater freedom, foreign friends, or activists with issues to discuss,” says the Independent.

But, it goes on, “it was always a question of when, not if, the Communist Party would lock up Mr Hu, China’s most famous dissident, who has been under house arrest for many months, guarded by state security officers.”

Hu and his wife and their six-week-old daughter, Hu Qianci, “were at home around Christmas time with Ms Zeng’s grandmother when 20 policemen burst in, cut their telephone lines and internet connection and arrested Mr Hu,” says the Independent.

Ms Zeng, “told of how she was only allowed out a couple of times to take baby Qianci to the clinic for check-ups, but she wasn’t allowed out to walk the child,”ays the story.

“Mr Hu’s sister and parents were keeping them supplied. She was furious and frustrated at her plight. Both of them are proud that the Olympics are being hosted by Beijing, but they think the Games have been hijacked.”

Hu kep a video diary, “and one particularly affecting scene is of a police officer walking behind Ms Zeng, cruelly mimicking her walk and making ape-like gestures,” says the story.

Two years ago, Hu was interviewed by Radio Free Asia >>>

I was kidnapped by police at around 9 a.m. on Feb. 16. I was told yesterday that they would be able to release me, and in the morning they dropped me off about an hour’s walk from my house. They didn’t bring me home, but made me walk the rest of the way.

On the morning of Feb. 16 I was heading out to a meeting of non-governmental AIDS organizations, and the State Security Bureau of the Tongzhou county police department had already checked with their superiors and said I could go. At the time I was under house arrest.

But they said I had to go in to the meeting in a police car. I wasn’t in the slightest bit suspicious, and I got into the police vehicle. But then I realized that the four officers in the police vehicle weren’t the same as the ones from before.

They were heavies; I’d never seen them before. They drove me out to a remote area where there weren’t any people and one of the guys in front turned around and said to the others , “Get him sorted out for me.” And they immediately grabbed me and got me into that position they use for restraining criminals, called the jetliner position…

Black hood over the head

They put a black hood over my head, removing my glasses first, so I couldn’t see anything. Sometimes they forced my head right down to the floor as the car was driving along…

I asked them several times during my detention if they would go back home and get my medication for me but they refused.

They were making sure that I had no idea where they were taking me. I started to vomit at one point because I was extremely car-sick. I’m not normally car-sick, but because one minute the car was accelerating, the next minute they were slamming on the brakes, and me with my head pressed down against the floor.

I went for a total health check today. The doctor ran a series of tests and said things were not looking good. He says I have early cirrhosis of the liver. He said the next stage is late cirrhosis and then cancer. They asked me if I drank a lot of alcohol, but I told them that I am a Buddhist and that I never drink. I told them about some of my run-ins with police and they said this could be a reason for it, that my liver had been damaged in this way.

When I left home I had no medication with me, and no daily necessities, and no change of clothes…I was on hunger strike for 30 days during my detention. I asked them several times during my detention if they would go back home and get my medication for me but they refused.

When my mother and wife were going to the police station to look for me, they ran into police officers who had been watching me. But they absolutely refused to admit they were holding me.

The place was called the the No. 5 Production Brigade of Taihu township, Tongzhou county, Beijing. It used to be countryside but now it’s been turned into one of those holiday villages. I was locked up in the inner room of one of their suites. It was very cold. At any given time there’d be seven or eight police officers watching me. They did it in shifts.

Cut off from outside world

I had no idea of all the reports that were circulating about me. I had no way of knowing. They had all been told not to bring any news from the outside world in with them. They were also very careful about their mobile phones. They were very careful to keep them far away from me for fear I would manage any sort of communication at all with the outside world.

After they had kidnapped me and taken me to that place, I asked them why they were doing it, but they wouldn’t tell me…That evening, three people came to visit from the Beijing municipal headquarters of the State Security Bureau. They were very young. They started asking me about the hunger strike, because when Gao Zhisheng had put out his statement about the hunger strike, he had included my name.

I answered all their questions either by saying I couldn’t answer or by suggesting they go and look it up on the Internet. They got nothing new out of me, and then they left. After that, I think they realized that they weren’t going to change my attitude or achieve any sort of cooperation or communication with me.

Yesterday lunchtime another four people came from the Beijing municipal headquarters and took all the notes I had made about who had come to see me, my diary, everything on my person. They did a very intimate search.

Then they put the black hood over my eyes again and took me out to the suburbs of Beijing and left me to walk home, after warning me that more misfortune would come upon me if I continued to take part in those activities – any activities relating to human rights – I would be detained again and my family would be left to worry about me. They’ve never done that before. Usually they take me right to my neighborhood and the police see me right to the door of my apartment.

I think they did that because they didn’t want any proof at all of this whole affair. They were afraid that if they took me home, someone would see them. They’ve already got to the point where they’re invisible…They were from the Internal State Security Brigade of the Beijing Public Security Bureau. This department is run like a criminal gang. Everything they do goes against human rights, and they know it, and they don’t care.

Police department for dissidents

Other types of police…have to actually do some work on behalf of ordinary people. Some of them even work pretty hard at it. But the state security police are in charge of dissidents. Office number 610 [set up to track down members of the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement] is part of this department.

Basically if the Party wants to get you, then this department will use illegal means to deal with you…the officers who were on surveillance detail were from the Tongzhou branch of this department.

I’ve never had this before in all the times that I’ve been detained. I had no idea the amount of concern that was shown by my family, my wife, my mother, my friends, and also media while I was being held. But I cannot let this go. According to Chinese law, even if someone has committed a crime, even if they’ve committed murder, they still have to inform their family within 12 hours of their detention. But I was held for 41 days.

Those police knew very well where I was; they’d been with me, but they still kept their mouths shut when my wife went enquiring after me at the police station. They also told her a pack of lies. It is unbelievable that such things were done by law enforcement officers.

I plan to seek out each one of those police officers and ask them to account to me for what they did. First, I will write an account of what happened and send it to the Beijing National People’s Congress deputy, and go through that channel to the Beijing municipal police department…

I am going to sue the Beijing Public Security Bureau, because they have become more and more reckless in violating human rights, which not only has brought misfortune to my family, but also to many other families. In order to put restraint on them, to awaken them, and to make them repent, I must use the law as my weapon.

To tell the truth, however, it’s enormously difficult to gather proof. My records of my detention have all been taken away.

There’s been no suggestion that Yahoo, Google, Microsoft or any of China’s other major US trading partners collectively or individually plan to use their connections or influence to try to convince China it’s time to join the 21st digital century in which the truth can no longer be hidden.

Stay tuned.

SlashdotSlashdot it! Add to Technorati Favorites

Independent – Hu Jia: China’s enemy within, April 4, 2008
international cause célèbre – Hu Jia jailed for three-and-a-half years
BBC – Concern for jailed China activist, April 4, 2008
Radio Free Asia – Interview With AIDS Activist Hu Jia, April 2, 2008


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3 Responses to “Hu Jia — down, but not out”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    Another reason Tibet beeing the other one to boycott not only the olynmpic but to boycott China.

  2. Stray Mongrel Says:

    Scary stuff. I’ve read books that detail accounts much more horrific in China, when the communists took over, and brutally and savagely exterminated people and even babies. This story seems tame in comparison.

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    Neverless unnaccaptable.

    Boycott China!

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