Hujia&jinyan’s spirit

Entries from January 2008

Petition Demanding Release of Hu Jia

January 31, 2008 · 1 Comment

A link to an online petition requesting the release of Hu Jia can be found on our petitions page.

Categories: Part 6: Who support them? · Part 8: Give your hand for one dream, one world!

News from 30th January 2008

January 30, 2008 · No Comments

A series of articles were published on the net the 30th of January, below are the links for them to be read.1) Well-wishers detained outside Hu Jia’s Beijing home - from “chinaelections.net

Chinese well-wishers and bloggers were detained and questioned by police standing guard outside the home of detained AIDS activist Hu Jia, reporting their experience later online.
Dozens of petitioners went to Hu Jia’s home in an eastern suburb of Beijing on Sunday, in a bid to bring baby formula to Hu’s wife Zeng Jinyan. Zeng has been held with her baby daughter under house arrest since Hu’s arrest Dec. 27 for “subverting state power.” Their internet and phone connections have been cut off.
Some of the well-wishers were taken to the Dispersion Center for petitioners from out of town, suggesting they travelled from elsewhere in China to help Zeng. [continues…]

2) Dissident’s Arrest Hints at Olympic Crackdown - from “The New York Times : Asia Pacific section

BEIJING - When state security agents burst into his apartment last month, Hu Jia was chatting on Skype, the Internet-based telephone system. Mr. Hu’s computer was his most potent tool. He disseminated information about human rights cases, peasant protests and other politically touchy topics even though he often lived under de facto house arrest. [continues…]

3) Surveillance follows Chinese activists - from CNN

# Chinese police quietly seize activist Hu Jia from home in December# Hu faces charges of “inciting subversion of state power”# EU has demanded Hu’s release; U.S. has raised concerns to Beijing# Questions remain over China’s willingness to address human rights questions [read here]

4) Chinese dissident watched, then taken - from Yahoo! news

BEIJING - Nearly two dozen plainclothes police swarmed the apartment on a December afternoon, confiscating laptops, cell phones, bank cards and books. The wife, who was bathing her 6-week-old daughter, heard nothing. The husband, China’s brashest dissident, was quietly whisked away.
In a matter of minutes, Hu Jia had vanished into the country’s state security system.
The Dec. 27 raid sent a clear message that the Chinese leadership is determined to silence critics ahead of this summer’s Beijing Olympics. [continues…]

Categories: Part 2: What's happened to him and her? · Part 5: What about Hu Jia and Zeng Jinyan now? · Press

Olympic Games committee letter

January 29, 2008 · No Comments

In our Petitions section there a letter and email address of various sections of the Olympic Games Committee in china. Please feel free to copy and email to the address listed!

Direct Link

Categories: Part 6: Who support them? · Part 8: Give your hand for one dream, one world! · Press

European Parliament’s resolution on the arrest of Hu Jia

January 29, 2008 · No Comments

MEPs urge the Chinese government to release Hu Jia and implement other human rights reforms

European Parliament News Release — January 17, 2008

In a resolution adopted on Thursday afternoon, MEPs called on the Chinese authorities to release human rights campaigner Hu Jia and to respect human rights in the run-up to this year’s Olympic Games.

Hu Jia was taken from his home in Beijing by police on 27 December 2007 on charges of inciting subversion. He and his wife Zeng Jinyan, who were among the candidates for last year’s European Parliament Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, have thrown the spotlight on human rights abuses in China over the past few years and spent many periods under house arrest as a result of their campaigning… [continues here...]

Categories: Part 6: Who support them? · Press

Update 26 Jan 08

January 28, 2008 · No Comments

Once again the lawyer applied for permission to visit Hu Jia and tried to get the permission for medical treatment outside the prison on bail, but was again refused.

Categories: Part 5: What about Hu Jia and Zeng Jinyan now?

How not to fight HIV/Aids

January 28, 2008 · No Comments

The charity founded by Bill Gates is pouring millions into combating HIV in China. But it’s repeating old mistakes.

By Joe Amon - Guardian Unlimited

Read Article

Categories: Press · other materials

Visitors barred from Freedom City ‘crime’ scene

January 27, 2008 · No Comments

Agence France-Presse

BEIJING - Human rights activists Hu Jia and his wife Zeng Jinyan recently offered tea to guests with whom they discussed their hopes that the Beijing Olympics would help democratize China.

Now access is barred to their apartment in Bobo Freedom City on the eastern fringes of Beijing and Hu is in jail while Zeng is under house arrest [continues...]

Visitors barred from Freedom City ‘crime’ scene

Categories: Part 4: Why do the police treat them like that? · Part 5: What about Hu Jia and Zeng Jinyan now? · Press

Well-wishers Detained Outside Hu Jia’s Beijing Home (2008.01.23)

January 24, 2008 · No Comments

HONG KONG–Chinese well-wishers and bloggers were detained and questioned by police standing guard outside the home of detained AIDS activist Hu Jia, reporting their experience later online.

Dozens of petitioners went to Hu Jia’s home in an eastern suburb of Beijing on Sunday, in a bid to bring baby formula to Hu’s wife Zeng Jinyan. Zeng has been held with her baby daughter under house arrest since Hu’s arrest Dec. 27 for “subverting state power.” Their internet and phone connections have been cut off.

Some of the well-wishers were taken to the Dispersion Center for petitioners from out of town, suggesting they travelled from elsewhere in China to help Zeng.

One netizen, identified online as “Little Hammer,” said he had tried to deliver baby formula to Zeng but police blocked his way, questioning him for several hours.

“How precious freedom is! But Hu Jia sacrificed his own freedom for all of us,” “Little Hammer” wrote.

Several other people reported in blog posts and forum messages that they also tried to visit Zeng, or bring milk powder to her, but apparently none succeeded.

Hu Jia and his wife, Zeng Jinyan, January 2007. Photo courtesy of Hu Jia.

Instead, Zeng barred police from entering her apartment Sunday, saying it was illegal to hold her and her baby under house arrest.

According to Hu’s friend, legal scholar Teng Biao, the police replied: “You are not innocent. You were involved in many of the things that Hu Jia did.”

Teng said the police appeared to be threatening Zeng also with detention, talking within earshot about allowing her home from detention to feed her baby.

Note to wife

Zeng Jinyan, herself an AIDS activist who won an award from Paris-based Reporters Without Borders alongside Hu Jia last year, was also shown a photocopy of a note written to her from Hu.

She was not allowed to keep the note, which expressed concern about his wife and daughter. But she was told Zeng was being taken care of in prison, with his own bathroom and special vegetarian meals.

Teng called on the authorities to allow a lawyer to visit Hu, who suffers from cirrhosis of the liver, as soon as possible, as police were refusing to take prescription drugs sent to Hu by his family.

Hu’s lawyer submitted an application for parole last week but has not yet received any response from the authorities, Teng added.

“The outside world is greatly concerned about his health, and so the police tell us his condition is normal. But the most important thing is for a lawyer to be allowed in to visit him, so we can know the real situation,” he told RFA’s Mandarin service.

Meanwhile, the wives of two other imprisoned dissidents expressed their support for Zeng.

Open letter

The authorities should release all jailed dissidents before the Olympics, but instead they are detaining more. This is completely against the Olympic spirit.

Jia Jianying, wife of jailed dissident He Depu

Yuan Weijing, wife of the blind Shandong activist Chen Guangcheng, herself currently under house arrest, published an open letter to the Chinese leadership Monday calling for the immediate release of Hu Jia.

“I worry about Hu Jia’s health as well as his wife’s situation,” she wrote. “What Hu Jia did was just telling the world what is happening in China, such as the story of lawyer Gao Zhisheng, Chen Guangcheng, Guo Feixiong, and those people.”

“The Chinese media cannot report these stories in a timely manner. I really cannot understand why Hu Jia was charged with ‘inciting subversion by just doing what Chinese media couldn’t do,’” Yuan Weijing told RFA’s Mandarin service.

Jia Jianying, wife of jailed dissident He Depu, called on Chinese leaders to release political prisoners ahead of this year’s Summer Olympics in Beijing.

“The authorities should release all jailed dissidents before the Olympics, but instead they are detaining more. This is completely against the Olympic spirit,” Jia said.

Video taken by the couple in recent months shows a team of national security police camped outside the couple’s apartment round the clock. Police are turning away any journalists who try to visit Zeng, but she was briefly captured by a UK television crew peering from the window, her baby in her arms.

Teng said the charges of incitement to overthrow state power against Hu were unfounded. He said Hu Jia wasn’t against the Olympics, but rather that he had called publicly for an improvement to Chinese society as a result of the Olympics.

Prominent AIDS activist Wan Yanhai was also taken in by police for questioning on the day of Hu’s arrest, Dec. 27. And Gao Yaojie, a well-known AIDS doctor, says that the day Hu Jia was detained she received a “mysterious phone call” from a stranger inviting her to attend an AIDS seminar. Upon verification she learned that there was no such seminar.

The 80-year-old doctor says she believes that it was a trick to lure her out of her house. She says her phone line is being tapped, her e-mail has been blocked, and her family has been harassed and even threatened.

from:  http://www.rfa.org/english/china/2008/01/23/china_hujia/

Categories: Part 3: Their efforts and love story · Part 5: What about Hu Jia and Zeng Jinyan now? · Part 6: Who support them?

Channel 4 Press articles

January 23, 2008 · 1 Comment

Here below are 3 articles published by Channel 4 news:

1) China’s price for protest - 04/06/2007

2) One dream, One prison - 11/01/2008

3) Why flat-pack China doesn’t quite work - 14/01/2008

The pdf of the articles can be found “here

Categories: Part 1: who are Hu Jia and Jinyan? · Part 2: What's happened to him and her? · Press

Zeng Jinyan - TIME 100 2007

January 23, 2008 · 2 Comments

In 2007 Zeng Jinyan was nominated as one of TIME 100 influential people under the “Heroes and Pioneers” category.

Click Here for the article

Categories: Part 1: who are Hu Jia and Jinyan? · Press
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