Hujia&jinyan’s spirit

Entries categorized as ‘Part 6: Who support them?’

Beijing is listening to our silence

February 11, 2008 · No Comments

Article from the National Post (Canada) of the 18 01 2008

“The fact that Time magazine named Zeng Jinyan, right, one of the world’s 100 most influential people did not help her much on Dec. 27, when 30 Chinese agents arrested her husband, prominent rights activist Hu Jia.

Security agents showed up at the couple’s Beijing apartment with a warrant for “subversion against the state,” a catch-all phrase used to lock up pretty much anyone who says something the Communist Party does not like. Despite liver problems and a two-month-old daughter, Hu now potentially faces years in prison.” [continues...]

Categories: Part 5: What about Hu Jia and Zeng Jinyan now? · Part 6: Who support them? · Press

Reporters Without Borders Protest Hu Jia’s Arrest in China

February 10, 2008 · No Comments

From Clear harmony

An “insult to the diplomatic efforts made by the numerous countries appealing for the release of Hu Jia”

The Procuratorate of Beijing Municipality announced the official arrest of famous Chinese human rights activist Hu Jia for the crime of “inciting subversion of state power”. Hu’s relatives received notice of his official arrest on the 30th of January 2008.

he headquarters of Reporters without Borders, based in Paris, made a strong protest against the arrest of Hu Jia by the Chinese Communist Authority regardless of the appeals of the international community. Reporters without Borders expressed in a news bulletin issued on the 31st of January, “It is an insult to the diplomatic efforts made by the numerous countries calling for the release of Hu Jia.” [continues...]

Categories: Part 6: Who support them? · Press

Facebook

February 6, 2008 · No Comments

For all you facebook users, the following add-on has been brought to our attention. In the “Causes” application there is the following cause to subscribe to:

http://apps.facebook.com/causes/view_cause/58833?recruiter_id=2074037&m=4303549

Please support them and help spread the word!

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

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!

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

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?

Letters to Gordon Brown and Condoleezza Rice

January 15, 2008 · No Comments

Here are the links to two letters that were sent to the British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and to the US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice by Tom Porteous and Sophie Richardson and reported on HRW.

Letter to Brown

Letter to Rice

Categories: Part 6: Who support them? · Press

Last time: SOLIDARITY DAY OF ACTION TO FREE HU JIA, OTHER CHINESE ACTIVISTS, HELD IN DC, NYC AND PARIS (March 22, 2006)

March 22, 2006 · No Comments

Last time Hu Jia disappeared, the aids international organization appealed for releasing Hu Jia and form a solidarity, see the links:

1)US AIDS Activists Protest Detentions of Chinese AIDS Activists

2)Paris Protest At Chinese Embassy, March 22, 2006

3)AIDS Activists, Queer Activists, and Human Rights Activists Protest Detentions of People with AIDS in China

from: http://www.aidspolicyproject.org/, see the right sides REALEASE HU JIA.

Categories: Part 6: Who support them?

Last time: Emergency Action: Activist Disappeared / China(Mar 2, 2006 )

March 2, 2006 · No Comments

Take Action! Help find Hu Jia, a prominent Chinese activist who has been missing since February 16th.

Summary

Prominent environmentalist and HIV/AIDS activist Hu Jia went missing on the morning of February 16th. His current whereabouts are unclear, but it is feared that he has been detained by the Chinese authorities. His family has contacted various government departments, including the police, to ask where he is detained, but none have admitted holding him.

Background Information

Hu Jia is an outspoken advocate for people with living with HIV/AIDS, especially in China’s poor rural areas. He is the co-founder of the Beijing Aizhibing Institute of Health Education. He recently resigned from Loving Source—a non-governmental organization he co-founded in 2003 to help children orphaned by AIDS-related illnesses—in order to prevent the authorities from harassing the group.

Hu Jia is also a veteran environmentalist, and was an active member of the Chinese environmental movement from 1995-2001. He was a leader of China’s Green Camp from 1996 to 1997, helping promote student participation in environmental conservation. Hu Jia offered tremendous support to the development of one of China’s best known environmental groups, Friends of Nature. He also helped to establish Greenpeace’s first Beijing office in 2000.

One of Hu Jia’s greatest contributions to conservation work in China has been the attention he brought to saving the endangered Tibetan Antelope. He set up a Tibetan Antelope Information Center and ceaselessly raised awareness about antelope poaching on the Tibetan Plateau for making Shatoosh. Through his efforts, Hu Jia helped local conservationists and nature reserves in Xinjiang and Qinghai provinces obtain needed resources and funding to implement their work.

Hu Jia has never hesitated to stand up against violations of human rights, particularly those of China’s most socially-vulnerable groups.

Recommended Action:

Please send the following letter to Prime Minister Wen Jiabao requesting that Hu Jia’s whereabouts is disclosed.

Your Excellency,

I am writing to ask the Chinese Government to take all necessary steps to locate Hu Jia and inform his family of his whereabouts.

Hu Jia has been missing since 16 February, and his location is unknown. He has a known medical condition which requires that he take medicine daily. If detained, he should be given access to appropriate medical treatment and released immediately unless he is charged with a recognizable criminal offence.

Please help locate Hu Jia.

Sincerely,

XXX

Addresses

Prime Minister

Wen Jiabao

The State Council, No. 9 Xihuangchenggen Beijie

Beijing, 100032

People’s Republic of China

c/o Chinese Embassy in the USA

Political Affairs Office, Minister Counselor Cai Run, Fax: (202)-7457473

Governmental Affairs, Minister Counselor Su Ge, Fax: (202)-2655284

Tel:(202) 328-2500

Email: chinaembassy_us@fmprc.gov.cn

from: http://www.globalresponse.org/emailcampaigns.php?record=2163

Categories: Part 6: Who support them?