The Chinese authorities are demonstrating new-depths of cruelty by preventing Liu Xiaobo from leaving the country to receive urgent medical treatment for his late-stage liver cancer, Amnesty International said.
On Wednesday, the authorities announced medical experts from Germany and the US will be invited to China to assist with the treatment of the Nobel Peace Prize winner. The move appears in part an attempt to limit international criticism, as the authorities continue to refuse to grant Liu Xiaobo and his wife Liu Xia’s wish to travel abroad to receive treatment.
“Time is running out for Liu Xiaobo. It is not too late for the authorities to end this cruel farce. They must let Liu Xiaobo and his wife, Liu Xia, travel abroad to get the medical treatment he so desperately needs,” said Salil Shetty, Secretary General of Amnesty International.
The pro-democracy activist and former university lecturer was placed on medical parole last Monday and transferred to a hospital in Shenyang municipality in north-east China. His wife Liu Xia was able to reunite with him last week. The authorities’ claim that Liu Xiaobo is too ill to travel is disputed by his family.
Liu Xiaobo was jailed for 11 years in 2009 for “inciting subversion of state power”, after he co-signed a call for political reform in China, known as Charter 08. Amnesty International recognized him as a Prisoner of Conscience, detained solely for exercising his human rights.
In an attempt to impose a news blackout on Liu Xiaobo after he obtained the Nobel Peace prize in 2010, the Chinese authorities systematically harassed and intimidated his family and supporters. Liu Xia has been unlawfully placed under house arrest for the past seven years to prevent her from communicating with the outside world.
Among growing international condemnation of China’s treatment of Liu Xiaobo and Liu Xia several foreign governments have offered to transfer and treat Liu abroad. Last Thursday, Amnesty International joined 153 other Nobel Prize Winners in a letter to Chinese President Xi Jinping calling for the couple to be allowed to travel abroad.
“Liu Xiaobo is an inspiring figure whose only crime was to speak truth to power. He should never have spent a single day in jail, an injustice made even more tragic by the fact that his cancer was not diagnosed until it reached terminal phase. President Xi Jinping must do the right thing and order his immediate release,” said Salil Shetty.
For further information or to request an interview with Amnesty International’s human rights experts on China contact Sue Montgomery, media relations for Amnesty International Canada, at 613-744-7667 ext. 236 or smontgomery@amnesty.ca