MCLC: China no. 3 in imprisoned journalists

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Thu Dec 19 09:55:17 EST 2013


MCLC LIST
From: pjmooney <pjmooney at me.com>
Subject: China no. 3 in imprisoned journalists
***********************************************************

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, China is No. 3 on the
list of countries with the most journalists in prison, with a total of 32.
The definition of journalist is broad as the list includes several who
write just for the Internet, and also Liu Xiaobo.

Interesting to note that 16 are Han Chinese, 9 are Tibetan and 6 are
Uyghurs--disproportionately high for peoples who account for such a small
percentage of the total population. (Although the report says there are 32
imprisoned Chinese journalists, I counted just 31).

Turkey is No. 1 with 40 prisoners, Iran No. 2 with 35, China No. 3 with
32, Eritrea No. 4 with 22, and Vietnam is No. 5 with 18.

Here’s the List (http://www.cpj.org/):

Kong Youping, freelance
Imprisoned: December 13, 2003

Kong, an essayist and poet, was arrested in Anshan, Liaoning province. A
former trade union official, he had written online articles that supported
democratic reforms, appealed for the release of then-imprisoned Internet
writer Liu Di, and called for a reversal of the government's
"counterrevolutionary" ruling on the pro-democracy demonstrations of 1989.

Kong's essays included an appeal to democracy activists in China that
stated, "In order to work well for democracy, we need a well-organized,
strong, powerful, and effective organization. Otherwise, a mainland
democracy movement will accomplish nothing." Several of his articles and
poems were posted on the Minzhu Luntan (Democracy Forum) website.

In 1998, Kong served time in prison after he became a member of the
Liaoning province branch of the opposition China Democracy Party. In 2004,
he was tried on subversion charges along with co-defendant Ning Xianhua,
who was accused of being the vice chairman of the party's branch in
Liaoning, according to the U.S.-based advocacy organization Human Rights
in China and court documents obtained by the U.S.-based Dui Hua
Foundation. Later that year, the Shenyang Intermediate People's Court
sentenced Kong to 15 years in prison, plus four years' deprivation of
political rights. His sentence was reduced to 10 years on appeal,
according to the Independent Chinese PEN Center. He is expected to be
released in the fall of 2014.

Kong suffered from hypertension and was imprisoned in the city of
Lingyuan, far from his family. The Independent Chinese PEN Center reported
that his eyesight was deteriorating. Ning, who received a 12-year
sentence, was released ahead of schedule on December 15, 2010, according
to Radio Free Asia.

Yang Tongyan (Yang Tianshui), freelance
Imprisoned: December 23, 2005

Yang, commonly known by his penname Yang Tianshui, was detained along with
a friend in Nanjing, eastern China. He was tried on charges of "subverting
state authority," and on May 17, 2006, the Zhenjiang Intermediate People's
Court sentenced him to 12 years in prison.

Yang was a well-known writer and member of the Independent Chinese PEN
Center. He was a frequent contributor to U.S.-based websites banned in
China, including Boxun News and Epoch Times. He often wrote critically
about the ruling Communist Party and advocated for the release of jailed
Internet writers.

According to the verdict in Yang's case, which was translated into English
by the U.S.-based Dui Hua Foundation, the harsh sentence against him was
related to a fictitious online election, established by overseas Chinese
citizens, for a "democratic Chinese transitional government." His
colleagues said that he had been elected to the leadership of the
fictional government without his prior knowledge. He later wrote an
article in Epoch Times in support of the model.

Prosecutors also accused Yang of transferring money from overseas to Wang
Wenjiang, a Chinese dissident who had been convicted of endangering state
security and jailed. Yang's defense lawyer argued that this money was
humanitarian assistance to Wang's family and should not have constituted a
criminal act.

Believing that the proceedings were fundamentally unjust, Yang did not
appeal. He had already spent 10 years in prison for his opposition to the
military crackdown on demonstrators at Tiananmen Square in 1989.

In June 2008, Shandong provincial authorities refused to renew the law
license of Yang's lawyer, press freedom advocate Li Jianqiang. In 2008,
the PEN American Center announced that Yang had received the PEN/Barbara
Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award.

Relatives who visited Yang in prison in August 2012 said he was receiving
poor treatment for a number of medical conditions including tuberculosis,
arthritis, and diabetes, according to international news reports.

He is being held in Dantu District Detention Centre in Zhenjiang, Jiangsu
Province, according to the PEN American Center.

Qi Chonghuai, freelance
Imprisoned: June 25, 2007

Police in Tengzhou arrested Qi, a journalist of 13 years, in his home in
Jinan, the provincial capital, and charged him with fraud and extortion.
He was convicted and sentenced to four years in prison on May 13, 2008.
The arrest occurred about a week after police detained Qi's colleague, Ma
Shiping, a freelance photographer, on charges of carrying a false press
card.

Qi and Ma had criticized a local official in Shandong province in an
article published June 8, 2007, on the website of the U.S.-based Epoch
Times, according to Qi's lawyer, Li Xiongbing. On June 14, 2007, the two
had posted photographs on Xinhua news agency's anti-corruption Web forum
that showed a luxurious government building in the city of Tengzhou.

Qi was accused of taking money from local officials while reporting
several stories, a charge he denied. The people from whom he was accused
of extorting money were local officials threatened by his reporting, Li
said. Qi told his lawyer and his wife, Jiao Xia, that police beat him
during questioning on August 13, 2007, and again during a break in his
trial.

Qi was scheduled for release in 2011, but in May that year, local
authorities told him that the court had received new evidence against him.
On June 9, 2011, less than three weeks before the end of his term, a
Shandong provincial court sentenced him to another eight years in jail,
according to the New York-based advocacy group Human Rights in China and
Radio Free Asia.

Ma was also sentenced in late 2007 to one and a half years in prison. He
was released in 2009, according to Jiao.

Human Rights in China, citing an online article by defense lawyer Li
Xiaoyuan, said the court tried Qi on a new count of stealing advertising
revenue from China Security Produce News, a former employer. The
journalist's supporters speculated that the new charge came in reprisal
for Qi's statements to his jailers that he would continue reporting after
his release, according to The New York Times.

Qi was being held in Tengzhou Prison, a four-hour trip from his family's
home, which limited visits. Jiao told international journalists in 2012
that her husband had offered her a divorce, but that she declined.

Dhondup Wangchen, Filming for Tibet
Imprisoned: March 26, 2008

Police in Tongde, Qinghai province, arrested Wangchen, a Tibetan
documentary filmmaker, shortly after he sent footage filmed in Tibet to
his colleagues, according to the production company Filming for Tibet. A
25-minute film titled "Jigdrel" (Leaving Fear Behind) was produced from
the tapes.

Officials in Xining, Qinghai province, charged the filmmaker with inciting
separatism and replaced the Tibetan's own lawyer with a government
appointee in July 2009, according to international reports. On December
28, 2009, the Xining Intermediate People's Court in Qinghai sentenced
Wangchen to six years' imprisonment on subversion charges, according to a
statement issued by his family.

Filming for Tibet was founded in Switzerland by Gyaljong Tsetrin, a
relative of Wangchen who left Tibet in 2002 but maintained contact with
people there. Tsetrin told CPJ that he had spoken to Wangchen on March 25,
2008, but lost contact after that. He learned of the detention only later,
after speaking by telephone with relatives.

Filming for the documentary was completed shortly before peaceful protests
against Chinese rule of Tibet deteriorated into riots in Lhasa and in
other Tibetan areas of China in March 2008. The filmmakers had gone to
Tibet to ask ordinary people about their lives under Chinese rule in the
run-up to the Beijing Olympics.

The arrest was first publicized when the documentary was screened before a
small group of international reporters in a hotel room in Beijing on
August 6, 2008. A second screening was interrupted by hotel management,
according to Reuters.

Wangchen was born in Qinghai but moved to Lhasa as a young man, according
to his published biography. He had relocated with his wife, Lhamo Tso, and
four children to Dharamsala, India, before returning to Tibet to begin
filming, according to a report published in October 2008 by the South
China Morning Post.

In March 2008, Wangchen's assistant, Jigme Gyatso, was arrested, then
released on October 15, 2008, Filming for Tibet said. Gyatso described
having been brutally beaten by interrogators during his seven months in
detention, according to Filming for Tibet. The Dharamsala-based Tibetan
Centre for Human Rights and Democracy reported that Gyatso was re-arrested
in March 2009 and released the next month. The film company reported in
October 2012 that Gyatso had been missing since September 20, 2012, and
that it feared he had been detained again.

Lhamo Tso told Radio Netherlands Worldwide in 2011 that her husband was
working extremely long hours in prison and had contracted hepatitis B.

In October 2013, the film company reportedthat Wangchen continued to
suffer from hepatitis B and had not received the medical treatment he
needed. They said it had been difficult to obtain reliable information
about his condition and that it was believed he had been transferred to
Qinghai Provincial Women's Prison.

Wangchen was scheduled to be released in June 2014. CPJ honored Wangchen
with an International Press Freedom Award in 2012.

Liu Xiaobo, freelance
Imprisoned: December 8, 2008

Liu, a longtime advocate for political reform and the 2010 Nobel Peace
Prize laureate, was imprisoned for "inciting subversion" through his
writing. Liu was an author of Charter 08, a document promoting universal
values, human rights, and democratic reform in China, and was among its
300 original signatories. He was detained in Beijing shortly before the
charter was officially released, according to international news reports.

Liu was formally charged with subversion in June 2009, and he was tried in
the Beijing Number 1 Intermediate Court in December of that year.
Diplomats from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and Sweden were
denied access to the trial, the BBC reported. On December 25, 2009, the
court convicted Liu of "inciting subversion" and sentenced him to 11 years
in prison and two years' deprivation of political rights.

The verdict cited several articles Liu had posted on overseas websites,
including the BBC's Chinese-language site and the U.S.-based websites
Epoch Times and Observe China, all of which had criticized Communist Party
rule. Six articles were named-including pieces headlined, "So the Chinese
people only deserve 'one-party participatory democracy?'" and "Changing
the regime by changing society"-as evidence that Liu had incited
subversion. Liu's income was generated by his writing, his wife told the
court.

The court verdict cited Liu's authorship and distribution of Charter 08 as
further evidence of subversion. The Beijing Municipal High People's Court
upheld the verdict in February 2010.

In October 2010, the Nobel Prize Committee awarded Liu its 2010 Peace
Prize "for his long and nonviolent struggle for fundamental human rights
in China." His wife, Liu Xia, has been kept under house arrest in her
Beijing apartment since shortly after her husband's detention, according
to international news reports. Authorities said she could request
permission to visit Liu every two or three months, the BBC reported.

In March 2013, unidentified assailants beat two Hong Kong journalists as
they filmed an activist's attempt to visit Liu Xia at her home.

In June 2013, Liu's brother-in-law, Liu Hui, a manager of a property
company, was convicted of fraud in what the journalist's family said was
reprisal for Liu Xiaobo's journalistic work. The conviction stemmed from a
real estate dispute that his lawyers said had already been settled. Liu
Hui was sentenced to 11 years in prison, news reports said. A court
rejected his appeal in August 2013.

Liu Xiaobo is being held in Jinzhou Prison in northeastern China's
Liaoning province, according to news reports.

Kunchok Tsephel Gopey Tsang, Chomei
Imprisoned: February 26, 2009

Public security officials arrested Tsang, an online writer, in Gannan, a
Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in the south of Gansu province, according to
Tibetan rights groups. Tsang ran the Tibetan cultural issues website
Chomei, according to the Dharamsala, India-based Tibetan Centre for Human
Rights and Democracy. Kate Saunders, U.K. communications director for the
International Campaign for Tibet, told CPJ that she learned of his arrest
from two sources.

The detention appeared to be part of a wave of arrests of writers and
intellectuals in advance of the 50th anniversary of the March 1959
uprising preceding the Dalai Lama's departure from Tibet. The 2008
anniversary had provoked ethnic rioting in Tibetan areas, and
international reporters were barred from the region.

In November 2009, a Gannan court sentenced Tsang to 15 years in prison for
disclosing state secrets, according to The Associated Press.

Gopey Tsang served four years of his sentence in Dingxi prison in Lanzhu,
Gansu Province,

before being transferred in August 2013 to another prison in Gansu where
conditions are

more harsh and where there are serious concerns for his health, according
to PEN International. His family is allowed to visit him once every two
months, but is only permitted to speak with him in Chinese via intercom
through a glass screen. Not being allowed to converse in Tibetan is
difficult for many of his nomadic family members, PEN International said.

Kunga Tsayang (Gang-Nyi), freelance
Imprisoned: March 17, 2009

The Public Security Bureau arrested Tsayang during a late-night raid,
according to the Dharamsala, India-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights
and Democracy, which said it had received the information from several
sources.

An environmental activist and photographer who also wrote online articles
under the penname Gang-Nyi (Sun of Snowland), Tsayang maintained his own
website, Zindris (Jottings), and contributed to others. He wrote several
essays on politics in Tibet, including "Who is the real instigator of
protests?" according to the New York-based advocacy group Students for a
Free Tibet.

Tsayang was convicted of revealing state secrets and sentenced in November
2010 to five years in prison, according to the center. Sentencing was
imposed during a closed-court proceeding in the Tibetan area of Gannan,
Gansu province.

A number of Tibetans, including journalists, were arrested around the
March anniversary of the failed uprising in 1959 that prompted the Dalai
Lama's departure from Tibet. Security measures were heightened in the
region in the aftermath of ethnic rioting in March 2008.

No information about where he is being held or any details about his
health and living conditions have been disclosed.

Tan Zuoren, freelance
Imprisoned: March 28, 2009

Tan, an environmentalist and activist, had been investigating the deaths
of schoolchildren killed in the May 2008 earthquake in Sichuan province
when he was detained in Chengdu. Tan, believing that shoddy school
construction contributed to the high death toll, had intended to publish
the results of his investigation ahead of the first anniversary of the
earthquake, according to international news reports.

Tan's supporters believe he was detained because of his investigation,
although the formal charges did not cite his earthquake reporting.
Instead, he was charged with "inciting subversion" for writings posted on
overseas websites that criticized the military crackdown on demonstrators
at Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989.

In particular, authorities cited "1989: A Witness to the Final Beauty," a
firsthand account of the Tiananmen crackdown published on overseas
websites in 2007, according to court documents. Several witnesses,
including the prominent artist Ai Weiwei, were detained and blocked from
testifying on Tan's behalf at his August 2009 trial.

On February 9, 2010, Tan was convicted and sentenced to five years in
prison, according to international news reports. On June 9, 2010, the
Sichuan Provincial High People's Court rejected his appeal.

Tan's wife, Wang Qinghua, told reporters in Hong Kong and overseas that he
had contracted gout and was not receiving sufficient medical attention.
Visitors to the prison were subject to strict examination before being
allowed to see him, the German public news organization Deutsche Welle
reported in 2012, citing Wang.

A number of prominent China and U.S.-based rights lawyers and dissidents
published

an open letter calling for Tan's release in May 2013, ahead of the fifth
anniversary of the earthquake, according to news reports.

No information on his whereabouts had been disclosed in late 2013. CPJ's
emailed questions to his lawyer went unanswered.

Memetjan Abdulla, freelance
Imprisoned: July 2009

Abdulla, editor of the state-run China National Radio's Uighur service,
was detained in July 2009 for allegedly instigating ethnic rioting in the
Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region through postings on the Uighur-language
website Salkin, which he managed in his spare time, according to
international news reports. A court in the regional capital, Urumqi,
sentenced him to life imprisonment on April 1, 2010, the reports said. The
exact charges against Abdulla were not disclosed.

The U.S. government-funded Radio Free Asia reported on the sentence in
December 2010, citing an unnamed witness at the trial. Abdulla was
targeted for talking to international journalists in Beijing about the
riots, and translating articles on the Salkin website, Radio Free Asia
reported. The Germany-based World Uyghur Congress confirmed the sentence
with sources in the region, according to The New York Times.

Abdulla is being held in a prison in Xinjiang, according to the U.S.
Congressional-Executive Commission on China, an organization founded by
Congress in 2000 that has the legislative mandate to monitor human rights
and the rule of law in China.

Tursunjan Hezim, Orkhun
Imprisoned: July 2009

Details of Hezim's arrest following the 2009 ethnic unrest in northwestern
Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region first emerged in March 2011. Police in
Xinjiang detained international journalists and severely restricted
Internet access for several months after rioting broke out on July 5,
2009, in Urumqi, the regional capital, between groups of Han Chinese and
the predominantly Muslim Uighur minority.

The U.S. government-funded Radio Free Asia, citing an anonymous source,
reported that a court in the region's far western district of Aksu had
sentenced Hezim, along with other journalists and dissidents, in July
2010. Several other Uighur website managers received heavy prison terms
for posting articles and discussions about the previous year's violence,
according to CPJ research.

Hezim edited the well-known Uighur website Orkhun. U.S.-based Uighur
scholar Erkin Sidick told CPJ that the editor's whereabouts had been
unknown from the time of the rioting until news of the conviction surfaced
in 2011. Hezim was sentenced to seven years in prison on unknown charges
in a trial closed to observers, according to Sidick, who had learned the
news by telephone from sources in his native Aksu. Chinese authorities
frequently restrict information on sensitive trials, particularly those
involving ethnic minorities, according to CPJ research.

No information on where he is being held has been disclosed.

Gulmire Imin, freelance
Imprisoned: July 14, 2009

Imin was one of several administrators of Uighur-language Web forums who
were arrested after the July 2009 riots in Urumqi, in Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region. In August 2010, Imin was sentenced to life in prison on
charges of separatism, leaking state secrets, and organizing an illegal
demonstration, a witness to her trial told the U.S. government-funded
broadcaster Radio Free Asia.

Imin held a local government post in Urumqi. She also contributed poetry
and short stories to the cultural website Salkin, and had been invited to
moderate the site in late spring 2009, her husband, Behtiyar Omer, told
CPJ. Omer confirmed the date of his wife's initial detention in a
broadcast statement given at the Geneva Summit for Human Rights and
Democracy in 2011.

Authorities accused Imin of being an organizer of major demonstrations on
July 5, 2009, and of using the Uighur-language website to distribute
information about the event, Radio Free Asia reported. Imin had been
critical of the government in her online writings, readers of the website
told Radio Free Asia. The website was shut down after the July riots and
its contents were deleted.

Imin was also accused of leaking state secrets by phone to her husband,
who lives in Norway. Her husband told CPJ that he had called her on July
5, 2009, only to be sure she was safe.

The riots, which began as a protest against the death of Uighur migrant
workers in Guangdong province, turned violent and resulted in the deaths
of 200 people, according to the official Chinese government count. Chinese
authorities shut down the Internet in Xinjiang for months after the riots
and hundreds of protesters were arrested, according to international human
rights organizations and local and international media reports.

Imin is being held in the Xinjiang Women's Prison (Xinjiang No. 2 Prison)
in Urumqi, according to the World Uyghur Congress.

Nijat Azat, Shabnam
Nureli, Salkin
Imprisoned: July or August 2009

Authorities imprisoned Azat and another journalist, Nureli, who goes by
one name, in an apparent crackdown on managers of Uighur-language
websites. Azat was sentenced to 10 years and Nureli to three years on
charges of endangering state security, according to international news
reports. The Uyghur American Association reported that the pair were tried
and sentenced in July 2010.

Their sites, which have been shut down by the government, had run news
articles and discussion groups concerning Uighur issues. The New York
Times cited friends and family members of the men who said they were
prosecuted because they had failed to respond quickly enough when they
were ordered to delete content that discussed the difficulties of life in
Xinjiang.

Nureli's three-year sentence should have been completed in 2013. Although
prisoners in China are generally released at the completion of their
sentence, CPJ could not confirm that Nureli had been freed. Former
prisoners in China are often ordered not to discuss their detention or are
afraid to do so.

Azat's whereabouts were also unknown in late 2013.

Dilshat Parhat (Dilixiati Paerhati), Diyarim
Imprisoned: August 7, 2009

Parhat, who edited the popular Uighur-language website Diyarim, was one of
several online forum administrators arrested after ethnic violence in
Urumqi in July 2009. Parhat was sentenced to a five-year prison term in
July 2010 on charges of "endangering state security," according to
international news reports. He has previously appeared on CPJ's prison
census as Dilixiati Paerhati, which is the pinyin transliteration of his
Chinese name.

Parhat was detained and interrogated about riots in the Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region on July 24, 2009, but was released without charge after
eight days. Agents seized him from his apartment on August 7, 2009,
although the government issued no formal notice of arrest, his U.K.-based
brother told Amnesty International. News reports citing his brother said
Parhat was prosecuted for failing to comply with an official order to
delete anti-government comments on the website.

No information on where he was being held had been disclosed in late 2013.

Gheyrat Niyaz (Hailaite Niyazi), Uighurbiz
Imprisoned: October 1, 2009

Security officials arrested Niyaz, a website manager who is sometimes
referred to as Hailaite Niyazi, in his home in the regional capital,
Urumqi, according to international news reports. He was convicted under
sweeping charges of "endangering state security" and sentenced to 15 years
in prison.

According to international media reports, Niyaz was punished because of an
August 2, 2009, interview with Yazhou Zhoukan (Asia Weekly), a
Chinese-language magazine based in Hong Kong. In the interview, Niyaz said
authorities had not taken steps to prevent violence in the July 2009
ethnic unrest that broke out in China's far-western Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region.

Niyaz, who once worked for the state newspapers Xinjiang Legal News and
Xinjiang Economic Daily, managed and edited the website Uighurbiz until
June 2009. A statement posted on the website quoted Niyaz's wife as saying
that while he did give interviews to international media, he had no
malicious intentions.

Authorities blamed local and international Uighur sites for fueling the
violence between Uighurs and Han Chinese in the predominantly Muslim
Xinjiang region. Uighurbiz founder Ilham Tohti was questioned about the
contents of the site and detained for more than six weeks, according to
international news reports.

Niyaz is being held at Xinjiang No. 3 Prison, according to the U.S.
Congressional-Executive Commission on China, an organization founded by
Congress in 2000 that has a legislative mandate to monitor human rights
and the rule of law in China.

Tashi Rabten, freelance
Imprisoned: April 6, 2010

Public security officials detained Rabten for publishing a banned magazine
and a collection of articles, according to Phayul, a pro-Tibetan
independence news website based in New Delhi.

Rabten, a student at Northwest Minorities University in Lanzhou, Gansu
province, edited the magazine Shar Dungri (Eastern Snow Mountain) in the
aftermath of ethnic rioting in Tibet in March 2008. The magazine was
banned by local authorities, according to the International Campaign for
Tibet. The journalist later self-published a collection of articles titled
Written in Blood, saying in the introduction that "after an especially
intense year of the usual soul-destroying events, something had to be
said," the campaign reported.

The book and the magazine discussed democracy and recent anti-China
protests; the book was banned after he had distributed 400 copies,
according to the U.S. government-funded Radio Free Asia. Rabten had
already been detained once before, in 2009, according to international
Tibetan rights groups and Radio Free Asia.

A court in Aba prefecture, a predominantly Tibetan area of Sichuan
province, sentenced Rabten to four years in prison in a closed-door trial
on June 2, 2011, according to Radio Free Asia and the International
Campaign for Tibet. Radio Free Asia cited a family member as saying that
Rabten had been charged with separatism, although CPJ could not
independently confirm the charge.

No information on where he was being held had been disclosed in late 2013.

Dokru Tsultrim (Zhuori Cicheng), freelance
Imprisoned: May 24, 2010

Tsultrim, a monk at Ngaba Gomang Monastery in western Sichuan province,
was detained in April 2009 in connection with alleged anti-government
writings and articles in support of the Dalai Lama, according to the
Dharamsala, India-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy and
the International Campaign for Tibet. Released after a month in custody,
he was detained again in May 2010, according to the Dharamsala,
India-based Tibet Post International. No formal charges or trial
proceedings were disclosed.

At the time of his 2010 arrest, security officials raided his room at the
monastery, confiscated documents, and demanded his laptop, a relative told
The Tibet Post International. He and a friend had planned to publish the
writings of Tibetan youths detailing an April 2010 earthquake in Qinghai
province, the relative said.

Tsultrim, originally from Qinghai province, which is on the Tibetan
plateau, also managed a private Tibetan journal, Khawai Tsesok (Life of
Snow), which ceased publication after his 2009 arrest, the center said.

"Zhuori Cicheng" is the Chinese transliteration of his name, according to
Tashi Choephel Jamatsang at the center, who provided CPJ with details by
email.

No information on where he was being held, his legal status, or his health
had been disclosed in late 2013.

Kalsang Jinpa (Garmi), freelance
Imprisoned: June 19, 2010

Jangtse Donkho (Nyen, Rongke), freelance
Imprisoned: June 21, 2010

Buddha, freelance
Imprisoned: June 26, 2010

The three men, contributors to the banned Tibetan-language magazine Shar
Dungri (Eastern Snow Mountain), were detained in Aba, a Tibetan area in
southwestern Sichuan province, the U.S. government-funded Radio Free Asia
reported.

Donkho, an author and editor who wrote under the penname Nyen, meaning
"Wild One," was detained on June 21, 2010, Radio Free Asia reported. The
name on his official identification is Rongke, according to the
International Campaign for Tibet. Many Tibetans use only one name.

Buddha, a practicing physician, was detained on June 26, 2010, at the
hospital where he worked in the town of Aba. Kalsang Jinpa, who wrote
under the penname Garmi, meaning "Blacksmith," was detained on June 19,
2010, Radio Free Asia reported, citing local sources.

On October 21, 2010, they were tried together in the Aba Intermediate
Court on charges of inciting separatism that were based on articles they
had written in the aftermath of the March 2008 ethnic rioting. Radio Free
Asia, citing an unnamed source in Tibet, reported that the court later
sentenced Donkho and Buddha to four years' imprisonment each and Jinpa to
three years. In January 2011, the broadcaster reported that the three had
been put in Mian Yang jail near the Sichuan capital, Chengdu, where they
were subjected to hard labor.

Shar Dungri was a collection of essays published in July 2008 and
distributed in western China before authorities banned the publication,
according to the advocacy group International Campaign for Tibet, which
translated the journal. The writers assailed Chinese human rights abuses
against Tibetans, lamented a history of repression, and questioned
official media accounts of the March 2008 unrest.

Buddha's essay, "Hindsight and Reflection," was presented as part of the
prosecution, Radio Free Asia reported. According to a translation of the
essay by the International Campaign for Tibet, Buddha wrote: "If
development means even the slightest difference between today's standards
and the living conditions of half a century ago, why the disparity between
the pace of construction and progress in Tibet and in mainland China?"

The editor of Shar Dungri, Tashi Rabten, was also jailed in 2010.

Jinpa's three-year sentence may have been completed in 2013. Although
prisoners in China are generally released at the completion of their
sentence, CPJ could not confirm that Jinpa had been freed. Former
prisoners in China are often ordered not to discuss their detention or are
afraid to do so.

Liu Xianbin, freelance
Imprisoned: June 28, 2010

A court in western Sichuan province sentenced Liu to 10 years in prison on
charges of inciting subversion through articles published on overseas
websites between April 2009 and February 2010, according to international
news reports. One was titled "Constitutional Democracy for China: Escaping
Eastern Autocracy," according to the BBC.

The sentence was unusually harsh; inciting subversion normally carries a
maximum five-year penalty, international news reports said. Liu also
signed Liu Xiaobo's pro-democracy Charter 08 petition. (Liu Xiaobo, who
won the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize for his actions, is serving an 11-year term
on the same charge.)

Police detained Liu Xianbin on June 28, 2010, according to the
Washington-based prisoner rights group Laogai Foundation. He was sentenced
in 2011 during a crackdown on bloggers and activists who sought to
organize demonstrations inspired by uprisings in the Middle East and North
Africa, according to CPJ research.

Liu spent more than two years in prison for involvement in the 1989 
anti-government protests in Tiananmen Square. He later served 10 years of 
a 13-year prison sentence handed down in 1999 after he founded a branch of 
the China Democracy Party, according to The New York Times.

No information about where Liu was being held had been disclosed in late 
2013.

Lü Jiaping, freelance
Imprisoned: September 4, 2010

Jin Andi, freelance
Imprisoned: September 19, 2010

Beijing police detained Lü, a military scholar in his 70s, his wife, Yu 
Junyi, and his colleague, Jin, for inciting subversion in 13 online 
articles they wrote and distributed together, according to international 
news reports and human rights groups.

A court sentenced Lü to 10 years in prison and Jin to eight years in 
prison on May 13, 2011, according to the Hong Kong-based advocacy group 
Chinese Human Rights Defenders. Yu, 71, was given a suspended three-year 
sentence and kept under residential surveillance, according to the group. 
Their families were not informed of the trial, and Yu broke the news when 
the surveillance was lifted in February 2012, according to the 
English-language Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post and the U.S. 
government-funded Voice of America.

An appeals court upheld the sentences on the basis that the three 
defendants "wrote essays of an inciting nature" and "distributed them 
through the mail, emails, and by posting them on individuals' web pages. 
[They] subsequently were posted and viewed by others on websites such as 
Boxun News and New Century News," according to a 2012 translation of the 
appeal verdict published online by William Farris, a Beijing-based lawyer. 
The 13 offending articles, which were principally written by Lü, were 
listed in the appeal judgment, along with dates, places of publication, 
and number of times they were re-posted. One 70-word paragraph was 
reproduced as proof of incitement to subvert the state. The paragraph said 
in part that the Chinese Communist Party's status as a "governing power 
and leadership utility has long-since been smashed and subverted by the 
powers that hold the Party at gunpoint."

Court documents said Lü and Jin were being held in the Beijing Number 1 
Detention Center. Lü suffered a heart attack and other health problems in 
jail, leaving him barely able to walk, according to Chinese Human Rights 
Defenders.

Li Tie, freelance
Imprisoned: September 15, 2010

Police in Wuhan, Hubei province, detained 52-year-old freelancer Li in 
September 2010, according to international news reports. The Wuhan 
Intermediate People's Court tried him behind closed doors on April 18, 
2011, but did not announce the verdict until January 18, 2012, when he was 
handed a 10-year prison term and three additional years' political 
deprivation, according to news reports citing his lawyer. Only Li's mother 
and daughter were allowed to attend the trial, news reports said.

The court cited 13 of Li's online articles to support the charge of 
subversion of state power, a more serious count than inciting subversion, 
which is a common criminal charge used against jailed journalists in 
China, according to CPJ research. Evidence in the trial cited articles 
including one headlined "Human beings' heaven is human dignity," in which 
Li urged respect for ordinary citizens and called for democracy and 
political reform, according to international news reports. Prosecutors 
argued that the articles proved Li had "anti-government thoughts" that 
would ultimately lead to "anti-government actions," according to Hong 
Kong-based Chinese Human Rights Defenders.

Jian Guanghong, a lawyer hired by his family, was detained before the 
trial, and a government-appointed lawyer represented Li instead, according 
to the group. Prosecutors also cited Li's membership in the small 
opposition group the China Social Democracy Party, the group reported.

No information about where Li was being held had been disclosed in late 
2013.

Chen Wei, freelance
Imprisoned: February 20, 2011

Police in Suining, Sichuan, detained Chen among the dozens of lawyers, 
writers, and activists jailed nationwide following anonymous online calls 
for a nonviolent "Jasmine Revolution" in China, according to international 
news reports. The Hong Kong-based Chinese Human Rights Defenders reported 
that Chen was formally charged on March 28, 2011, with inciting subversion 
of state power.

Chen's lawyer, Zheng Jianwei, made repeated attempts to visit him but was 
not allowed access until September 8, 2011, according to the rights group 
and the U.S. government-funded broadcaster Radio Free Asia. Radio Free 
Asia reported that police had selected four pro-democracy articles Chen 
had written for overseas websites as the basis for criminal prosecution.

In December 2011, a court in Suining sentenced Chen to nine years in 
prison on charges of "inciting subversion," a term viewed as unusually 
harsh.

He is being held in Suining City Detention Centre in Sichuan Province, 
according to Amnesty International.

Gartse Jigme, freelance
Imprisoned: January 1, 2013

Police arrested Jigme, a Tibetan author and monk, in his room at the 
Rebgong Gartse monastery in the Malho prefecture of Qinghai province, 
according to news reports. His family was unaware of his whereabouts until 
a Qinghai court sentenced him to five years in prison on May 14, 2013. The 
charges have not been disclosed.

The conviction was in connection with the second volume of Jigme's book, 
Tsenpoi Nyingtob (The Warrior's Courage), according to Voice of America 
and Radio Free Asia. The book contained chapters expressing Jigme's strong 
opinions on topics such as Chinese policies in Tibet, self-immolations, 
minority rights, and the Dalai Lama, according to reports.

Authorities did not disclose any information on Jigme's health or 
whereabouts.

Jigme had also been briefly detained in 2011 in connection with the first 
volume of his book, Tsenpoi Nyingtob, according to the Hong Kong-based 
group Chinese Human Rights Defenders and Tibetan rights groups. He had 
written the book as a reflection on widespread protests in Tibetan areas 
in the spring of 2008, Tibetan scholar Robert Barnett told CPJ. China has 
jailed scores of Tibetan writers, artists, and educators for asserting 
Tibetan national identity and civil rights since widespread protests swept 
the region in 2008.

Liu Wei'an, freelance
Imprisoned: June 5, 2013

Hu Yazhu, Nanfang Daily
Imprisoned: June 21, 2013

The Shaoguan People's Procuratorate, a state legal body, issued a 
statement in June 2013 that said Hu and Liu had been arrested in Guangdong 
province after confessing to accepting bribes while covering events in the 
northern city of Shaoguan.

Hu, a staff reporter for the official Guangdong Communist Party newspaper 
Nanfang Daily, and Liu, a freelance writer, had both written articles 
published in 2011 in Nanfang Daily and news websites about a land-use 
dispute involving the illegal extraction of rare minerals in Shaoguan, 
according to news reports.

The prosecutors' statement said Hu accepted 95,000 yuan (about US$16,000) 
in bribes, but did not offer a specific amount for Liu. The statement did 
not offer further details.

Users on Weibo, China's Twitter-like microblog service, said they 
suspected the reporters were arrested "due to possible revenge from local 
authorities" because their reports had exposed problems in the government 
and judiciary, according to CPJ research.

Shaoguan authorities had not disclosed the health, whereabouts, or legal 
status of the journalists in late 2013.

Liu Hu, Modern Express
Imprisoned: August 23, 2013

Liu, a journalist for the Shenzhen-based state-owned newspaper New 
Express, was arrested at his home in Chongqing province in connection with 
statements he made on his microblog in July 2013, according to news 
reports and Liu's lawyers. He was charged with libel on September 30, 
2013, news reports said.

In his posts, Liu urged authorities to investigate Ma Zhengqi, deputy 
director of the State Administration for Industry and Commerce, for 
dereliction of duty during his term as vice mayor of Chongqing. Liu 
accused the official of losing millions of yuan while overseeing the 
privatization of two state-owned companies, according to media reports. 
Liu's posts were later removed, and his microblog accounts were shut down 
without explanation.

In an interview with the South China Morning Post in July, Liu said that 
in 2002 Ma allowed civil servants to purchase the state companies for 1.7 
million yuan (US$278,000), far less than their value of 27.7 million yuan. 
He also posted a government document allegedly showing that Ma waived 
investigation into the deal, saying, "What is done cannot be undone. Let's 
focus now on the later development."

Neither Ma nor the State Administration for Industry and Commerce publicly 
addressed Liu's claims.

Authorities have not disclosed Liu's whereabouts. No trial date was set in 
late 2013.

Authorities detained scores of people starting in August 2013 in a 
stepped-up campaign to banish online commentary that, among other issues, 
casts the government in a critical light, according to Chinese media and 
human rights groups. Many have been released, but some were still being 
held on criminal accusations.

Charles Xue Biqun, freelance
Imprisoned: August 23, 2013

Charles Xue Biqun, a Chinese-born American billionaire venture capitalist 
and a prominent microblogger, was detained on August 23, 2013, in 
connection with alleged involvement in prostitution, according to Beijing 
police. He was put under administrative detention, whereby individuals are 
imprisoned without trial. It is not clear if Xue has been officially 
charged.

Xue appeared in a 30-minute program on CCTV in September in prison garb, 
and confessed to being an "irresponsible opinion leader" and not for 
soliciting prostitutes. At the end of the program, Xue expressed his 
support for recent judicial guidelines that define and outlaw false online 
rumors, saying that they would "restore order" in the online world.

Xue's Weibo microblog had 12 million followers, and critics have said that 
the allegations against Xue were fabricated in reprisal for his online 
comments. He was known for his investing tips and commentary on social 
issues, such as child trafficking and the underprivileged, according to 
The New York Times. Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of the Global Times paper, 
said, "It is a universal ruse by governments around the world to use sex 
scandals or tax evasion charges to frame political rivals," according to 
the South China Morning Post.

Although Xue is not a professional journalist, CPJ determined that he was 
jailed in connection with his news-based commentary published on the 
Internet. Authorities detained scores of people starting in August 2013 in 
a stepped-up campaign to banish online commentary that, among other 
issues, casts the government in a critical light, according to Chinese 
media and human rights groups. Many have been released, but some were 
still being held on criminal accusations.

Dong Rubin, freelance
Imprisoned: September 12, 2013

Dong was detained in Kunming City, Yunnan Province, on accusations of 
misstating his company's registered assets, according to statements from 
his lawyer.

Dong, who runs an Internet consulting company, had used the name "Bianmin" 
on his microblog to criticize authorities and raise concerns about local 
issues. He had also used the microblog to campaign in 2009 for an 
investigation into the death of a young man in police custody. 
(Authorities had initially said it was accidental but later admitted the 
man was beaten to death, according to news reports.) In 2013, Dong raised 
safety and environmental concerns about plans for a new state-owned oil 
refinery project near the city of Kunming and expressed support on his 
microblog for a protest against the project by Kunming residents in May 
2013.

Dong predicted his own arrest when he wrote on his microblog, which has 
about 50,000 followers, that strangers had raided his office in late 
August and taken away three computers. "What crime will they bring against 
me? Prostituting, gambling, using and selling drugs, evading tax, causing 
trouble on purpose, fabricating rumors, running a mafia online?" Dong 
wrote.

Dong's friend, Zheng Xiejian, told Reuters in September: "If they want to 
punish you, they can always find an excuse. They could not find any 
wrongdoing against Dong and had to settle on this obscure charge."

Dong's lawyer, Xiao Dongzhi, told CPJ that he was formally charged at a 
hearing in late October. Dong was charged with declaring false capital in 
the registration of his Internet consulting company and of conducting 
illegal business operations, according to Xiao and statements from police 
authorities that were published by Xinhua, China's official state news 
agency.

He was also charged with creating disturbances in connection to his online 
activities, police said.

As of November 2013, a date for Dong's trial had not been set, Xiao told 
CPJ.

Although Dong is not a professional journalist, CPJ determined that he was 
jailed in connection with his news-based commentary published on the 
Internet. Authorities detained scores of people starting in August 2013 in 
a stepped-up campaign to banish online commentary that, among other 
issues, casts the government in a critical light, according to Chinese 
media and human rights groups. Many have been released, but some were 
still being held on criminal accusations.

Chen Yongzhou, The New Express
Imprisoned: October 18, 2013

Police detained Chen, a journalist working for the state-run New Express 
newspaper based in the southern city of Guangzhou, in connection with his 
reports on the finances of one of the country's largest construction 
machinery companies, Zoomlion Heavy Industry Science and Technology 
Company, according to The New York Times.

Chen had written 15 articles, published between September 2012 and June 
2013, that questioned Zoomlion's revenue and profit figures, news reports 
said. Chen alleged that the company, which is partly owned by the Hunan 
government, had exaggerated profits and manipulated the market, reports 
said. Zoomlion denied the allegations.

Chen was summoned to a Guangzhou police station on October 18, 2013, and 
was then taken into custody by police officers visiting from Changsha, 
located 700 kilometers (437 miles) to the north. He was put in a 
Mercedes-Benz and driven away, reports said. Four days later, police 
announced his arrest on their official Sina Weibo microblog, saying he was 
being held on criminal charges of "damaging commercial reputation," the 
Hong Kong-based China Media Project reported.

After failed attempts to secure Chen's release behind closed doors, The 
New Express published a front-page appeal for his release, marking one of 
the few times a Chinese newspaper has openly demanded the release of one 
of its journalists. The paper's editors said they had thoroughly vetted 
Chen's stories and found only one factual error.

However, on October 26, 2013, Chen appeared in handcuffs on China Central 
Television (CCTV) and confessed to having filed false information in 
exchange for money. He said the stories on Zoomlion had been written by 
someone else, according to news reports. The CCTV broadcast did not name 
the intermediary who allegedly bribed Chen or offer any evidence or 
details on the amounts received. According to Caixin magazine, a close-up 
shot of Chen's signed confession aired during the CCTV interview clearly 
showed the name of Zoomlion's chief competitor, Sany Heavy Industry Co.

The New Express subsequently published an apology. The official All-China 
Journalists Association, which had pledged to investigate Chen's arrest, 
condemned his actions, the China Media Project reported.

No information about a trial had been disclosed in late 2013, and it was 
unclear where Chen was being held. His lawyer could not be reached.

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