Tiananmen dissident family presses for his release
HONG KONG — Family and lawyers of an exiled leader of the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests pressed for his release Monday, nearly a year after he was sent to a mainland Chinese jail while trying to return to his homeland.
Zhou Yongjun, a permanent U.S. resident on track to become a naturalized citizen, was trying to enter Hong Kong in September last year when he was stopped by local officials and handed over to mainland Chinese authorities.
He is being held in a detention facility in his home province of Sichuan in western China, where one of his attorneys said he has been tortured and denied family visits.
“I am here with our little girl to look for Daddy,” said Zhang Yuewei, Zhou’s girlfriend and the mother of his young daughter. “It’s Hong Kong’s government who sent him to mainland China.”
Zhou, now 42, was among the most prominent figures in the 1989 student-led demonstrations in Beijing that were violently suppressed. Hundreds, possibly thousands, of people are believed to have been killed when troops stormed into central Beijing June 3-4, 1989, on orders to break up the protests.
But China has never acknowledged its crackdown, discussion of which is still taboo, and restrictions on those who took part in the protests remain harsh.
In April 1989, Zhou captured global attention by kneeling on the steps of the Great Hall of the People along one side of Tiananmen Square in a plea for China’s communist leaders to acknowledge student calls for political reforms and an end to corruption.
On Monday, Zhou’s girlfriend carried a portrait of him as she marched with other supporters to Hong Kong’s government headquarters. They called on Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang to explain why Zhou was turned over to Chinese officials, a possible violation of the territory’s laws, and asked for help securing his release.
“Zhou was sent to China without legal basis,” said Jim Li, one of Zhou’s attorneys. “Hong Kong is responsible.”
Hong Kong, a former British colony, was returned to China in 1997, but the territory retains separate political, legal, economic and immigration systems from the mainland. It also lacks a deportation and removal treaty with mainland China.
“They are totally disregarding the obligations under the law,” Albert Ho, a Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmaker who is helping with Zhou’s case, said of Hong Kong authorities. “It seems the government is acting on the direction from China.”
Hong Kong’s government refused to comment on Zhou’s case specifically. In general, its immigration department returns visitors whose travel documents do not meet requirements back to their “place of embarkation or origin,” the government said.
Zhou and his family live in Los Angeles.
Zhou was imprisoned for two years after Chinese leaders crushed the pro-democracy movement. He then left China for New York.
He was planning to enter China from Hong Kong on his latest visit, in hopes of seeing his elderly parents, his supporters said. He tried to visit China once before, in December 1998, but was arrested in Shenzhen and spent more than two years in a labor camp. He returned to the United States in 2002.
Related News
Beijing students demand release of teacher, former Tiananmen protester, apparently heldSeptember 20th, 2009 Beijing students protest teacher's detentionBEIJING — Nearly a hundred university students gathered outside a Beijing district police bureau Sunday to demand the release of a lecturer — a former leader of 1989 Tiananmen pro-democracy demonstrations — who they believe is being held unfairly by authorities. It was the second day that students turned up at the public security bureau in the capital's Haidian district to call on police to release Ding Xiaoping, who lectures on various topics at several universities, said Yu Zhiwei, who joined the students Sunday.
Man stabs 2 to death, wounds 12 despite tight security in Chinese capitalSeptember 18th, 2009 Man stabs 2 to death, wounds 12 in BeijingBEIJING — A man stabbed two security guards to death with a knife and wounded 12 other people in central Beijing, despite increased security ahead of the 60th anniversary of Communist rule in China. Zhang Jianfei, 46, of northeastern Jilin province, allegedly attacked the people late Thursday in Dashilan, the oldest commercial street in Beijing near the southern end of Tiananmen Square, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
Chinese intellectuals issue petition for release of dissident who championed reformsJune 26th, 2009 China intellectuals call for release of dissidentBEIJING — Dozens of China's most prominent writers and scholars are calling for the release of a dissident who was arrested after co-authoring a bold manifesto urging civil rights and political reforms. Liu Xiaobo, who had been held by police at a secret location for more than six months, was formally arrested this week on suspicion of "inciting to subvert state power," a charge that carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in jail.
Lawyer for Chinese writer secretly detained 6 months ago demands his releaseJune 8th, 2009 Lawyer says China must free dissident writerBEIJING — The lawyer for a prominent Chinese writer secretly detained six months ago called on authorities Monday to free his client or formally charge him. Dissident author Liu Xiaobo was taken away by police on Dec.
China slams Clinton's Tiananmen Square remarksJune 5th, 2009 BEIJING - China has expressed deep discontent and resolute opposition to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's call for Beijing to publish the names of those killed or missing in the Tiananmen crackdown in 1989. Clinton has urged China to openly look into the June 3-4, 1989, incident and give an accounting of those killed, missing or detained during the military crackdown.
Washington commemoration of Tiananmen overshadowed by US need for Chinese cooperationJune 4th, 2009 Washington commemoration of Tiananmen overshadowedWASHINGTON — Activists and U.S. lawmakers looking to highlight the 20th anniversary of China's bloody crackdown at Tiananmen Square are finding their efforts overshadowed by the emergence of a China crucial to U.S.
China bars foreign journalists from Tiananmen Square ahead of 20th anniversary of protestsJune 3rd, 2009 China bars foreign reporters from Tiananmen SquareBEIJING — Foreign journalists were barred from Beijing's Tiananmen Square on Wednesday as police fanned out across the vast plaza on the eve of the 20th anniversary of the bloody crackdown on 1989 pro-democracy protests. Authorities blocked social networking and image-sharing Web sites such as Twitter and Flickr and confined dissidents to their homes or forced them to leave Beijing, as they ramped up efforts to prevent online discussions about or commemorations of those who died in the military assault on demonstrators on the night of June 3-4 1989.
Tiananmen protest leader says Macau denies him entry ahead of crackdown anniversaryJune 3rd, 2009 Macau denies entry to Tiananmen protest leaderHONG KONG — The second most-wanted student leader from the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests was denied entry to the southern Chinese territory of Macau on Wednesday, a day before the 20th anniversary of China's crackdown. He said he was being detained at the airport.
China blocks Twitter, bars reporters from Tiananmen ahead of 20th anniversary of crackdownJune 3rd, 2009 China bars reporters from Tiananmen; blocks blogsBEIJING — Foreign journalists were barred from Beijing's Tiananmen Square on Wednesday as an Internet clampdown that blocked Twitter expanded to include more blogs on the eve of the 20th anniversary of a bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protests. In a further sign of the government's unwavering hard-line stance toward the protests, the second most-wanted student leader from 1989 said he had been denied entry to the southern Chinese territory of Macau.
Prominent Tiananmen leader says he's arrived in Macau, seeking entry before anniversaryJune 3rd, 2009 Tiananmen student leader seeks entry to MacauHONG KONG — A prominent student leader from the 1989 pro-democracy protests at Beijing's Tiananmen Square says he's arrived in the Chinese gambling enclave of Macau to turn himself in. Wu'er Kaixi told The Associated Press by phone Wednesday that immigration officials at Macau's airport took him to a room after he arrived from Taipei.
Chinese security out in force in Tiananmen Square on 20th anniversary of crackdownJune 3rd, 2009 Tiananmen security tight on crackdown anniversaryBEIJING — A massive police presence ringed China's iconic Tiananmen Square on Thursday, the 20th anniversary of the bloody crackdown on pro-democracy activists, as the government continued an overwhelming drive to muzzle dissent and block commemorations. An exiled protest leader — famous for publicly haranguing one of China's top leaders 20 years ago — was also blocked from returning home to confront officials over what he called the "June 4 massacre."
Foreign journalists were barred from the vast square as uniformed and plainclothes police stood guard across the vast plaza that was the epicenter of the student-led movement that was crushed by the military on the night of June 3-4, 1989.
China cracks down on Twitter, other social media ahead of Tiananmen anniversaryJune 3rd, 2009 China cracks down on Twitter, other social mediaBEIJING — Chinese authorities shut down blogs, Internet forums and social media sites such as Twitter in an apparent attempt to stem online political discussion ahead of Thursday's 20th anniversary of the bloody crackdown on 1989's Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests. As in past years, dissidents were rounded up and shipped out of Beijing and foreign media reports on the protests and continuing calls for an independent investigation into the events of June 3-4, 1989, have been blocked.
Former Chinese political prisoner detained ahead of 1989 Tiananmen protest anniversaryJune 2nd, 2009 China dissident held ahead of protest anniversaryBEIJING — A former Chinese political prisoner has been detained just days before the 20th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests, a human rights group said Tuesday. Wu Gaoxing, a former educator in his late 60s, was taken from his home in the eastern city of Taizhou by security agents on Saturday, shortly after the publication of a letter he had co-signed complaining about economic discrimination against dissidents, the New York-based Human Rights in China said in a news release.
Chinese authorities clamp down on dissidents ahead of anniversary of 1989 Tiananmen protestsJune 2nd, 2009 China clamps down ahead of Tiananmen anniversaryBEIJING — Chinese authorities blocked popular Web sites like Twitter and Flickr on Tuesday after forcing dissidents from Beijing in a clampdown ahead of the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests. Exiled former student leader Chai Ling, meanwhile, issued a rare public statement before Thursday's anniversary of the bloody crackdown, calling for the release of political prisoners, an independent investigation into the events and permission for former student leaders to return home.
China detains exiled Tiananmen-era dissident for more than 6 months without chargeMay 13th, 2009 Exiled Tiananmen-era dissident detained in ChinaBEIJING — An exiled leader in the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests has been secretly detained in south China for more than six months after trying to return to his homeland for the first time since 2002, his family said. Nearly two decades since China's pro-democracy campaign blossomed briefly in the spring of 1989, the movement and its suppression are still taboo and restrictions on those who took part remain harsh.