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Chinese blind lawyer escapes house arrest
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 27, 2012

Blind Chinese activist in '100% safe location': supporter
Beijing (AFP) April 27, 2012 - Chen Guangcheng is in a "100 percent safe" location in Beijing, a supporter said Friday, amid speculation the blind Chinese lawyer had sought refuge at the US embassy after escaping from house arrest.

Chen fled his closely guarded home in the eastern province of Shandong last Sunday, escaping from under the noses of dozens of plain-clothes security officers with the help of his supporters.

His exact whereabouts are unknown, but Bob Fu, a US-based activist in close contact with Chen, told AFP the lawyer was "now in a 100 percent safe location in Beijing".

No one at the US embassy in Beijing returned calls for comment on whether Chen, who won worldwide acclaim for his campaigning on forced sterilisations and late-term abortions under China's "one-child" policy, had sought refuge there.

He has been under house arrest along with his wife and young son since he was released from a four-year jail sentence in September 2010.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who has repeatedly called for Chen to be released from his house arrest, is due in China on Wednesday for the annual US-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue in Beijing.


Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese lawyer who uncovered scores of rights abuses, has escaped from house arrest and appealed to Premier Wen Jiabao to keep his family safe in a video posted online Friday.

Chen, 40, fled his closely guarded home in the eastern province of Shandong last Sunday, escaping from under the noses of dozens of plain-clothes security officers with the help of his supporters.

In an address to China's premier, he said he had suffered repeated beatings, and expressed serious concerns for his wife and young son, still being held at the family's home in Dongshigu village.

"Even though I am now free, I am still concerned because my family -- my mother, my wife, my child are still in their hands," he said.

Chen's exact whereabouts are unknown, but there are rumours he may have sought refuge at the US embassy.

Bob Fu, a US-based activist in close contact with Chen, told AFP the lawyer was "now in a 100 percent safe location in Beijing", but declined to give further details.

No one at the US embassy in Beijing returned calls for comment on whether Chen, who won worldwide acclaim for his campaigning on forced sterilisations and late-term abortions under China's "one-child" policy, had sought refuge there.

Fu -- a former Tiananmen Square democracy activist who fled China in 1996 after being persecuted for his religious beliefs -- said Chen had previously expressed reluctance to leave the country.

"He said he wants to fight to the end inside China for his citizen's rights. He wants to lead a normal life as a Chinese citizen," Fu said.

Chen's escape came ahead of a visit to China next week by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who has repeatedly called for him to be released from house arrest.

If he has been granted refuge by the United States, he would be the first Chinese dissident known to have done so since Fang Lizhi, a key figure in the pro-democracy movement.

Fang was granted refuge at the embassy after publicly supporting the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, and forced into exile in 1990. He died in the United States earlier this month at the age of 76.

Wang Lijun, former right-hand man of the disgraced Chinese leader Bo Xilai, reportedly went to the US consulate in the southwestern city of Chengdu in February to seek US asylum, but was turned down.

Chen had been under house arrest along with his wife and young son since he was released from a four-year jail sentence in September 2010.

The family was forced to live holed up in their cramped home for nearly 20 months -- guarded round the clock by government-employed thugs who Chen said had repeatedly beaten him.

Chen gained fame for helping people sue officials over a wide variety of injustices, with corrupt officials in government a particular target.

After pursuing law at a school for the blind during his youth, he armed himself with legal knowledge and began giving free legal advice to villagers, although he has no formal legal qualifications.

He was jailed in 2006 after accusing family-planning officials in Shandong of forcing at least 7,000 women to be sterilised or undergo late-term abortions.

That same year, he was named by Time magazine as one of the world's 100 most influential people for his courage in exposing the abortion and sterilisation abuses.

Reporters and activists who have tried to visit Chen during his house arrest have been unable to access his home, and some have even been roughed up by the thugs who stand guard at every entrance to his village.

Hollywood actor Christian Bale famously tried to go visit the lawyer last December, but was stopped by thugs who pushed and punched him.

Chen's treatment is particularly draconian even in China, where dissidents and lawyers are frequently held under some form of house arrest if they upset authorities or are believed to be a threat.

Fu said news of Chen's escape burst into the open in the early hours of Friday, when government officials went to Dongshigu village to search his house and that of his elder brother Chen Guangfu.

A China-based supporter of Chen, whose name AFP is withholding for his safety, said violence then broke out in the village.

Fu said the lawyer's wife, mother and child were unable to leave the house, which had been surrounded by police, while his elder brother had been arrested.

He added that He Peirong, one of Chen's supporters who helped transport him to a safe location, was arrested at her home in the eastern city of Nanjing on Friday.

-- The video of Chen Guangcheng's appeal to the Chinese premier can be viewed at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ycMCdAtgeu0

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Chen Guangcheng: China's blind 'barefoot' lawyer
Beijing (AFP) April 27, 2012 - Blind activist Chen Guangcheng, who has escaped from house arrest, gained worldwide acclaim for exposing abuses under China's draconian family planning policy.

Blinded after an illness in his infancy, Chen, 40, grew up in China's eastern province of Shandong on classical Chinese tales of courageous heroes who fought wicked officials to help powerless ordinary people.

The stories, passed on to him by his father, inspired Chen to help others and to embark on his civil rights crusade, his brother Chen Guangfu once told AFP.

But his efforts at improving human rights in China worked to further mire him into a deepening abyss of abuse stemming from police beatings, round-the-clock surveillance, numerous detentions and finally jail.

After accusing authorities in Shandong's Linyi county of forcing up to 7,000 women to undergo late-term abortions or sterilisations under the "one child" policy, Chen was sentenced to four years and three months in prison in August 2006.

Officially, Chen was convicted of "wilfully damaging public property and organising a mob to disturb traffic," which stemmed from a 2006 rally by his supporters protesting against the government's treatment of the blind lawyer.

During his trial, his lawyers, who had already suffered repeated beatings by thugs believed to be hired by local Linyi authorities, were refused entry into the court room.

While in prison, he was beaten by fellow inmates on at least one occasion, according to the Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD), a network of rights activists.

His wife, Yuan Weijing, was reportedly subject to official harassment and physical violence.

Since his release in September 2010, Chen and his wife and young son have been held under house arrest, effectively cut off from the outside world, with dozens of security officers posted outside their home.

Activists and journalists who tried to visit him at his home were roughed up or harassed and barred from gaining access to the village, among them Hollywood actor Christian Bale, who travelled there last December.

Chen and his wife were also severely beaten after they smuggled out a videotape of themselves documenting the conditions of their house arrest last year, the US-based ChinaAid rights group said at the time.

Chen, who has no formal legal qualifications, is what is known in China as a "barefoot," or self-taught, lawyer.

After pursuing law at a blind school during his youth, Chen armed himself with legal knowledge and began giving free legal advice to villagers for all sorts of problems, according to his brother.

He gained fame in his locality for helping people sue officials over a wide variety of injustices, with corrupt officials in government a particular target.

Although the State Family Planning Commission in 2005 publicly admitted that local officials in Linyi had carried out forced abortions and sterilisations and vowed to bring perpetrators to justice, pressure on Chen from county authorities never abated.

In 2006, he was named by US-based Time magazine as one of the world's 100 most influential people for his courage in exposing rights abuses in China.

Chen is a past recipient of the Ramon Magsaysay Award, a human rights prize awarded to deserving activists in Asia.



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