Jan 31, 2018

Taiwan: Wife of Taiwanese Democracy Activist Barred from Entering China to Visit Her Husband in Prison


Photo Courtesy of Wikipedia Commons

On Tuesday, 30 January 2018, the wife of political prisoner Lee Ming-cheh – an NGO democracy activist who was arrested in mainland China in March 2017 – was barred from entering the People’s Republic despite receiving a visitation notice. The official reason stated is that she did not have the right travel permit. Taiwan responded by urging China to grant her the visitation rights, insisting that the situation goes against her basic human rights. 

The article below was published by Agence France Presse:

The wife of a Taiwanese democracy activist who was jailed in China in a case which further strained relations was Tuesday [30 January 2018] barred from boarding a flight to visit him in prison.

Lee Ming-cheh -- an NGO worker arrested during a trip to the mainland last March -- was sentenced in November to five years in prison by a court in the central province of Hunan on charges of subverting state power.

Human rights and democracy activists have been targeted in Chinese President Xi Jinping's crackdown on dissent since he took power in 2012.

Taipei had called Lee's jailing "unacceptable" and a serious blow to cross-strait relations, while his wife Lee Ching-yu called his trial a "political show".

She received a visitation notice from Chishan prison in Hunan but was told at the airport on Tuesday [30 January 2018] she could not board as she does not have the necessary travel permit.

Lee Ching-yu had her mainland travel permit cancelled last April when she was trying to locate Lee, who was held incommunicado for months before his trial.

Since then, Chinese authorities had only granted her single-entry visas to attend the trial and sentencing.

Taiwan authorities urged China Tuesday to issue the necessary permits for her.

"It is regrettable that China did not allow Ms Lee to board the plane to China today," the Mainland Affairs Council, which handles official contacts with Beijing, said in a statement.

"Granting of visitation rights to relatives is a guaranteed basic human right," it said.

Lee had admitted the charges during his trial in September, stating that he had written and distributed online articles that criticised China's ruling Communist Party and promoted democracy, among other topics.

He had shared "Taiwan's democratic experiences" with his Chinese friends online for many years and often mailed books to them, according to the Taiwan Association for Human Rights.

Lee Ching-yu -- who tattooed her husband's name on her arm before his trial -- has appealed for overseas support and testified at a US Congressional hearing last May.