Exiled Chinese Writer Vows to Continue Struggle
January 12, 2011- Acclaimed Chinese author and rights activist Yu Jie vowed
Thursday to continue his struggle for freedom in China, where he says he was
tortured and deprived of the freedom to write and practice his religion.
"My decision to leave China marked an important turning point," Yu declared
to RFA in his first media interview a day after going into self-imposed
exile in the United States.
He said he had come under tremendous pressure since his detained "best
friend," Liu Xiaobo, was declared Nobel Peace Prize winner in October 2010.
Since then, "my situation deteriorated rapidly," he said. "I was subjected
to torture."
"For the better part of the past year, I was deprived of my freedom and
under surveillance," said Yu, 38, who is also a leader of the underground
Protestant church in China.
"I was even deprived of the freedom to publish overseas. I felt that, as a
writer and as a Christian, I no longer had any freedom to express myself and
to practice my religion. So I chose to come to the United States, where I
can live freely," he explained.
Yu, who wrote a controversial book about China's Premier Wen Jiabao which
was banned in China but published in Hong Kong, said he had visited the
United States more than a dozen times before but had never wanted to leave
China.
"Many friends often asked why I did not stay and instead always chose to
return to China. I told them that I am a writer who writes in the Chinese
language, and that as long as my life was not in danger, as long as I had
even the slightest degree of freedom to write, I would insist on staying in
China."
Unbearable
But Yu, who had been repeatedly denied permission to leave China after being
severely beaten by security agents in late 2010, said the pressure on him
since Liu won the Nobel prize had become unbearable.
Yu then asked RFA to convey a message to his friends in China, saying he was
"deeply grateful" to them for their concern over his well-being.
"I will be spending a relatively long time in the United States. I will not
stop writing," he said, about his struggle to help bring freedom to his
compatriots.
"I believe that living overseas, I will have access to more information and
material."
"I will be able to write with a free spirit-free from fear. I will have the
freedom to write and to publish. I believe my observation, studies, writing,
and commentaries about China will reach new heights. I will not let my
friends down."
Reported and translated by Jennifer Chou for RFA. Written in English by
Parameswaran Ponnudurai.
Radio Free Asia is a private, nonprofit corporation broadcasting and
publishing online news, information, and commentary in nine East Asian
languages to listeners who do not have access to full and free news media.
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