Wife concerned over top Chinese dissident’s life
February 14, 2012— The exiled wife of China’s prominent jailed dissident lawyer Gao
Zhisheng on Tuesday expressed doubt over whether her husband is alive, saying she could
not trust the authorities who say he is serving his latest imprisonment in a remote
region.
Speaking to RFA as visiting Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping met with U.S. President
Barack Obama at the White House, Geng He, who fled to the U.S. with her two children in
2009, said she worried about her husband’s safety as he had disappeared for lengthy
periods and re-emerged to say he had been tortured.
“This government lied about his situation all along. Can we believe what they say? Can we
believe Gao Zhisheng is still alive? That is our worry,” she said in an interview.
Authorities in Beijing have said little publicly about Gao, one of China’s most outspoken
dissidents, although his case has been highlighted by foreign governments and human rights
groups across the globe.
But, in December, China’s official Xinhua news agency said in a terse announcement that
Gao had been imprisoned for three years for repeatedly violating his terms for probation
for "inciting subversion" of the state.
Geng, who has not spoken to Gao for nearly two years, said she had become more concerned
over Gao’s life after his brother traveled to a jail in Shaya county in the far
northwestern Xinjiang region where in December they were informed Gao was being held.
Prison authorities told the brother that Gao was not allowed visitors and did not want to
see his family, Geng said.
“He used his career as a lawyer to work for fairness and human rights principles. But the
situation is that the Chinese government harshly persecutes the good lawyers that the
people need,” Gao said.
Once a prominent lawyer lauded by China's ruling Communist Party, Gao fell afoul of
the government after he defended some of China's most vulnerable people, including
Christians, coal miners, and followers of the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement.
In 2006, authorities arrested Gao and handed him a sentence for “inciting subversion” that
was later suspended. But over the next five years, Gao repeatedly suffered forced
disappearances and torture, Geng said.
Prominent case
“We have no idea if he is indeed alive,” Jared Genser, Gao’s lawyer in the U.S., said in
an interview.
Genser, an international human rights lawyer, said that Gao’s case stands out for the
brazenness with which the Chinese authorities have withheld information about his
situation, despite international attention.
“While I would like to believe the Chinese government, they have repeatedly lied about
this case,” he said.
“I could see why, if they had killed him – from torture, for example – they would want to
postpone making that public until after the leadership transition… and why they would want
to keep that very much under wraps at this sensitive time,” he said.
Vice President Xi is widely expected to take over the leadership of the ruling Chinese
Communist Party later this year and the government in 2013.
“They are flagrantly lying to the international community and torturing not only Gao
Zhisheng, but also his family is being tortured by the lies they are telling to the
international community and to the family themselves. I think that is the most disturbing
part about this case,” Genser said.
Asked what message she had for Xi, Geng said, “My husband is an excellent lawyer.… Why
would you have such a good lawyer “disappeared’?”
Geng also testified at a hearing Tuesday of the Congressional-Executive Commission on
China, saying her husband once said, “’You can’t be a rights lawyer [in China] without
becoming a rights case yourself.’”
“Whatever he does I support him,” Geng told RFA, speaking about how hard Gao’s ordeal has
been on her children.
“It has been four years since I spent Valentine’s Day with him,” she said, and brought out
a Valentine card that her son, Peter, made for his father.
“I’ve wanted to grow up to be like you. I hope you can come home soon. I love you,” he had
written.
Reported by Zhang Min and Wei Ling for RFA’s Mandarin and Cantonese services. Written in
English with additional reporting by Rachel Vandenbrink.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/women/genghe-02142012172353.html
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