Chinese Dissident’s Family Defects
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WASHINGTON, March 12, 2009—The wife and children of a top
civil rights lawyer under close surveillance by the Chinese authorities have
arrived in the United States after walking across the border to Thailand, Gao
Zhisheng’s wife Geng He has told Radio Free Asia (RFA).
Geng said her daughter, 15, and son, 5, had suffered “great
hardship” in China from living under virtual house arrest in their
Beijing home.
“I left China because my family had been under tight
surveillance for a long time. We experienced—in our careers and daily
life—great hardship and difficulty,” Geng told RFA’s Mandarin
service in her first interview since arriving in the United States on March 11 to
seek asylum.
“My
daughter was unable to attend school. Because she was unable to attend school,
she tried to commit suicide several times,” Geng said. “I had no
place to turn. So I fled with my children.”
Geng
said she had left a note for Gao, an Army veteran who lost his law license
after he criticized the government for its treatment of the banned Falun Gong
spiritual movement.
Gao
began a rolling hunger strike among fellow civil rights activists to protest the
ill-treatment of lawyers and rights activists at the hands of police and local
government officials.
“I
left a note for my husband that I was leaving with the children,” Geng
said.
“I
said in my note that our daughter is miserable because she couldn’t
attend school. I said I was miserable and I had to take the kids and
leave,” said Geng, in tears.
Dangerous
route through Thailand
Geng
and her children left China on Jan. 9 and arrived in Thailand on Jan. 16,
leaving for the United States on March 10.
Describing
the family’s dramatic escape, Geng said they first left Beijing very
quietly, unnoticed by the state security police who usually followed them.
“We
could not travel by air. We took a train,” Geng said, adding that Gao was
unable to accompany them because he couldn’t throw off the police on his
tail.
“Eventually,
with the help of friends, we freed ourselves from police surveillance and we
walked to another country,” she said.
Geng
said friends who helped her leave China were members of the banned Falun Gong
spiritual movement.
“We
walked day and night. It was extremely hard. I did not even know the names of
some of the towns we passed through.”
“It
was extraordinarily difficult to get us out of China. The friends who helped us
escape took enormous pains, some even risking their own lives,” Geng
said.
She
said she hadn’t been in touch with Gao since leaving China.
“On
Feb. 4, when we had arrived in the second country, I heard from a friend that
he had been detained. I am very worried,” said Geng, who has no idea of
Gao’s whereabouts.
‘Very
fragile state’
Now
in the United States, Geng said she has few specific plans.
“The
first step is to get here and to give my daughter a chance to heal her mental
scars,” she said.
“She
is in a very fragile state. When she feels better, I will arrange for her to
get an education. It’s important to get an education.”
She
said her son asked repeatedly for Gao, and whether his father had been sent to
prison again.
Gao’s
whereabouts remained unclear for months after he was subjected to a secret
trial by the authorities on unspecified subversion charges in 2006.
Lauded
by China’s own Justice Ministry as one of China’s Top 10 lawyers in
2001 for his pro bono work in helping poor people sue government
officials over corruption and mistreatment, Gao was once a member of the ruling
Chinese Communist Party. He resigned from the Party in 2005.
Gao’s
fortunes took a sharp downturn after he wrote an open letter to President Hu
Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao in October 2005 urging them to end the
persecution of Falun Gong practitioners, detailing a range of abuses they
suffer in custody, including torture, beatings, and execution.
Report
on abuses
In
its most recent report on human rights around the world, the U.S. State
Department noted that Gao’s whereabouts remained unknown.
It
also noted the authorities had revoked the professional licenses of several
prominent lawyers, including Gao and of Teng Biao, who offered to represent
Tibetans taken into custody for their role in the March 2008 Tibetan uprising
in Lhasa.
“Government-employed
lawyers often refused to represent defendants in politically sensitive cases,
and defendants frequently found it difficult to find an attorney,” the
report said.
“Officials
deployed a wide range of tactics to obstruct the work of lawyers representing
sensitive clients, including unlawful detentions, disbarment, intimidation,
refusal to allow a case to be tried before a court, and physical abuse.”
Original
reporting in Mandarin by Tang Qiwei. Mandarin service director: Jennifer Chou.
Written for the Web in English. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.
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Sarah Jackson-Han
News Director, English
Radio Free Asia (RFA)
jacksonhans@rfa.org
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