Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Top official in dissident’s province sacked

The eastern province of Shandong where blind activist Chen Guangcheng was under house arrest before he fled has sacked the top official in charge of the courts, prosecution and police, state press said on Wednesday.

1 comment:

Guanyu said...

Top official in dissident’s province sacked

Agence France-Presse in Beijing
30 May 2012

The eastern province of Shandong where blind activist Chen Guangcheng was under house arrest before he fled has sacked the top official in charge of the courts, prosecution and police, state press said on Wednesday.

Bai Jimin was dismissed from the standing committee of the Communist Party of Shandong on Tuesday, the official China News Service said in a short report.

His dismissal comes after Chen sparked a diplomatic row between Beijing and Washington after taking refuge in the US embassy and on May 20 being allowed to leave China to study in New York.

Chen entered the US embassy in late April after a daring escape from extra-legal house arrest in Shandong’s Dongshigu village, where he had languished since his release from prison in 2010.

The self-taught lawyer was jailed in 2006 after he exposed widespread forced abortions and sterilisations in Shandong’s “one-child” family population control policy.

During his house arrest, he and his family were beaten and isolated from friends and supporters by up to 60 hired thugs who refused to allow him to communicate with the outside world or leave his home.

No official reason was given for the sacking of Bai, 58, who was given a lower-level post in the provincial legislature, but rights activists welcomed the move.

“I can only hope that in the future Shandong leaders will show full respect for the law and work to rule Shandong by law,” said Shandong rights lawyer Liu Weiguo, who has represented members of Chen’s family.

“Chen’s case has been highly unusual for its illegalities and lack of legal procedure. In such unusual cases it is hard to believe that the head of the politics and law commission went unaware.”