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The wife of the famous Chinese human rights lawyer Xie Yang denounces his disappearance

2022-01-14T14:54:03.579Z


Chen Guiqiu assures that state security agents took this lawyer last Tuesday, known for defending Beijing dissidents and members of civil society


Chinese lawyer Xie Yang, in an undated photograph. CHINA CHANGE

The famous Chinese human rights lawyer Xie Yang is missing after he was taken away by security forces last Tuesday, according to his wife, the university professor of Chemistry Chen Guiqiu, on social networks.

In the last known case, the lawyer had been defending a pregnant teacher, Li Tiantian, in a rural area of ​​Hunan province (southern China), forcibly transferred to a psychiatric center, according to the Red of Human Rights Lawyers (

Weiquanwang

) on his blog.

A few days later, he himself was arrested.

“Xie Yang was detained by state security on January 11 and his whereabouts are unknown.

His phone is operational but calls are transferred to voicemail all the time," Chen said on his Twitter account.

"Local state security offices have warned Xie's family not to talk to the media."

The 49-year-old lawyer from Changsha, the capital of Hunan, is known for his defense of dissidents and other defendants in politically sensitive cases.

Among others, he has represented people involved in the New Citizen civil movement, which in the first decade of the century tried to promote transparency in Chinese government.

One of his favorite phrases is “don't let silence become a habit”.

In July 2015, he was one of those arrested in a major raid on some 200 human rights lawyers across China, which would be dubbed “709″ after the date it began.

During his detention, first six months incommunicado in a secret location and then a year and a half in a detention center, he reported to his lawyers that he had been subjected to torture, which he described in detail.

In 2017, he was tried for crimes of disorderly conduct and subversion against the state, two charges that are frequently used in China against dissidents.

At trial he pleaded guilty and retracted his allegations of torture.

But the court did not impose any sentence on him, allowing him to keep his license to practice when he returned home.

Something that the vast majority of those arrested in the 709 raid, subjected to the scrutiny of the authorities even today, have never managed to recover.

It was later learned that he was forced to withdraw those complaints as a condition for his release.

In 2020, his license to practice was finally withdrawn, amid a climate of tightening control of civil society and surveillance of dissidents.

The Hunan provincial government's Justice Department said at the time that his permit had been revoked for multiple episodes of "contempt of court" - his attempts to defend his clients - and for comments on social media that were deemed either defamatory or misleading. endangered national security.

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Source: elparis

All news articles on 2022-01-14

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