Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




SINO DAILY
Chen vows to fight China 'threat' from new platform
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 02, 2013


Chen Guangcheng, the Chinese activist who dramatically escaped house arrest, said Wednesday he would speak out more boldly against Beijing's "threat" to humanity as he took positions at three US groups.

The blind-since-childhood campaigner was allowed to move to the United States last year after a diplomatic crisis between Washington and Beijing.

But more recently, he had a falling out with New York University which he accused of ending his studies due to Chinese pressure.

Chen accepted three-year simultaneous appointments at the Witherspoon Institute, a conservative group known for opposition to same-sex marriage and abortion, as well as the Catholic University of America and the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice, which carries on the legacy of late liberal Democratic congressman Tom Lantos.

The 41-year-old, who will move to Washington, hailed the three institutions as "not intimidated by the powerful."

Chen said he will enjoy a platform "to speak up about the facts and realities of the Chinese communist authorities' violations of human rights, their inhumane brutality and the threat they pose to humanity."

"Of course the dictatorship will find a way to interfere with our undertakings, but being in a free society, no one can stop someone from doing what he or she wants to do," Chen told a news conference.

In a stinging written statement in June, Chen accused New York University -- which has just opened a campus in Shanghai -- of bowing to China to end his studies at the private Manhattan school.

He declined to repeat his criticism at the news conference and voiced his "sincere gratitude" to New York University and its professor Jerome Cohen, an expert on Chinese law who was his mentor.

New York University has adamantly denied succumbing to pressure, saying it provided Chen and his family with generous support including accommodation but had only planned a one-year course of study.

Cohen has said that he wanted to shield Chen, a newcomer in New York who spoke little English, from the rough-and-tumble of US politics and from being unwittingly appropriated by conservative Christians.

'That's the style of Mao Zedong'

Chen rose to prominence as a self-taught lawyer who exposed forced abortions carried out by authorities in eastern Shandong province as they implemented China's one-child-only policy.

However, Chen is not known to be religious or to have a position on the right to voluntary abortion, an intensely divisive issue in the United States.

Chen spent four years in prison until 2010 and later said he and his wife were subjected to severe beatings under house arrest for refusing to stay quiet.

He scaled the walls of his home and fled in a getaway car to the US embassy in Beijing on the eve of a visit by then secretary of state Hillary Clinton.

Asked whether he has been co-opted by US conservatives, Chen said: "There is enough diversity in the United States so that everybody can be independent in their thinking and actions."

"To use ideology to block out the truth is not something that's done here. That's the style of Mao Zedong," he said, referring to communist China's founder.

"I believe that human rights supersedes partisan politics and it's greater than national borders," he said.

John Garvey, the president of Catholic University, the national university of the Roman Catholic Church, criticized those who "see everything as falling into two categories" of liberal and conservative.

"The institutions that are supporting him now, like the university that supported him before, don't really fit some easy description like that," Garvey said.

Richard Swett, the treasurer of the Lantos Foundation and son-in-law of Tom Lantos, said that the late congressman -- a Holocaust survivor -- also believed that human rights transcended differences in Washington.

"It is my hope that he (Chen) is one individual who can help to build a bridge between the polarized politics of this world and particularly in this community," said Swett, himself a former Democratic congressman.

.


Related Links
China News from SinoDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SINO DAILY
China's e-cigarette inventor fights for financial rewards
Beijing (AFP) Oct 02, 2013
The Chinese inventor who dreamed up the electronic cigarette in a nicotine-induced vision says that despite its global popularity, copycat versions and legal disputes mean he has battled to cash in on his creation. "Smoking is the most unhealthy thing in people's everyday lives.... I've made a big contribution to society," said Hon Lik, 57, in a cramped office in Beijing, sending tobacco-sce ... read more


SINO DAILY
UCLA engineers develop new metabolic pathway to more efficiently convert sugars into biofuels

KAIST announced a novel technology to produce gasoline by a metabolically engineered microorganism

Solving ethanol's corrosion problem may help speed the biofuel to market

First look at complete sorghum genome may usher in new uses for food and fuel

SINO DAILY
Putting a face on a robot

People prefer different robot faces depending on task assigned

Robots take over

A swarm on every desktop: Robotics experts learn from public

SINO DAILY
Installation of the first AREVA turbines at Trianel Windpark Borkum and Global Tech 1

Trump's suit to halt wind farm project to be heard in November

Ireland connects first community-owned wind farm to grid

Moventas significantly expands wind footprint

SINO DAILY
Hong Kong's handcarts keep the city on a roll

US-made electric car tops new registrations in Norway

China, the global auto industry's best hope

Australia researchers unveil 'attention-powered' car

SINO DAILY
Libya's oil sector faces long-term decline amid anarchy

Slow progress in Israel-Turkey talks threatens gas pipeline plan

US court backs BP in dispute over compensation for oil spill

Russia charges all 30 Greenpeace activists with piracy

SINO DAILY
Bangladesh breaks ground for first nuclear power plant

Four tonnes of radioactive water spilled in Fukushima

New leak at crippled Fukushima nuclear plant: TEPCO

Radioactivity found in fracking waste water in Pennsylvania

SINO DAILY
IEA: Southeast Asia's energy demand to increase 80 percent

Nigeria signs $1.3 bn power plant deal with China

Myanmar's energy sector boosted by World Bank investment

ASEAN region has potential for 70 percent green energy

SINO DAILY
ForWarn follows rapidly changing forest conditions

Indonesia, EU seal pact to stop illegal timber exports

Seeing the forest and the trees

Uphill for the trees of the world




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement