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China rights lawyer gets suspended jail sentence: lawyer
By Becky Davis
Beijing (AFP) Dec 22, 2015


Hong Kong student leader Wong 'expects jail'
Hong Kong (AFP) Dec 22, 2015 - Hong Kong student leader Joshua Wong said Tuesday he is preparing for a possible prison sentence next year, as another trial date was set in a string of cases he faces relating to pro-democracy protests.

Wong 19, was the teenage face of the Umbrella Movement, which brought parts of Hong Kong to a standstill for more than two months last year calling for fully free leadership elections, and has been charged with multiple offences.

He was in court Tuesday over an anti-China protest in the build-up to the street rallies and will stand trial in May.

"I already expect the outcome that I may go to jail," Wong told AFP Tuesday.

"I'm ready to bear the responsibility for organising the campaign and the movement," he said.

The small protest in June 2014 saw dozens gather outside Beijing's representative office in the city.

Wong, student leader Nathan Law, and activists Raphael Wong and Albert Chan have been charged with obstructing police, which carries a possible two-year jail term. The four have pleaded not guilty.

Separately, Wong faces trial in February over a demonstration that saw students climb into the Hong Kong government complex on September 26, 2014, triggering wider rallies that exploded two days later when police fired tear gas to disperse crowds.

Wong was charged with inciting others to take part in an unlawful assembly and taking part in an unlawful assembly, which carry a jail term of up to five years.

"I hope to show that activists in Hong Kong still persist to fight for universal suffrage and democracy even though we are facing political prosecution," Wong said.

But "not going to jail may be better", he added, saying that it would interfere with his university studies.

Sending Wong to prison could trigger a backlash for the authorities, said political analyst Willy Lam.

Beijing wants to see him punished harshly "to serve him up as an example of rebelliousness against Beijing and Chinese values," said Lam, a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

"(But) If he were jailed, this would have a very negative impact for the current administration because many young people consider Joshua Wong as their inspiration for getting involved in politics."

Wong also faces another charge relating to a protest in Mong Kok, where the most violent clashes happened during the pro-democracy rallies.

Hong Kong is semi-autonomous after being returned to China by Britain in 1997, with much greater freedoms than seen on the mainland.

But there are fears those freedoms are being eroded by increasing interference from Beijing.

One of China's most celebrated human rights lawyers was given a three-year suspended prison term on Tuesday in the latest clampdown on critics of the ruling Communist Party.

Police and plainclothes security officials were out in force to try to stop supporters and journalists reaching the court where Pu Zhiqiang was sentenced for "inciting ethnic hatred" and "picking quarrels and provoking trouble".

The verdict is the latest in a widening crackdown on civil society under President Xi Jinping, with more than 200 lawyers and activists detained or called in for questioning since the summer.

Amnesty International called it a "gross injustice".

Pu, who has represented labour camp victims and dissident artist Ai Weiwei, was arrested a year-and-a-half ago over posts on social media between 2011 and 2014.

His secretive trial at Beijing's No. 2 Intermediate People's Court ended Tuesday with a widely-anticipated guilty verdict, but with the sentence suspended for three years.

The ruling means Pu may be sent to jail if he repeats his criticism or runs afoul of police-imposed rules.

"Pu will not have to immediately go to prison, but he is still not a free man," his lawyer Mo Shaoping told AFP.

"We are not satisfied with the verdict because we maintain Pu is innocent."

There were angry scenes around the courthouse, where police set up a cordon to hold back activists and reporters.

- 'There are foreign journalists here' -

"Pu Zhiqiang is a good man! So speaking for the common people is a crime?" yelled one tearful woman as she was roughly shoved into a police van by uniformed officers and plainclothed officials.

"Stop putting on a play, stop acting, there are foreign journalists here," the officer told her.

Another woman stood alone at the centre of a ring of dozens of officers and plainclothes men and shouted "I just won't go! Pu Zhiqiang is innocent!" before being forcibly escorted away.

"China's judicial authorities have been dealing with these cases according to law and the person involved accepted the verdict of the court," Hong Lei, a foreign ministry spokesman, said at a regular briefing.

"Our judicial sovereignty and the decision of the court will not be affected by foreign forces."

For the next three years Pu will be subject to police monitoring and needs permission to leave Beijing.

If he breaks the law or any conditions of his release, he will be sent to prison.

In the comments for which he was tried, Pu said China did not need Communist rule, writing: "Other than secrecy, cheating, passing the buck, delay, the hammer and sickle, what kinds of secrets of governance does this party have?"

He also condemned government policy in the mainly Muslim far-western region of Xinjiang as "absurd".

Ni Yulan, a wheelchair-bound rights lawyer whose 2012 sentencing to nearly three years in prison for "picking quarrels" and "fraud" roused similar international outrage, appeared at the courthouse to show her support.

She sat serenely with her legs wrapped in a blue blanket against the bitter winter cold as her husband Dong Jiqin, also sentenced at the time to two years in prison on similar charges, wheeled her through a pushing crowd of police and plainclothes men who swept her away from reporters.

The state-run Xinhua news agency called it a "light punishment".

It said Pu had "stirred ethnic hatred among Internet users, triggering an antagonistic mentality in many and creating a severe social impact".

But rights groups condemned the sentence.

"Clearly it is positive that Pu Zhiqiang is unlikely to spend another night in jail, yet that cannot hide the gross injustice against him," said William Nee, China researcher at Amnesty International, in a statement.

"He is no criminal and this guilty verdict effectively shackles one of China's bravest champions of human rights from practising law."

Awaiting the verdict in a nearby cafe out of way of police, supporter Xu Chongyang said: "I'm devastated. This case is not just a question of China's internal affairs -- it's a case that implicates all of humanity. Pu Zhiqiang spoke the truth."


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