After being
found hanged in a hospital in central China, activists demand to know what
really happened to the 62-year-old who saw it as his mission to fight for the
democratization of his country.
All eyes
are on China's human rights record after 62-year-old dissident Li Wangyang was
found dead at a hospital In Shaoyang, central China, on Thursday.
New
York-based Human Rights in China (HRIC) reported that Li's sister and
brother-in-law had found him in the hospital ward strung up to a windowsill
with bandages around his neck. His feet were reportedly touching the ground.
According to eyewitness accounts, 40 police officers immediately stormed into
the hospital and removed his body, raising concerns over an accurate assessment
of the cause of death.
Authorities
have blamed his death on suicide. Li's friends and family, however, do not
believe this to be possible and suspect foul play, especially because his feet
were touching the ground when he was found.
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| Chen Guangcheng perturbed Chinese authorities by turning to the US for help |
'No
indication' of suicidal tendencies
Up to his
death, Li was also heavily guarded. Zhang Shanguang, Li's close friend from
prison, told DW there was "no indication whatsoever" that Li had
suicidal tendencies.
"Right
up to his death, he was acting normal. He showed great interest in the
situation in Syria. There was no indication whatsoever that he wanted to take
his own life," Zhang said.
Chinese
authorities did agree on Thursday to allow an autopsy of his body. But skeptics
like Zhang question the authenticity of the autopsy that is to be carried out.
He said the authorities were only allowing it to deter negative attention.
"The
local government is probably worried that Li Wangyang will turn into another
Chen Guangcheng," Zhang told DW. "Because that would put the Chinese
government in a bad light."
China of
late has drawn negative international attention after the high-profile and
widely-reported case of Chen Guangcheng, who caused a diplomatic row between
the US and China after escaping from house arrest over a month ago to the US
embassy in Beijing.
Like Chen
Guangcheng, Li Wangyang was no stranger to the Chinese penal system. He spent
22 years in jail after first being sentenced to 13 years imprisonment - 11 of
which he served - for supporting trade unions in the 1989 student uprising. In
2001 he was sentenced again to 10 years in prison for filing a lawsuit for
maltreatment while in prison - jail conditions, he claimed, were so bad that
they left him nearly blind and deaf and in overall poor health.
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| Chinese authorities quashed dissent in June, 1989 |
All for his
country
His poor
health is the reason he had been in the hospital at the time of his death. Li's
close friend, Li Zheng'an, told Hong Kong Cable TV:
"Whenever
I see him, I feel bad … really bad. A healthy person being tortured to death.
Why? Because he cared about the future of his country?"
Many people
were arrested in the student movement in 1989. And many others were killed in
the infamous Tiananmen Square Massacre. In his last interview taken by Hong
Kong Cable TV on May 24 this year, Li said he had felt obligated to take part
in the movement back then. "I wanted to do my part to turn China into a
democratic society."
"Many
people were killed in the massacre. But I only had to go to jail," Li
continued. "But I haven't been killed. Even if I were killed, I wouldn't
regret a thing. I have a responsibility to fight for the democratization of my
country, to see the introduction of a multiple party system as soon as
possible. And not even death can stop me."
Activists
demand a full investigation into his death.
Author: Sarah Berning
Editor: Shamil Shams



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