Activist Disappears at Beijing Airport

A troubling update to our earlier posts about Yuan Weijing, the wife of jailed blind activist Chen Guangcheng. When last we visited her in July, Yuan –who was effectively under house arrest in her home province of Shandong– had evaded her guards and traveled to Beijing where she and her two year old daughter put up at the apartment of fellow activists Hu Jia and Zeng Jinyan. Police soon camped out outside the apartment complex and physically prevented Yuan when she attempted to go to the U.S. Embassy to meet with a human rights officer. Fearful of being kidnapped and forcibly taken back home as her husband was two years earlier, Yuan holed up inside the apartment.

The thirty-one year old English teacher finally decided to test the waters today by traveling to the airport to catch a plane to the Philippines, where she was to accept the prestigious 2007 Ramon Magsayay Award for Emergent Leadership. (In naming Chen, the Magsaysay board said it was recognizing his “irrepressible passion for justice in leading ordinary Chinese citizens to assert their legitimate rights under the law.” You can read our account of his travails here.)

Zeng told us that she and her husband were with Yuan when she checked in for the flight this morning and waved goodbye to her when she entered the passenger-only security channel. She passed through customs around noon but then reported to them by phone that she had been detained by unknown security officers. There was no further contact until around three o’clock when Yuan called. “I have been kidnapped,” she said, “All my things have been taken.” After repeating herself, Yuan was cut off and further attempts to reach her were fruitless.

Zeng and her husband said they tried to report a kidnapping at the airport police station but officers were reluctant to do so and would only accept a missing person report. “Even though I have no fantasy about this government,” Zeng told us by phone, “at least I thought it had to abide by the law. I had some hope in their decency.”

Related Topics: China
  • Latest on Global Spin

    Oded Balilty / Reuters

    Netanyahu’s New Government: Warming to Peace Talks with the Palestinians?

    A flurry of gestures toward the Palestinian leadership suggests that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in his new role as leader of a center-right government, is warming toward the resumption of peace talks — or at least giving the appearance of warming; call it a rosy glow rising from a pair of announcements on Monday. One was about Palestinian prisoners who had been carrying out a mass hunger strike for weeks inside Israeli prisons. With several prisoners near death, Netanyahu approved an agreement that improves prison conditions and permits visits by family members in the Gaza Strip, the heavily guarded enclave that Palestinians have been allowed out of only for medical emergencies. Greeted by Palestinians as a victory, the deal eased concerns that a prisoner’s death might combust what are usually routine protests planned for Tuesday’s commemoration of Nakba Day, the “catastrophe” of Israel’s 1948 victory over Arab forces trying to prevent the establishment of a Jewish state.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Palestinians Mark Their Day of “Catastrophe”

    Protesters challenge Israeli troops in the West Bank while commemorating the Nakba, or “day of catastrophe” in Arabic, which marks the day when Israel declared its statehood in 1948—an act which forced thousands of Palestinians out of their homes and into a life of exile

    Christopher Furlong/ Getty Images

    Rebekah Brooks, Husband Charged in Phone-Hacking Scandal

    The convoluted saga of the British phone-hacking scandal seems to have been dragging on longer than a back-to-back performance of Wagner’s Ring Cycle. Yet despite the demise of Rupert Murdoch‘s News of the World, the launching of a public inquiry into British press standards, three police investigations and more than 40 arrests, the scandal has yet to draw real blood. The closest it has come was a report released this month by a Parliamentary committee, which accused Murdoch of turning a blind eye to the hacking at his paper and declared him “not a fit person” to run an international company — a damning conclusion that nonetheless seems to have had little immediate effect.

blog comments powered by Disqus