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July 14, 2015

How support for a Chinese rights lawyer could have led to crackdown

POSTED: 13 Jul 2015 23:05   UPDATED: 14 Jul 2015 01:15

Human rights lawyer Wang Yu talks during an interview with Reuters in Beijing in this March 1, 2014 photo. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

BEIJING: China's state media last month accused Wang Yu, the country's most prominent female human rights lawyer, of "blabbering about the rule of law and human rights".

Two weeks later, she met a Reuters reporter, saying she thought her arrest was inevitable.

Wang has defended Wu Gan, an online free speech advocate, Li Tingting, a prominent rights activist, and Cao Shunli, an activist who died in detention after being denied medical treatment.

In doing so, Wang became the focus of an unprecedented crackdown on human rights lawyers in China.

Although the government has not disclosed the reason for the crackdown, lawyers say the widespread support for Wang in the rights community appeared to be the catalyst.

State media said on Saturday police had criminally detained Wang and some colleagues. Four lawyers taken in for questioning said police had warned them not to advocate for Wang, according to accounts by them and other activists.

The rights group Amnesty International said 101 lawyers and activists, including Wang, were targeted by police in a nationwide sweep.

Police have said Fengrui Law Firm, the firm that Wang works for, is a "major criminal organisation" that served as a coordinating "platform" involved in dozens of sensitive cases since 2012, the People's Daily, the Communist Party mouthpiece, said on Saturday.

Nine of Wang's colleagues had been detained, according to Amnesty.

The Ministry of Public Security did not respond to a faxed request for comment.

PRESSING FOR RULE OF LAW

China has consistently cracked down on rights lawyers but the current campaign was unprecedented both in terms of numbers and the way it has been carried out, said Eva Pils, a China law expert at King's College London.

"Previously, it was much more covered, it was much less open, and the reason why people are saying this is a bit 'Cultural Revolution-style' is because it's so public," Pils said, referring to a 1966-1976 campaign that convulsed the country in chaos and violence after then leader Mao Zedong declared class war.

The last two years under President Xi Jinping's administration have been marked by a sweeping crackdown on dissidents and activists.

Wang, a soft-spoken woman who started her career in commercial law, said the Xinhua state news commentary in which she has accused of "blabbering" was a "smear campaign" and she was "mentally prepared" to be taken into custody.

"If they want to arrest me, then they will arrest me. There's nothing to be worried about," Wang said in the interview with Reuters.

She gave a list of people to contact in the event of her detention. Three of the five, including her husband, were summoned by police over the weekend.

Wang said she started becoming interested in "rights defence" in 2008 after she was assaulted by unidentified men at a railway station in the city of Tianjin.

In 2010, a Tianjin court sent her to prison for three years on a charge of "intentional assault". The sentence was later reduced to two-and-a-half years.

"After my miscarriage of justice, I had a clearer recognition of the system," Wang said. "So I wanted to improve China's human rights system through the legal system and push for the rule of law."

Fengrui Law Firm is known for its defence of petitioners - people who approach authorities over grievances like land disputes - and public interest cases. Many of the lawyers taken away by authorities had worked on cases related to petitioners.

"Impactful public interest litigation and legal aid to vulnerable citizens is the genuine contribution of Fengrui lawyers to modern civil society and the development of rule of law," the firm says on its website.

Experts say the backdrop to the crackdown is a growing number of rights lawyers posing a challenge to the ruling Communist Party. Pils estimated there were 350 rights lawyers compared with about a dozen in 2004.

"I think the reality is that the activism on legal issues is also getting bigger," said Nicholas Bequelin, Amnesty's East Asia director. "Every time you try to put the genie back in the bottle, you have to round up a greater number of people."

(Additional reporting by Megha Rajagopalan; Editing by Robert Birsel)

- Reuters

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