Hu Jia released but not free

After serving a three-and-a-half year sentence for inciting subversion, Chinese activist Hu Jia was sent home on Sunday.

But like Ai Weiwei, who surfaced from detention last week, Hu is far from free.

His wife told the BBC that he is being held under conditions “equivalent to house arrest.”

Media have published plenty of photos today showing crowds of non-uniformed police outside their apartment block in Beijing’s eastern suburbs.

Hours after his release, Hu spoke by phone to Hong Kong media, telling them that he will be careful in the future.

“Once I saw my family, I understood how much I owe them, especially my parents, my wife and my kid,” Hu told iCable News. “I realise I’ve done nothing for them. There is a Chinese saying that ‘patriotism and filial piety don’t go hand in hand’.”

Both Hu and Ai, once strident critics of aspects of the Chinese political system, now appear hobbled and cowed.

And this is just how the government wants them to appear, as a lesson to other would-be critics of the Party.

True to form, the English-language Global Times, a Chinese state mouthpiece, has an opinion piece today on Hu. The paper frequently covers news Chinese domestic media tend to shy away from.

The editorial, headlined: “Questioning West’s campaign to create a hero” is an oddly-worded critique of how the west only champions those were are anti-Chinese government.

It also warns Hu that his time in the limelight will be short-lived.

“The West will forget about China’s “social activists” soon, just as the “democratic activists” of 20 years ago [an oblique reference to the Tiananmen Square activists] have been gradually marginalized in Western society.”

India: Journalist beaten by police

Shalabh Mani Tripathi, Bureau Chief of Hindi news channel IBN, has claimed that he was beaten by police for his reporting on a medical officer found dead in a jail hospital. Tripathi alleges that he was dragged into a car, interrogated about his “wrong and sensational” reports and beaten. Journalists in Lucknow protested outside the Chief Minister’s residence until it was announced  that the officers involved had been suspended pending further investigations.

Russia: Oleg Kashin defeats libel claim

Russian journalist, Oleg Kashin, has won the right to speculate about the identity of two men who beat him with iron rods. Kashin spent five days in a coma after he was attacked outside his apartmenton 6 November last year. The Kremlin’s youth policy chief, Vasily Yakemanko, filed a libel suit against Kashin, liberal newspaper Novye Izvestia and political analyst, Alexander Morozov, for reporting speculation that he might be behind the incident. A Moscow court ruled in favour of Kashin after it was found that Yakemenko had failed to prove that the accusations were factual statements.

 

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