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Police Document Sheds Additional Light on Shi Tao Case
SAN FRANCISCO (July 25, 2007) – New documentation of the Beijing State Security Bureau’s request for user account information from Internet company Yahoo! in the case of Chinese journalist Shi Tao raises new questions about how much the company knew at the time of the request about the nature of the police investigation.
“This new documentation suggests that Yahoo!’s
Beijing office was at least aware of the general nature of the crime being
investigated in the Shi Tao case,” says Joshua Rosenzweig, manager of
research and publications for The Dui Hua Foundation, “even if it was
unaware of the specific circumstances or the name of the individual
involved. One does not have to be an expert in Chinese law to know that
‘state secrets’ charges have often been used to punish political dissent in
China.”
“We must remember,” Rosenzweig adds, “that
before Shi Tao there were
three other Chinese dissidents about whom Chinese police obtained user
information from Yahoo! in Beijing. If we assume that law enforcement
agencies investigating these cases followed the same procedures to obtain
that information, three other notices would have been provided specifying
investigations into subversion or incitement—crimes of a more unambiguous
political nature.” Shi Tao, sentenced in 2005 by a court in Hunan Province to 10 years’ imprisonment for “illegally providing state secrets to foreign entities,” was jailed for sending an overseas web site details of a secret government memorandum warning Chinese media outlets against voicing opinions contrary to official policies during the months prior to the sensitive 15th anniversary of the 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations. Shi recently joined another jailed Chinese dissident, Wang Xiaoning, in seeking damages in US federal court against Yahoo! and its Hong Kong subsidiary.
The Dui Hua Foundation San Francisco, California
July 25, 2007 |
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