Book’s editors on lifting a veil from Chinese politics
By Katie Koch, BU Today, Dec 2, 2009
Bao Pu (left) and Adi Ignatius, editors of Prisoner of the State: The Secret Journal of Premier Zhao Ziyang, say the former leader’s memoir is the first to emerge from the highest ranks of China’s Communist Party. Photos by Vernon Doucette
Secrecy has long been the calling card of China’s Communist Party. When important leaders retire, unlike their Western counterparts, they choose silence over the attention and danger of a tell-all memoir.
Until now. The first behind-the-scenes look at China’s political power struggles in the turbulent 1980s has emerged, the secret memoirs of Zhao Ziyang, the fallen party chief who spent the last 16 years of his life under house arrest.


Xu Zhiyong is a co-founder of Gongmeng, a legal group which has dealt with some high-profile human rights cases. Photograph: Greg Baker/AP
Rebiya Kadeer, head of the World Uighur Congress, gives a press conference in Japan. Photograph: Junji Kurokawa/AP
Case against Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo sent to prosecutors
December 9, 2009Liu’s lawyer says investigators claim author incited subversion, which carries a maximum 15-year jail term
Tania Branigan, The Guardian/UK, Dec 9, 2009
Chinese police have presented the case against one of the country’s most prominent dissidents to prosecutors, after detaining him for a year.
Liu Xiaobo’s lawyer Shang Baojun said the investigators’ report alleged that the author incited the subversion of state power through articles he published on the internet and by helping to write Charter 08, an appeal for democratic reforms and greater civil liberties.
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