Australian writer and democracy activist Dr Yang Hengjun’s health is failing as he approaches three years imprisoned in China, say friends who fear he may not survive his incarceration.
© Photograph: Facebook Yang Hengjun’s single-day secret trial was in May of 2021 and he has not yet been sentenced, despite his failing health.
Wednesday is the third anniversary of Yang’s arrest at Guangzhou airport on allegations of espionage on behalf of an unnamed foreign country. He maintains his innocence.
“Sometimes I’m pessimistic and sometimes I’m optimistic,” he said in a dictated statement from prison, made before he was blindfolded and led back to his cell.
Related: China stepping up use of secret detention without trial, report warns
“I’m confident I didn’t do what they said I did. I know this, my lawyer knows this, and I think the judge knows this. According to Chinese law, I’m not guilty. But they treat me like dirt here and they tortured me.”
Despite hundreds of interrogations, and, in his words, “torture” at the hands of China’s ministry of state security, Yang says he has not confessed to anything alleged against him, a fact that appears to have further delayed his judgment and sentencing under China’s confession-based legal system. His sentencing is now due by 9 April.
Yang, 54, faced a single-day trial in May, held in secret, after more than two years in detention. He spoke briefly in his own defence, telling the court he was “100% innocent” and submitted about 100 pages of evidence and testimony to support his case.
Yang, and the Australian government, reject the allegations against him. Australia’s ambassador to China has said his imprisonment amounts to “arbitrary detention”.
Yang’s family, friends, and supporters say they are extremely concerned about his deteriorating health and argue he must be released on bail for medical treatment and returned to Australia. However, there appears little chance of his release ahead of sentencing, which has been repeatedly delayed.
China has consistently said Yang’s detention and trial had been conducted in accordance with the law and accused Australia of “gross interference” in its advocacy on behalf of Yang.
“Chinese judicial authorities handle the case strictly in accordance with law and fully protect the lawful rights of the relevant person,” a spokesperson said ahead of the trial. “The Australian side should respect China’s judicial sovereignty and refrain from interfering in any form in Chinese judicial authorities’ lawful handling of the case.”
In his latest message from prison, Yang said: “I want the Chinese government to open my case and publish it. To provide details to the world, the Australian government, and the country. We should apply to open the case, and you can see for yourself.
“They said it’s about espionage. I hope it’s just about Chinese judicial corruption.”
Yang has been prevented from sending letters to lawyers, family and friends, or receiving them.
He has access to one state-run television channel and some pre-approved books. He lives and sleeps in a crowded room with no sunlight, lights on all night, a communal open toilet, a hard floor and little room to move around or stretch.
Yang’s health has deteriorated seriously in prison. He has severe problems with gout, high uric acid, high blood pressure, impaired vision and dizzy spells.
One recent account, from late in 2021, reported: “Ongoing fatigue meant he was only able to exercise for short periods. Further, because of his dizzy spells, he sometimes wasn’t able to walk and had to, at times, just stand in place during his one hour of activity outdoors”.
Blood tests have shown rapidly rising levels of creatinine, raising his risk of kidney failure.
Friends and family say his worsening health problems are not being adequately treated. “We are concerned Yang is being systematically deprived of proper medical treatment,” a close friend and supporter said.
“We know he does not trust the medication administered to him and, unfortunately, he has no reason to. Yang must not be left to die through medical neglect and mistreatment, like so many other writers and artists and public intellectuals who are passionately committed to a better future for the Chinese people, such as [Nobel laureate] Liu Xiaobo.”
Prof Chongyi Feng, Yang’s PhD supervisor, said Yang was previously healthy, “but he has deteriorated greatly, and he is not being properly treated”.
“We are very worried about him.”
The Australia director at Human Rights Watch, Elaine Pearson, said conditions in China’s detention facilities and prisons were poor, with only rudimentary health care.
“We are very concerned that Yang’s detention has exacerbated his medical problems and that the treatment in prison is inadequate. The Chinese government should release him unconditionally immediately.”
Related: ‘They tortured me,’ Australian Yang Hengjun says as he awaits verdict after trial in China
Pearson said there was a “long list of human rights defenders” who have died in Chinese custody or shortly after being released.
“A prison sentence should not be a death sentence in China. The Australian government should be doing everything in their power to persuade the Chinese authorities to release Yang Hengjun, as well as Cheng Lei and others who are arbitrarily detained.”
Australia’s foreign minister, Marise Payne, said the federal government was concerned about numerous delays to the verdict following Yang’s trial.
“Neither Dr Yang nor the Australian government have been provided with details as to the charges against him or of the investigation, reinforcing our view that this constitutes the arbitrary detention of an Australian citizen,” Payne said in a statement. “We therefore call for Dr Yang’s immediate release and his return to Australia.”
Payne said the government would continue to advocate for Yang’s interests and wellbeing.
“Australia is also extremely concerned about Dr Yang’s health. We call on Chinese authorities to meet their obligations to ensure that all necessary treatment for his physical and mental health is provided.”
Yang, whose legal name is Yang Jun, was born in Hubei in central China. He was formerly a diplomat for China’s ministry of foreign affairs, and an agent for the secretive ministry of state security, before working in the private sector in Hong Kong and moving to Australia, then to the US, where he was a visiting scholar at Columbia University.
A writer of spy novels, he has been a popular blogger, political commentator and agitator for democratic reforms in China for more than a decade. He describes himself as a “democracy peddler”.
Yang, who became an Australian citizen in 2002, flew into Guangzhou with his family in January 2019. His wife and child were able to enter China but authorities escorted Yang from the plane into detention. He has not been free since.
Wednesday is the third anniversary of Yang’s arrest at Guangzhou airport on allegations of espionage on behalf of an unnamed foreign country. He maintains his innocence.
“Sometimes I’m pessimistic and sometimes I’m optimistic,” he said in a dictated statement from prison, made before he was blindfolded and led back to his cell.
Related: China stepping up use of secret detention without trial, report warns
“I’m confident I didn’t do what they said I did. I know this, my lawyer knows this, and I think the judge knows this. According to Chinese law, I’m not guilty. But they treat me like dirt here and they tortured me.”
Despite hundreds of interrogations, and, in his words, “torture” at the hands of China’s ministry of state security, Yang says he has not confessed to anything alleged against him, a fact that appears to have further delayed his judgment and sentencing under China’s confession-based legal system. His sentencing is now due by 9 April.
Yang, 54, faced a single-day trial in May, held in secret, after more than two years in detention. He spoke briefly in his own defence, telling the court he was “100% innocent” and submitted about 100 pages of evidence and testimony to support his case.
Yang, and the Australian government, reject the allegations against him. Australia’s ambassador to China has said his imprisonment amounts to “arbitrary detention”.
Yang’s family, friends, and supporters say they are extremely concerned about his deteriorating health and argue he must be released on bail for medical treatment and returned to Australia. However, there appears little chance of his release ahead of sentencing, which has been repeatedly delayed.
China has consistently said Yang’s detention and trial had been conducted in accordance with the law and accused Australia of “gross interference” in its advocacy on behalf of Yang.
“Chinese judicial authorities handle the case strictly in accordance with law and fully protect the lawful rights of the relevant person,” a spokesperson said ahead of the trial. “The Australian side should respect China’s judicial sovereignty and refrain from interfering in any form in Chinese judicial authorities’ lawful handling of the case.”
In his latest message from prison, Yang said: “I want the Chinese government to open my case and publish it. To provide details to the world, the Australian government, and the country. We should apply to open the case, and you can see for yourself.
“They said it’s about espionage. I hope it’s just about Chinese judicial corruption.”
Yang has been prevented from sending letters to lawyers, family and friends, or receiving them.
He has access to one state-run television channel and some pre-approved books. He lives and sleeps in a crowded room with no sunlight, lights on all night, a communal open toilet, a hard floor and little room to move around or stretch.
Yang’s health has deteriorated seriously in prison. He has severe problems with gout, high uric acid, high blood pressure, impaired vision and dizzy spells.
One recent account, from late in 2021, reported: “Ongoing fatigue meant he was only able to exercise for short periods. Further, because of his dizzy spells, he sometimes wasn’t able to walk and had to, at times, just stand in place during his one hour of activity outdoors”.
Blood tests have shown rapidly rising levels of creatinine, raising his risk of kidney failure.
Friends and family say his worsening health problems are not being adequately treated. “We are concerned Yang is being systematically deprived of proper medical treatment,” a close friend and supporter said.
“We know he does not trust the medication administered to him and, unfortunately, he has no reason to. Yang must not be left to die through medical neglect and mistreatment, like so many other writers and artists and public intellectuals who are passionately committed to a better future for the Chinese people, such as [Nobel laureate] Liu Xiaobo.”
Prof Chongyi Feng, Yang’s PhD supervisor, said Yang was previously healthy, “but he has deteriorated greatly, and he is not being properly treated”.
“We are very worried about him.”
The Australia director at Human Rights Watch, Elaine Pearson, said conditions in China’s detention facilities and prisons were poor, with only rudimentary health care.
“We are very concerned that Yang’s detention has exacerbated his medical problems and that the treatment in prison is inadequate. The Chinese government should release him unconditionally immediately.”
Related: ‘They tortured me,’ Australian Yang Hengjun says as he awaits verdict after trial in China
Pearson said there was a “long list of human rights defenders” who have died in Chinese custody or shortly after being released.
“A prison sentence should not be a death sentence in China. The Australian government should be doing everything in their power to persuade the Chinese authorities to release Yang Hengjun, as well as Cheng Lei and others who are arbitrarily detained.”
Australia’s foreign minister, Marise Payne, said the federal government was concerned about numerous delays to the verdict following Yang’s trial.
“Neither Dr Yang nor the Australian government have been provided with details as to the charges against him or of the investigation, reinforcing our view that this constitutes the arbitrary detention of an Australian citizen,” Payne said in a statement. “We therefore call for Dr Yang’s immediate release and his return to Australia.”
Payne said the government would continue to advocate for Yang’s interests and wellbeing.
“Australia is also extremely concerned about Dr Yang’s health. We call on Chinese authorities to meet their obligations to ensure that all necessary treatment for his physical and mental health is provided.”
Yang, whose legal name is Yang Jun, was born in Hubei in central China. He was formerly a diplomat for China’s ministry of foreign affairs, and an agent for the secretive ministry of state security, before working in the private sector in Hong Kong and moving to Australia, then to the US, where he was a visiting scholar at Columbia University.
A writer of spy novels, he has been a popular blogger, political commentator and agitator for democratic reforms in China for more than a decade. He describes himself as a “democracy peddler”.
Yang, who became an Australian citizen in 2002, flew into Guangzhou with his family in January 2019. His wife and child were able to enter China but authorities escorted Yang from the plane into detention. He has not been free since.
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