Join “I am Liu Xianbin” 

The Chinese government’s systematic incarceration of its best and brightest citizens is inconsistent with China’s position as a leading member of the world community and a major trading partner of the United States.  Continued silence in the face of this repression weakens our position as the defender of freedom and ultimately threatens our own liberties.  We must consider the imprisonment of Liu Xianbin as an act against our own freedom.  We encourage everyone to “adopt” Xianbin. 

– Tell your friends and associates that “I am Liu Xianbin”.
– Sign your emails with “I am Liu Xianbin”
– Make “I am Liu Xianbin” T-Shirts or buttons.
– Spread the word via your social networking outlets.
– Send a donation using the donate button on this website to help us keep this campaign alive. 

“A threat to justice anywhere, is a threat to justice everywhere” -Martin Luther King Jr.

What if King George of England jailed Thomas Jefferson, Sam Adams, George  Washington, and Thomas Paine on the premise of “subverting state power?”  This is what is happening now in China, our second largest trading partner.  Rather than opening its political system and expanding the political rights of its citizens, the Chinese government is exponentially increasing its repression of its best and brightest citizens.  In the process it is stifling any promise of reform and committing Chinese society to the continued curse of corruption and alienation that has marked the 60 years of communist rule.  The recent arrest of Liu Xianbin exemplies the political castration that is taking place in China with a renewed vengeance.  Xianbin has spent 13 of the past 16 years in prison.  He was arrested again on June 28 for publishing articles on democracy on the internet. In the wake of the Tiananmen massacre he spent two and a half years in prison, He was sentenced to another 10 years in prison, after founding the Chinese Democratic Party, for “incitement to subvert state power.” His supporters, family, including his 13 year old daughter  are regularly intimidated and harassed by police. The police also threaten Yu Jie, a Protestant Christian writer, guilty of wanting to publish a book that contains criticism of Premier Wen Jiabao. He risks a sentence of 11 years in prison, “like Liu Xiaobo”. All of these dissidents are signatories of Charter 08.

Beijing (AsiaNews) by Wang Zhicheng

Former Tiananmen hero and democracy activist Liu Xianbin, has been arrested by police and charged with “incitement to subvert state power” for articles on the internet. The news was given yesterday by the dissident’s wife Chen Mingxian, who confirmed that Liu was arrested last June 28 after a raid on his home in Suining (Sichuan).

Liu Xianbin was released about a year ago from prison, where he had served ten years once again for “inciting subversion of state power.”

A group of activists have now launched a digital on-line campaign to support him entitled “I am Liu Xianbin”. Some of them were stopped by police and warned “not to get too deeply involved” in these activities.

Liu, 41, is a founding member of the Democratic Party, condemned for this (“incitement etc. ..) to 13 years in prison in 1999. He was released in November 2008 for good behaviour. His lawyer Ma Xiaopeng says he has not been allowed to see the prosecution’s evidence and does not know for articles Liu was arrested.

Liu also participated in the Tiananmen Square movement of ‘89 and was arrested for this in 1991 and sentenced to two and a half years in prison. After his release in 2008 he continued to write articles in support of democracy and signed the Charter 08 document, which calls for political reform and religious freedom and for the Chinese government to implement a true society respectful of human rights. One of the drafters of the Charter 08, Liu Xiaobo, was sentenced last Christmas to 11 years in prison forever for “incitement to subvert state power.” Liu had written articles in defence of Liu Xiaobo.

A few days ago, another signatory of Charter 08 was stopped by police and threatened with arrest. This is the famous writer Yu Jie, who is about to distribute a book critical of Premier Wen Jiabao. On 4 July, Yu was detained by police and interrogated for four hours, then threatened that if he published the book he will be condemned, since the book “endangers national security.”

Yu said that the police assured him “a sentence as heavy as that of Liu Xiaobo”.

Yu, who founded the Pen Centre in China, an association of independent writers and journalists, is a Protestant Christian. His books are banned in China.