BBC NEWS    BBC Sport >>   Graphics version >>   Change to UK edition >>
News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | UK | Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature | Technology | Health | Talking Point
Friday, 20 December, 2002, 11:13 GMT

China admits missing dissident arrested

China has acknowledged it has arrested a high-profile US-based democracy activist, Wang Bingzhang, who disappeared in Vietnam six months ago.

The authorities say he was kidnapped in Vietnam, with a ransom demand of $10m and was later found in southern China.

They say he is now facing charges of espionage and terrorist activities.

Two other activists arrested with Mr Wang, Yue Wu and Zhang Qi - who had also been reported missing - are said to have been cleared of all charges and freed.

Vanished

The three entered Vietnam - where they were planning to hold meetings with fellow activists - with valid visas on 16 June, and last communicated with their families on 26 June.

They have not been heard from since.

Chinese dissidents in the United States said in July that they had received information that the three were abducted by Chinese security forces along the border of China and Vietnam and were being held at a secret location in China.

But China's official news agency Xinhua said on Friday that police had found the trio bound and gagged in a temple in Fanchenggang city, southern Guangxi province, on 3 July.

It said they had been kidnapped on 27 July in Tinh Quang Ninh in Vietnam, and were being blackmailed.

After they were found, Mr Wang was transferred to neighbouring Guangdong province, where he was put under house surveillance before being formally arrested on 5 December, the agency said.

"The state security department had verified that Wang, starting in the early 1980s, had struck up contact with Taiwan's espionage organisation, which paid him as he collected and stole state secrets," it said.

Mr Wang has lived in Canada and the US since 1979.

Xinhua quoted a spokesman from the ministry of public security as saying that Mr Wang was also facing charges of engaging in "violent terrorist activities".

His colleagues in the democracy movement say he has never committed a violent crime.

Exiled

Fang Yuan, a member of the China Democracy Party, which is outlawed inside China, has said the disappearance of the dissidents was "testament to the desperate lengths the government will go to stop the evolution of democracy in China".

The three all have connections with exiled Chinese opposition groups:


Related to this story:
China's veteran dissident (20 Dec 02 | Asia-Pacific) China 'snatched exiled dissidents' (26 Jul 02 | Asia-Pacific) The dark side of China (16 Mar 02 | From Our Own Correspondent) Concern over freed Chinese dissident (18 Oct 02 | Asia-Pacific) Chinese internet dissidents jailed (14 Jan 02 | Asia-Pacific)


Internet links: China Democracy Party | Human Rights in China | Chinese Government | Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | UK | Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature | Technology | Health | Talking Point

^^ Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | Feedback | ©