Posted By Christina Larson Share

It's been a rough week for activists, dissidents, and opposition movements of all types across Asia.

On Friday, Christmas Day, the Chinese intellectual Liu Xiaobo was sentenced to 11 years in prison on charges of "subversion" for his role in writing and promoting the Charter '08 petition for political reform last January. Flouting international criticism and calls for Liu's release, the sentence handed down in a Beijing courtroom is the longest ever for subversion charges.

By Sunday, police in Iran had opened fire into crowds of protestors as authorities sought to snuff out calls for political reform. As my colleague Blake Hounshell pointed out, "killing people on the Shiite holiday of Ashura [was] something even the shah never dared to do."

On Monday, in Vietnam, a country that in recent years has enjoyed somewhat greater religious and political freedoms than China, former amy officer Tran Anh Kim who advocated for democratic reforms, was sentenced to 5 1/2 years in prison on charges of "subversion." The case is seen as an ominous sign of shrinking space for political discussion in Vietnam. In the coming weeks, four similiar cases will be tried in Vietnam; at least one would-be reformer, human rights lawyer Le Cong Dinh, may face the death penalty.

On Tuesday morning, at 10:30 am local time, the first European national to be sentenced to death in China in more than 50 years was executed. Akmal Shaikh had been convicted of drug smuggling. His execution sent a chill throughout the international human rights community. The frantic mercy pleas of relatives, lawyers, and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown -- all claiming that his history of mental illness impaired his judgement -- fell on deaf ears in Beijing.

Meanwhile, new details emerged this week about the brutal conditions endured in prison by crusading Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who had taken the government to task for fraud. Magnitsky died in prison, after nearly 11 months in detention. Although it is little comfort to those who personally knew Magnitsky, at least the Moscow Public Oversight Commisssion is examining the case.

UPDATE: In response to a couple comments, I wanted to clarify that the British man executed in China was not himself comparable to activists in China, Vietnam, Russia, Iran, or elsewhere adovocating for domestic political reform -- but the concern of the international rights community, and the sight of frustrated but helpless foreign ministers (here Gordon Brown) appealing to Beijing, was in some ways parallel.

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ZJIN

3:55 PM ET

December 29, 2009

Since when a drug dealer

Since when a drug dealer equals activists, dissidents, and opposition movements in FP?

 

IEWGNEM

2:13 AM ET

December 30, 2009

mental illness

The pop-star excuse for mental illness would be funny if not pathetic, under Britain's own law a person can only plead mental illness if he can, among other things, prove he have no control over his own actions, Akmal seems perfectly capable of accepting the briefcase, obtaining a passport and go through the complex boarding process. His families and the British goverment also failed to produce any documentation of prior history of mental illness. All they are offering is this lame excuse that he "wanted to be a pop star". Insanity is the oldest, most over used and most thrown out defense in any such trials, every murder could claim to be mentally ill because no sane person would commit murder, I'm sorry but if you are carrying enough drugs to kill 20,000 people, you will die under Chinese law, in fact 4 kg would get him 80 death sentences, you simply do not have a chance when you are caught with that much herion

Human rights groups would do well to distance themselves from this case, there's absolutely no support within the Chinese public. If human rights is the right to bring 40kg of 85% purity heroin into China and get away with it because of a lame excuse and a British passport then human rights can go to hell where it belongs.

 

WINDOW_CLEANING

1:24 AM ET

December 31, 2009

Humanity

All the sentences are a far cry from humanity, the basic ingredient a human being should be made up of, pity the world is going to the dogs.
Window Cleaning

 
 

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