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New York, November 2, 2001—The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) condemns the nine-year prison sentence handed down to journalist
Jiang Weiping by the Dalian Intermediate Court in Liaoning Province.
The sentence was confirmed by CPJ sources, but has not yet been publicly
announced.
In a secret trial held on September 5, CPJ International Press Freedom
Award winner Jiang was charged with "revealing state secrets," "instigating
to overthrow state power," and "illegally holding confidential documents."
It is unclear whether he was found guilty on all three charges. His
relatives were not allowed to attend the trial.
Jiang was arrested on December 5, 2000, after publishing a number of
articles for the Hong Kong magazine Front-Line (Qianshao) that
revealed official corruption among senior officials in northeastern
China.
"Jiang Weiping helped uncover several of the largest corruption scandals
in China today, which should be a welcome part of the government's anti-corruption
efforts," said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper. "Instead, he has been
silenced by local officials who are evidently eager to avoid public
scrutiny of their actions."
Jiang's Front-Line articles, which he wrote under various pen
names on a free-lance basis, uncovered several corruption scandals involving
high-level officials, including such well-connected leaders as Bo Xilai,
governor of Liaoning province and son of Communist Party elder Bo Yibo.
Jiang also revealed that Ma Xiangdong, vice mayor of the provincial
capital, Shenyang, gambled away 30 million yuan (US$3 million) of public
funds, and he reported that the mayor of nearby Daqing used state money
to buy apartments for each of his 29 mistresses.
Ma Xiangdong's case was widely reported in the official Chinese press
and used as an example in the government's ongoing fight against corruption.
On October 10, Ma was sentenced to death on corruption charges.
In a letter to President Jiang Zemin, which was smuggled out of prison,
Jiang Weiping explained that he wrote the articles "out of a journalist's
conscience," and that he intended to express, "confidence and determination
in the Party's anti-corruption efforts," according to a report in Yazhou
Zhoukan magazine.
Until May 2000, Jiang was northeastern China bureau chief for the Hong
Kong paper Wen Hui Bao. In the 1980s, he worked as a Dalian-based
correspondent for the official Xinhua News Agency. Prior to his arrest,
he won several awards for journalistic excellence from local and provincial
governments.
On October 17, CPJ announced that Jiang Weiping had been selected to
receive one of four 2001 International Press Freedom awards. The awards
will be presented in New York on November 20.

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