New
York, September 6, 2005 The Committee to Protect Journalists is
deeply concerned about the health of journalist Zhang Lin, who has been
hospitalized since beginning a hunger strike last week to protest his
imprisonment, local sources said.
Zhang's lawyer Mo Shaoping told CPJ that he would visit Zhang this week
in Bengbu, in the southeast province of Anhui, where the dissident freelancer
is being held. Zhang was sentenced to five years in prison on July 28
for "inciting subversion."
Authorities detained Zhang on January 29 in Anhui on his return from Beijing,
where he had traveled to mourn the death on January 17 of Communist Party
leader Zhao Ziyang, who was ousted after opposing the use of force against
protesters in Tiananmen Square in 1989. Anhui Intermediate People's Court
found Zhang guilty of inciting subversion through a radio interview and
six articles that criticized the Communist Party which he posted on overseas
dissident news Web sites. Zhang has appealed the verdict. Zhang's wife
believes his imprisonment is also connected to essays he wrote about protests
by unemployed workers and recent cases of jailed officials, according
to Agence France Presse.
"Five years imprisonment for expressing his views is appalling," CPJ Executive
Director Ann Cooper said. "We urge the court hearing Zhang's appeal to
overturn this unjust verdict in accordance with the Chinese constitution
which guarantees freedom of expression."

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