This list consists of these activists who are known as Chinese dissidents.
There are also a large number of Chinese who claim to be dissidents and seek to defect, usually to USA, Canada, UK, Australia or New Zealand. To support their application to migrate, it is quite common for these self proclaimed dissidents to cite their participation in Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, their strong religious belief in Falun Gong or that they are being pursued by a network of spies (Chen Yonglin). (See Economic migrants) These people are not included in this list.
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Many Chinese political activists have been detained or jailed or exiled for their pro-democracy or rights defending activities.
Among them are:
Name | Occupation | Detained | Allegations | Sentence | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liao Yiwu | writer, musician | 1990 | Poem "Massacre" about Tiananmen Square | 4 years, permanent blacklist | under a 2011 'travel ban' for 'national security' reasons | |
Bao Tong | government official | 1989 | revealing state secrets and counter-revolutionary propagandizing | 7 years | Sentenced 1992. Prison: 1989-1996. as of 2009, under surveillance. | |
Tang Baiqiao | activist | 1989 | Spreading counterrevolutionary propaganda; inciting counterrevolutionary activities; defection to the enemy; treason. | 3 years | Released under international pressure 1991. Fled to Hong Kong, then U.S. 1992. | |
Zhao Lianhai | food safety worker, activist | 2009 | inciting social disorder | 2.5 years | Sentenced 2010[1][2] | |
Bao Zunxin | historian | 1989 | counterrevolutionary propaganda and incitement | 5 years | sentenced, 1991. released 1992, died 2007 | |
Cai Lujun | businessman, writer | 2003 | incitement to subversion | 3 years | released 2006, sought political asylum in Taiwan in 2007 | |
Gao Zhisheng | lawyer | ~2006 | disturbing public order | 5 yrs suspended | illegally detained and tortured in 2007; forcibly removed from family home in Shaanxi in 2009.[3]
'Disappeared' by government in 2009, reappeared in 2010. The Chinese foreign minister claimed a prison sentence was for 'subversion'.[4] [5] |
|
Guo Quan | professor | 2008 | subversion of state power | 10 years | sentenced 2009. awaiting appeal | |
He Depu | writer | 2002 | "incited subversion" on the Internet[6] | 8 years | sentenced 2003. expected release 2010 | |
Hu Jia | activist | 2007 | inciting subversion of state power | 3.5 years | arrested, imprisoned, and sentenced in 2008. expected release 2011 | |
Huang Qi | webmaster, anti-human trafficking activist | 2000 | inciting subversion | 5 years | sentenced 2003. accused of violating articles 103, 105, 55 and 56. released 2005. | |
2008 | illegal possession of state secrets | 3 years | sentenced 2009. Arrested after essay regarding the Sichuan Earthquake | |||
Jiang Lijun | writer | 2002 | Inciting subversion of the state power | 4 years | sentenced 2003. arrested for "Internet writing and publishing dissident articles". also sentenced to 'deprivation of political rights' for 1 year. | |
Jiang Yanyong | doctor | 2004 | Detained and released in 2004. broke story on SARS epidemic. wrote critical letter regarding Tiananmen. | |||
Li Hai | student | 1994 | 9 years | sentenced in 1995. released 2004 | ||
Li Zhi | civil servant | 2003 | inciting subversion | 8 years | sentenced 2003. Yahoo! helped the government against him. expected release in 2011 | |
Liu Di | student | 2002 | released in 2003 | |||
Liu Xiaobo | professor of literature | 2008 | inciting subversion of state power | 11 years | sentenced 2009. expected release 2020. recipient of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize | |
Lü Jiamin | writer | 1989 | released 1991 | |||
Shi Tao | journalist, writer, poet | 2004 | illegally supplying state secrets to overseas organizations | 10 years | sentenced 2005. Yahoo! helped the government against him. Expected release 2014.[7][8] | |
Tan Zuoren | writer | 2008 | 3 years | sentenced 2009 | ||
2010 | subversion of state power | 5 years | sentenced 2010 | |||
Wang Dan | professor of history | 1989 | Tiananmen activities | 4 years | sentenced 1991. released on parole in 1993 | |
1995 | 11 years | sentenced 1996. released on medical parole to U.S. in 1998; currently in Taiwan. | ||||
Wang Xiaoning | engineer | 2002 | incitement to subvert state power | 10 years | sentenced 2003. Yahoo! helped the government against him. expected release 2012 [9] | |
Wang Bingzhang | doctor | 2002 | spying, terrorism | life | sentenced 2003 | |
Wang Youcai | 1989 | |||||
~1998 | subversion | 11 years | released and exiled in 2004; currently in the United States | |||
Wei Jingsheng | electrician | 1979 | passing military secrets | 15 years | released and jailed again in 1993; released for "medical reasons" and deported to the US in 1997. | |
Yuan Hongbing | jurist, writer | 1994 | Detained and forced to leave Beijing in 1994; travelled to and sought political asylum in Australia in 2004. | |||
Zhao Changqing | teacher of history | 1989 | Tiananmen activities | released after about 1/2 year | ||
1998 | workers rights activity | 3 years | ||||
2002 | attempted subversion of state power | 5 years | sentenced 2003.[10] | |||
Zeng Jinyan | blogger | 2006 | suspected of harming state security | Under house arrest with husband Hu Jia from August 2006 - March 2007; currently under house arrest again, since May 2007.[11] | ||
Cheng Jianping | online activist | 2010 | disturbing social order | 1 year | reeducation through labor for a sarcastic post on twitter[12] | |
Ai Weiwei | artist and activist | 2011 | alleged economic crimes | detained for 80 days from April 3[13] to 22 June, 2011 |
The Chinese government has many blacklists. One of them was reported in the South China Morning Post on January 8, 1995 and forms the basis of this list: [14]