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Australia concerned writer faces espionage charge in China

CHONGYI FENG VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS

This undated photo released by Chongyi Feng shows Yang Hengjun and his wife Yuan Xiaoliang. The Australian government said, Tuesday, it was “very concerned and disappointed” that the Chinese Australian writer had been formally arrested in China on suspicion of espionage.

CANBERRA, Australia >> The Australian government said on Tuesday it was “very concerned and disappointed” that a Chinese Australian writer had been formally arrested in China on suspicion of espionage.

Yang Hengjun has been in Chinese custody since he arrived in southern China’s Guangzhou from New York on Jan. 19 with his wife, Yuan Xiaoliang, and his 14-year-old stepdaughter. China revealed in July that the 54-year-old academic and former Chinese government official had been detained.

“The government is very concerned and disappointed to learn that Australian citizen and academic Dr. Yang Hengjun … was formally arrested in China on suspicion of espionage,” Foreign Minister Marise Payne said in a statement. She described him as being held in “harsh conditions” without access to his lawyers or family visits, though embassy officials have visited him.

China’s foreign ministry has said Yang is suspected of engaging in criminal activities that endanger China’s security.

Yang was formally arrested Friday by the Beijing branch of China’s National Security Bureau on “suspicion of espionage,” ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said Tuesday.

“The Chinese state security organs handled the case according to law and fully guaranteed the various rights of Yang Jun. Yang Jun is currently in good health,” Geng said at a daily briefing.

Geng also expressed China’s “strong dissatisfaction with Australia’s statement on the case.”

“The Australian side should earnestly respect China’s judicial sovereignty and must not intervene in China’s handling of the case in any way,” he said.

Yang’s Australian lawyer, Rob Stary, said the basis of the espionage charge remains unclear.

“We think it relates to espionage on behalf of Australia, but it’s not specified on the charge sheet,” Stary said. “We’d obviously be disturbed by that if it was the allegation, because there is absolutely no foundation for it at all.”

Stary suspects the espionage charge relates to Yang’s democracy activism. “He’s a blogger and that’s what he does, he’s an academic, he’s of a different ilk,” Stary said.

Yang has held Australian citizenship since 2002 and has a doctorate from the University of Technology Sydney. He had been living in New York as a visiting scholar at Columbia University.

Payne said she had discussed with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi the Australian government’s concerns about Yang’s detainment.

“We have serious concerns for Dr. Yang’s welfare and about the conditions under which he is being been held,” Payne said. “It is important, and we expect, that basic standards of justice and procedural fairness are met. I respectfully reiterate my previous requests that if Dr. Yang is being held for his political beliefs, he should be released.”

Payne said Australia expects Yang to be treated in accordance with international human rights law, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, with special attention to those provisions that prohibit torture and inhumane treatment, guard against arbitrary detention and that protect the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion.

Before Yang was moved into criminal detention, he had been held under so-called residential surveillance at a designated location. This can involve being guarded 24 hours a day with lights on continuously and torture including sleep deprivation, being tied to a chair or forced to stand for hours.

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