[The police and guards kept Ms. Li from leaving her apartment in Beijing to attend the trial in Tianjin, a port city about 65 miles southeast from her home in the capital. During Mr. Wang’s detention, the authorities rejected repeated attempts by her and a succession of attorneys to visit him or find out more about his status and health.]
By Chris Buckley
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Wang
Quanzhang, left, and his wife Li Wenzu, with their child in eastern China’s
Shandong
Province in 2015. Credit Wang Quanxiu/Li Wenzu,
via
Associated Press
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BEIJING
— Nearly three and half
years after Wang Quanzhang disappeared in China’s fierce offensive against
human rights lawyers, he faced charges of subversion in a closed trial on
Wednesday, capping a year when the Communist Party redoubled efforts to stifle
political and religious dissent.
Mr. Wang, 42, was the last to be prosecuted
among the hundreds of rights lawyers and activists rounded up in a sweep that
started on July 9, 2015. In a blaze of propaganda, the police accused him and
other combative attorneys of disrupting trials, fanning discontent, and
plotting to overthrow the Communist Party.
But while others detained in the crackdown
were released with warnings, put on bail after making rehearsed confessions on
television, or tried and sentenced, Mr. Wang remained held in secrecy. His
trial was also swaddled in security to ward off protests.
“This whole process has been illegal, so how
could I expect an open and fair trial?” Mr. Wang’s wife, Li Wenzu, said in a
telephone interview before the hearing. “But my demand is still that he be
freed as not guilty, because that’s what he is.”
The police and guards kept Ms. Li from
leaving her apartment in Beijing to attend the trial in Tianjin, a port city
about 65 miles southeast from her home in the capital. During Mr. Wang’s
detention, the authorities rejected repeated attempts by her and a succession
of attorneys to visit him or find out more about his status and health.
The mobile phone of Liu Weiguo, the lawyer
who represented Mr. Wang at the trial was turned off on Wednesday evening, and
it was unclear when the trial ended. But the Tianjin Second Intermediate
People’s Court that heard the case said on its website that a verdict would be
announced at a later date. “Because state secrets were involved, the court
decided under the law not to hold a public trial,” the statement said.
“This will be a show trial, carefully
censored and tightly controlled,” said Terence Halliday, a research professor
at the American Bar Foundation in Chicago who studies Chinese defense lawyers.
“Through Wang Quanzhang’s protracted disappearance, China’s state security and
public security have been sending a chilling message to activist lawyers — keep
silent or this could be your fate too.”
Still, one detail slipped out from the secret
proceedings that suggested Mr. Wang remained unbowed. While in the courtroom,
he dismissed his lawyer, Mr. Liu, who was not chosen by his family, Ms. Li
said, citing a message from Mr. Liu. That step may have forced an adjournment
in the trial, but Ms. Li had no further details.
Mr. Wang’s case, though, has been
overshadowed this year by other controversies in China as Xi Jinping, the party
leader and president, has sought to extinguish potential threats to party rule.
Hundreds of thousands of Muslims in Xinjiang,
a northwest region, have been detained in indoctrination camps where they are
forced to renounce their religious beliefs and pledge loyalty to the party.
Several independent Protestant churches have been shut down, and an outspoken
pastor of one was detained. Two Canadians have been detained and accused of
threatening national security in what supporters say was reprisal for a Chinese
telecommunications executive’s arrest in Canada.
The detentions of lawyers and advocates in
2015 were a turning point on the way to more hard-line policies, said experts
and friends of Mr. Wang. His prolonged detention came to symbolize the
Communist Party’s growing readiness to override promised legal protections if
they got in the way of silencing perceived threats, they said.
“The mass detention and surveillance campaign
and other persecution in Xinjiang are the worst examples we know of at the
moment, but they are connected to what is going on more widely in China,” said
Eva Pils, a professor of law at King’s College London who studies China’s human
rights lawyers and knows Mr. Wang. “Human rights defenders are very openly
characterized as enemies of the people, connected to other, outside enemies.”
In the face of official pressure and rebuffs,
Ms. Li and the families of other detained lawyers coalesced into a determined
and creative resistance.
They have protested using red buckets,
attempted walking to the detention center where Mr. Wang was held, and this
month they shaved their heads to protest what they said was judges’ failure to
enforce Mr. Wang’s rights under Chinese law. (The Mandarin Chinese word for
hair (fa) sounds similar to the word for law.)
“In Chinese, having no hair sounds like
having no law,” Ms. Li said. “We meant that we can do without our hair, but we
can’t do without law.”
The prosecutors’ allegations against Mr. Wang
appeared to distill several themes that the government has used to attack
China’s human rights lawyers as a whole.
They accused him of “stirring up trouble” by
calling together lawyers and supporters to demand that detainees be freed; of
maligning China’s legal system online while representing members of a banned
spiritual movement, Falun Gong; and colluding with a foreign-funded group to
“propagate methods and tricks for resisting the government,” according to a
2017 prosecutors’ document shared by Peter Dahlin, a Swedish rights advocate
named in the allegations.
Mr. Dahlin, who was detained in Beijing for
23 days in 2016 and deported from China for his work helping rights activists,
said he was sure the document was authentic and rejected the claim that Mr.
Wang’s activities amounted to “subversion of state power.”
Mr. Wang was born in Shandong Province, east
China, and was drawn to activism even before he had graduated from law school.
Like many other Chinese attorneys who take on contentious cases, his clients
were mostly ordinary citizens in disputes with officials over land seizures,
detentions and police abuses.
Even more than most rights lawyers, he has a
stubborn streak, his wife and friends said.
His unbending personality probably “kept him
going through years of abusive, incommunicado detention and given him the
strength to refuse a forced confession,” Michael Caster, a human rights
advocate who formerly worked in Beijing with Mr. Wang, said by email. “He was
never one to be intimidated by threats from judges or by the physical abuse of
police.”
When asked about Mr. Wang and others detained
in the 2015 crackdown, Chinese officials have said that they have been given
all their legal rights. But legal experts have said that his long, secretive
confinement and lack of access to his own lawyers flouted China’s laws. In
October, a United Nations Human Rights Council group condemned the secretive
detention of Mr. Wang and two other Chinese advocates as a violation of
international laws.
Chinese courts come under the guidance of the
Communist Party and rarely, if ever, find defendants innocent in politically
charged cases. Some of his supporters said Mr. Wang could be given a suspended
prison sentence like other some lawyers who were detained in 2015. But others
were less hopeful of early release.
“Even though Quanzhang is innocent, the
outlook is bleak,” said Xie Yanyi, a recently disbarred Chinese rights attorney
who tried to attend Mr. Wang’s trial. “Wang Quanzhang’s wife and loved ones
need to be mentally prepared.”
Mr. Xie said he was blocked by plain clothes
officers from trying to reach the court in Tianjin and supporters who got near
the courthouse were bundled away by the police, said reporters there.
Mr. Wang’s wife, Ms. Li, said that until he
was detained she knew little about his work. But she has since become a savvy
advocate for her husband while trying to protect their 6-year old son. In a
public letter in July addressed to Mr. Wang, she said she told their son that
his father had gone off to battle monsters.
“Let’s go help dad fight the monsters,” the
son told a friend, Ms. Li wrote. “After they’re beaten, dad can come home.”
