Liu Xiaobo Born: 28-Dec-1955 Birthplace: Changchun, China Died: 13-Jul-2017 Location of death: Shenyang, China Cause of death: Cancer - Liver
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: Asian Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Activist Nationality: China Executive summary: Chinese human rights activist While serving an eleven year prison sentence for inciting subversion of state power, Liu Xiaobo was named winner of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize "for his long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights" inside communist China. He was an organizer of the Chinese democracy movement of 1989, which ended in the Tiananmen Square massacre, and he has remained a vocal critic of the Chinese government, writing numerous pro-freedom essays published on websites outside of China. He spent three years in prison in the late 1990s after being convicted of disturbing the public order.
His crimes, of course, would not be considered crimes outside of a totalitarian state, where the slightest criticism of government policies frequently leads to harsh prosecution and imprisonment. His principal offense, for which he has been imprisoned since 2009, is his co-authorship and key role in propagation of "Charter 08", a document which calls for political reforms in China, including human rights taken for granted in free societies — freedom of assembly, freedom of expression, freedom of religion, etc. Charter 08 is reported to have "thousands" of signatures from Chinese citizens, which is indicative of the level of oppression in Liu's nation, where the population numbers more than 1.3 billion.
Chinese officials described Liu's Nobel honor as "an obscenity" that "desecrates the prize", and said that the Nobel Committee had "disgraced itself". It took days for word of the Nobel Prize to reach Liu in prison, and according to reports that slowly leaked out, he responded by dedicating the honor to the "lost souls" massacred at Tiananmen Square. In the aftermath of the Nobel announcement, hundreds of ordinary Chinese people who said they agreed with Liu's views were detained, roughed up, or placed under house arrest in the aftermath of the announcement, including Liu's wife.
Neither Liu, his wife, nor anyone else of Chinese citizenry was allowed to attend the Nobel ceremonies, or to send a recorded or written message. In response to pressure from the Chinese government, the ceremony was boycotted by dignitaries from numerous nations, including Afghanistan, Colombia, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, the Philippines, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Tunisia, Ukraine, Venezuela and Vietnam. At the Nobel event, Norwegian actress Liv Ullmann read excerpts from Liu's writings, while the laureate's chair remained empty for the first time since 1935, when Carl von Ossietzky was awarded the Peace Prize in absentia as he languished in a Nazi concentration camp.
Activists and organizations from outside China, including Margaret Atwood, Salman Rushdie, International PEN, the US State Department, and the United Nations Human Rights Commission, have called for Liu's release. His prison term for incitement of subversion will be completed in 2020, but even then his punishment will continue, as his sentence stipulates two years’ deprivation of political rights following his release. Wife: Liu Xia
University: BA Literature, University of Jilin (1982) University: MS Literature, Beijing University (1984) University: PhD Chinese Literature, Beijing University (1988) Teacher: Beijing University (1984-91) Lecturer: Visiting Lecturer, Columbia University Lecturer: Visiting Lecturer, University of Oslo Lecturer: Visiting Lecturer, University of Hawaii
Nobel Peace Prize 2010 International PEN President, Chinese PEN Center (2003-07) Counter-Revolutionary Propaganda Convicted (1991)
Disturbing the Peace Convicted (1996) Incitement of Subversion Convicted (2009)
Subversion Convicted (2009)
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