China: Australian government “appalled” by death penalty for China critics

Espionage verdict
Australian government “appalled” by death penalty for China critics

It is unclear whether Yang Hengjun has returned his Chinese citizenship.

© Chongyi Feng / AP

The writer Yang Hengjun is being tried behind closed doors in China. It is not the first case involving an Australian citizen that has strained relations between Beijing and Canberra.

Australia’s government has reacted with dismay to a Chinese court’s death sentence against writer Yang Hengjun. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said in Canberra that the government was “appalled” that the Australian citizen was given a suspended death sentence in Beijing on Monday. According to the statement, the Australian government expects the sentence to be commuted to life imprisonment after a two-year probation period. There was initially no statement from the Chinese side about the case.

The Chinese authorities accuse the Chinese native of espionage. Yang has always denied the allegations. In January 2019, he traveled with his wife and child from New York to Guangzhou in southern China. After his arrival he disappeared. It was only later that his arrest became known.

Blogger with large readership

Yang is known in China as a novelist and blogger. He regularly commented on Chinese politics and was sometimes critical of the Communist Party. He reportedly previously worked in the Chinese Foreign Ministry. He has had Australian citizenship since 2002.

“This is devastating news for Dr. Yang, his family and everyone who supported him,” Wong said. The Australian government has repeatedly advocated for Yang’s interests and health at the highest levels and wants to continue to do so. According to reports, doctors discovered a cyst in the now 58-year-old’s kidney in August last year.

Australia has repeatedly argued with China over detained citizens in recent years. The relationship between Beijing and Canberra was accordingly strained. In October 2023, Chinese-Australian journalist Cheng Lei was released in China, more than three years after her arrest. The 49-year-old, who worked for China’s state television, was arrested in August 2020. The prosecution accused her of passing on state secrets abroad.

DA/Kra

source site-3