(RSF/IFEX) – For four months now, psychology student Liu Di has been detained by the police and her family has still not been allowed to see her. The authorities accuse her of having threatened national security and contend that they are keeping her in a secret place in order to put “pressure” on her. Her […]
(RSF/IFEX) – For four months now, psychology student Liu Di has been detained by the police and her family has still not been allowed to see her. The authorities accuse her of having threatened national security and contend that they are keeping her in a secret place in order to put “pressure” on her. Her close friends and relatives say Liu Di did nothing more than express her desire for freedom on the Internet.
RSF deplores the way in which 22-year-old Liu Di has been treated since her arrest in November 2002, and asks, how can a young Internet user with no political affiliation whatsoever pose a threat to the security of the People’s Republic of China? The organisation requests that Liu Di be immediately released and that the charges against her be dismissed. RSF also recalls that China has signed the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Liu Di’s family confirmed to RSF that the young Internet surfer is being secretly detained and the police refuse to reveal her place of confinement. Her parents have received just two short messages from their daughter, who asked them for money. They were allowed to leave some clothes and money at a police station, but received no assurance that they would be delivered to their daughter.
Since Liu Di’s arrest, police have only told her family that she was arrested for threatening national security. According to police, they had to “maintain pressure” on the student during the inquiry. Her parents are worried about what the police mean by the word “pressure”, even though the police claim their daughter is in good health.
Liu Di’s father explained to RSF that he could not understand why his daughter, who signed her Internet messages “Stainless Steel Mouse”, was imprisoned for posing a threat to national security. “She loved to surf the Web to look up information. But she was frustrated by the lack of freedom online and may have expressed some criticism or sarcasm without ever thinking of the possible consequences of such messages,” Liu Qinghua added.
Police officers have also warned the family that the nature of this case might change if the foreign media, human rights organisations or Chinese dissidents were to cause a stir over Liu Di’s case.
On 7 November, the day before the inauguration of the 16th Chinese Communist Party Congress, Liu Di was arrested on the Beijing University campus. Her family was only informed of her arrest when police arrived to search her home, at which time they confiscated her notes, books and computer.
At least 36 cyber-dissidents are still behind bars in China.