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Taiwan thanks European Parliament's support for detained activist

2017-07-07
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Taipei, July 6 (CNA) The Presidential Office on Thursday expressed gratitude for the European Parliament's support for Taiwanese human rights activist Lee Ming-che, who have been detained in China for more than three months on charges of "subversion of state power."

"We're very grateful for all the international assistance on the case," Presidential Office spokesman Sidney Lin said, in response to the adoption of a resolution on Thursday by the European Parliament that called for Beijing to release Lee.

Lin also repeated a call for the Chinese authorities to "cautiously deal with Lee's case in a civilized way" and to let him come home as soon as possible.

Earlier in the day, members of the European Parliament discussed the cases of Lee and 2010 Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo and passed the resolution calling for the Chinese government to release the two human rights activists, during a plenary session.

Lee, a former Democratic Progressive Party worker, staff member at Wenshan Community College in Taipei and a volunteer at the local NGO Covenants Watch, was detained by China after entering Zhuhai City via Macau on March 19.

Taiwan has repeatedly urged Beijing to release Lee, but to no avail. Lee's case has sparked concern from local and international human rights groups.

Meanwhile, the European Parliament called on Beijing to immediately release Liu and his wife from house arrest and allow him to seek medical treatment wherever he wishes, according to a statement issued by the parliament.

"The human rights activist has been imprisoned since 2009 for co-writing a manifesto known as 'Charter 8', calling for fundamental reforms, and is being denied to move outside China for treatment of his late-stage liver cancer," the statement added.

The statement said that the parliament is highly concerned by China's "continued efforts to silence civil society actors" with the help of new laws on state security, counterterrorism, cybersecurity and foreign NGO management.

The parliament urged the European Union to continue raising the issue of human rights violations in its dialogues with Beijing and to force China to live up to its international human rights commitments, the statement added. 

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