#yang hengjun
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
youtube
Yang Hengjun turned his back on the Communist Party and became an Australian - now China has sentenced him to death
There is great excitement in Australia. What did the naturalised author do to deserve the capital punishment in the eyes of China's rulers?
Patrick Zoll, Taipei 05.02.2024, NZZ
Australian Yang Hengjun, who was sentenced to death in China, in an undated photo with his wife Yuan Xiaoliang.
Australian Yang Hengjun, who was sentenced to death in China, in an undated photo with his wife Yuan Xiaoliang.
After five years in isolation in pre-trial detention, Australian author Yang Hengjun has been sentenced to death in China. The sentence will be commuted to "life imprisonment" if Yang does not commit any offences for a further two years. As Yang's health has recently deteriorated massively in prison, according to Australian reports, he will probably die in prison.
The Chinese judiciary has never announced in detail what it is accusing Yang of, nor has it provided any evidence. On Monday, a spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry in Beijing said, according to the Reuters news agency, that Yang had been convicted of espionage. All necessary procedures had been followed and "the Australian side" had attended the sentencing. What exactly this means remains unclear - Australian diplomats have repeatedly complained that they have hardly any access to Yang.
From Chinese functionary to democracy blogger
Yang emigrated to Australia in 1999. He had previously worked for the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and State Security. He studied in Sydney, wrote a doctoral thesis on the influence of bloggers on a possible democratisation of China and became a blogger himself. "Yang gave up his career as a communist cadre member to work for freedom and democracy," the Australian newspaper "Sydney Morning Herald" quoted Feng Chongyi, Yang's doctoral supervisor, as saying. Yang obtained Australian citizenship in 2002.
In 2019, Yang was arrested at Guangzhou airport when he travelled from the USA with his wife. At the time, he also held an academic position at Columbia University and was involved in the import-export business between China and the USA.
In captivity, Yang is said to have been repeatedly tortured and held incommunicado. He was tried behind closed doors in 2021.
There is a lot of excitement in Australia following the harsh judgement for Yang. Foreign Minister Penny Wong wrote that her government was outraged. All Australians wanted Yang to be reunited with his family. They will continue to stand up for him. However, Wong is probably aware that she has little room for manoeuvre.
The judgement comes at a delicate time in Australian-Chinese relations. These have only slowly begun to ease in recent months after years of ice age. The close trading partners found themselves in a serious diplomatic crisis. Australia accused China of interfering in and influencing Australian politics. During the coronavirus pandemic, Australia then demanded an investigation into the cause of the outbreak, which angered China's rulers so much that they imposed several punitive measures against Australian products.
The communist regime severely punishes "treason"
In November, Anthony Albanese became the first Australian Prime Minister in seven years to visit Beijing. Shortly before this, the Chinese government released the Australian journalist Cheng Lei. Like Yang, she was born Chinese and later obtained Australian citizenship. Cheng worked for the Chinese state broadcaster CGTN and was arrested, allegedly because she had ignored an embargo period. She was held for more than two years, but was never convicted.
Hopes at the time that Yang would soon be released did not materialise. On the contrary: the conditional death sentence exceeded the fears of most of his supporters. The 57-year-old's real "crime" was probably that he had turned his back on China and the Communist Party as a former member of the party cadre. In the eyes of those in power, this is treason and should be severely punished.
In Australia, Yang's harsh punishment is also seen in a political light. The director of the think tank Australia Strategic Policy Institute, Justin Bassi, described the judgement to the Sydney Morning Herald as hostage diplomacy. Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham told the public broadcaster ABC that the death sentence was a warning of the differences between Australia's and China's legal systems and the risks involved in doing business and maintaining contacts with China.
The West should finally understand that XI will not tolerate any resistance or criticism from the Chinese Communist Party, and if they do not retaliate today, they will retaliate at some point, without mercy or humanity.
The West must take advantage of China's weaknesses and exploit its dependence on China and the ultimate prosperity of the Chinese people.
In order to live in peace with China, the following must be realised.
China's business enterprises (mostly dependent on the CKP) cannot acquire shares in systemically relevant companies and infrastructure in Europe, nor in agricultural enterprises. Without exception, not even in the form of straw companies.
China's weakness is its size and the fact that ultimately China's land cannot feed the Chinese people sufficiently, which in turn means that the CP, which always emphasises that it and the people are one, must provide the people with food and quality of life. For better or worse! China has a large area, but this area is not exactly fertile.
Europe has the ability to supply China with the food China needs, but it should always understand that this is exactly the trump card to stop China.
Europe must also secure its supply routes and not be intimidated by China's behaviour in terms of exerting influence. Europe is China's sales market and if we get the sniffles, China is sick!
Mark Aurel more or less
According to the motto divide and conquer, keep a watchful eye on China because everything China does is part of a plan. They punish to negotiate, they smile to negotiate but always in the interest of the CKP and thus XI's plans.
No blogger is safe from dictatorships! Only democracy and freedom guarantee freedom of expression and thus participation in an open society. Someone should be persecuted because of their thoughts, opinions, ethnicity or sexual orientation.
A nation in which everyone is equal agrees on common rules of coexistence for the benefit of all.
Freedom is non-negotiable, human rights are non-negotiable.
Justice is when everyone is treated equally, publicly and transparently.
Everything else is injustice, there is no right in wrong!
#abc news#yang hengjun#death penalty#china is not our friend#reality#freedom of speech#free will#freedom of expression#save our democracy#protect humanity#Patrick Zoll#Taipei#nzz#wikipedia#mark Aurelius#Youtube#free Blogger#equal rights#equal justice
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
2008: Reviews of Yang Hengjun Fatal Weapon 《致命武器》with Reflection on PRC - Taiwan Unpleasantness
Translated here: 2008 : PRC Spy Novel “Fatal Weapon” — Vol II in Yang Hengjun’s Series Chinese Readers Comment Book Review: Fatal Weapon 《致命武器》 What is the essence of the Taiwan Strait issue? Reposting a comment from a Taiwan person on the Strengthening the Nation Forum: What is the essence of the Taiwan Strait issue? — Discussing with Yang Hengjun, the author of the spy novel Fatal…
View On WordPress
#China#espionage#Intelligence#literature#novel#politics#PRC#reader#review#spy#Strong Country Forum#Taiwan#Yang Hengjun#中国
0 notes
Text
#YangHengjun:
#Chinesisches #Gericht #verhängt #Todesurteil gegen #australischen #Autor.
Der gebürtige #Chinese war im Januar 2019 mit Frau und Stieftochter von New York nach #Guangzhou im Süden Chinas gereist, wo er kurz nach seiner Ankunft verschwand. Später wurde bekannt, dass er #festgenommen wurde.
0 notes
Text
Yang Hengjun sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve
wishing the Chinese courts a very get fucked
14 notes
·
View notes
Text
Feb. 5 (UPI) -- A Beijing court handed Australian writer Yang Hengjun a suspended death sentence on Monday, Foreign Minister Penny Wong of Australia said, some five years after he was detained in China on national security charges.
Wong confirmed the suspended sentence in a statement, saying the Australian government understands that if Yang does not commit any serious crimes in the next two years it could be commuted to life imprisonment.
"This is harrowing news for Dr. Yang, his family and all who have supported him," she said.
Novelist, blogger, former Chinese diplomat and outspoken critic of the Beijing government, Yang was detained in China in January 2019. U.S. officials have said that he was held incommunicado for several months until he was formally arrested that August and was charged two months later as a spy.
His closed-door trial was scheduled for May 27, 2021, and Monday's announcement follows repeated delays, Australian officials said.
"This period has been extraordinarily difficult. Like so many Australians, I am moved by Dr. Yang's strength, and the strength of his family and friends," Wong said.
She said the Australian government has consistently advocated for Yang at the highest levels of the Chinese government and that they will continue "to press for Dr. Yang's interests and wellbeing, including appropriate medical treatment and provide consular assistance to him and his family"
"We will not relent in our advocacy," she said.
Foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin confirmed the sentenced on Monday, stating he was found guilty of espionage and that along with being sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve the Second Intermediate People's Court of Beijing ordered his personal property be confiscated, the state-run Global Times tabloid reported.
Australia has repeatedly raised concerns over Yang's detention and health, as well as having called on the Chinese authorities to explain the charges against him and to demand his immediate release.
In May 2021 when the start date of his closed-door trial was announced, then-foreign minister Marise Payne of Australia said Yang has had no access to his family and limited or delayed access to his legal representation.
The U.S. 2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices concerning China states Yang was interrogated more than 300 times "at all hours of day and night, for four to five hours at a time."
"After arbitrary detention, torture, unfair trial, this heavy sentence is alarming," Maya Wang, interim China director at Human Rights Watch, said Monday on X.
"Even more outrageous is that Yang may have been punished for being a China critic."
Australian Member of Parliament with the Liberal Party described Yang's sentence as a tool designed to intimidate defenders of democracy and free speech.
"The fate of Dr. Yang Hengjun matters to all of us," he said in a statement on X. "Securing his freedom must be a line in the sand."
Yang was detained a month after the Asian nation arrested Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor also on national security charges in what was widely seen as retaliation over Ottawa's arrest of Huawei's chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou.
Spavor and Kovrig were released in September 2021, shortly after Canada released Meng.
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Chinese Prime Minister Li Qiang, who is visiting Australia, said during a visit to the Adelaide Zoo that China is willing to send two more pandas to Australia. Two weeks before Li Qiang's visit, China notified Australian officials of the news that the Beijing court had upheld Yang Hengjun's suspended death sentence.
LiQIang、#Australia、#China、#Cooperation
0 notes
Text
Detained Australian writer waives right to appeal _ FreeQuizBank.com - Free Exam Practice Questions for LANTITE Numeracy, Mathematical Reasoning - OC, Selective and Scholarship Tests @acereduau #NSWeducation #AusEdu @AusGovEducation @ServiceNSW
0 notes
Text
Detained Australian writer waives right to appeal _ FreeQuizBank.com - Free Exam Practice Questions for LANTITE Numeracy, Mathematical Reasoning - OC, Selective and Scholarship Tests @acereduau #NSWeducation #AusEdu @AusGovEducation @ServiceNSW
0 notes
Text
"We are aghast with horror and condemnation but it mirrors what we do ourselves. Espionage and security cases are not usually held in open courts, outsiders are not permitted to observe, evidence is covered by a shroud of ‘secrecy’ and sentences are often draconian."
0 notes
Link
0 notes
Text
0 notes
Text
2008 : PRC Spy Novel "Fatal Weapon" -- Vol II in Yang Hengjun’s Series
Here is my translation of volume II of Yang Hengjun’s Chinese spy trilogy. Many retired spies went on to write spy novels. Graham Greene, Ian Fleming, John le Carré/David Cornwall, Stella Rimington, Charles McCarry, Frederick Forsyth, Jason Matthews fueled their post-retirement novelist careers with lessons learned from their intelligence operation experiences, analyses and intelligence cultures…
View On WordPress
#Australia#China#Chinese#CIA#Communist Party#corruption#counterintelligencce#countryside#翻译#espionage#致命弱点#间谍#警察#Fudan#Intelligence#interrogation#Li Wenfeng#literature#migrant workers#migrants#Ministry of State Security#MSS#novel#peasant#poetry#police#politics#PRC#public intellectual#rural
0 notes
Link
0 notes
Text
#Breaking: Detained #Australian writer #YangHengjun given suspended death sentence in #China over #espionage charges
Detained Australian writer Yang Hengjun given suspended death sentence in China over espionage charges Australian writer Yang Hengjun has been given a suspended death sentence by a Chinese court, five years after he was arrested and accused of spying. The sentence may be commuted to life imprisonment after two years, according to Australian officials. Dr Yang – a scholar and novelist who…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Chinese-Australian Writer Yang Given Suspended Death Sentence in China
The verdict in the case of Yang Hengjun, who was detained on national security charges, may weigh on the warming relations between China and Australia. source https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/05/world/asia/australian-writer-yang-china-death-sentence.html
View On WordPress
0 notes