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Nobel winner's wife: Peace prize brings hope of change

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Nobel winner's wife: Peace prize brings hope of change

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BEIJING, China - Police officers close the gate to the home of Liu Xia, the wife of Nobel Peace laureate Liu Xiaobo, in Beijing on Oct. 8, 2010. The imprisoned Liu was awarded the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize for his struggle for human rights in China.


BEIJING — China's dwindling band of pro-democracy dissidents believe awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to one of their own could bring change to the world's most populous country, his wife told Reuters.

Liu Xiaobo, jailed in 2009 for 11 years for subversion, won the prize for his decades of non-violent struggle for human rights, putting China's rights record in the spotlight at a time when the world's most populous nation is starting to play a bigger role on the global stage.

"His friends repeatedly told me that they thirsted for Liu Xiaobo to win the Prize more than he himself did because they think it would be an opportunity to change China," she said by telephone.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee praised Liu for his "long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China."

The Chinese government called the prize for Liu an "obscenity" that went against the aims of the prize and warned that it would hurt relations between China and Norway.

Liu was first jailed in 1989 for joining a hunger strike in support of the 1989 Tiananmen Square student-led demonstrations for democracy, which were crushed on June 4 with heavy loss of life.

The democracy movement is largely forgotten in China, with many Chinese abandoning activism and focusing instead on cashing in on economic reforms.

Beijing has changed dramatically since 1989 and an economic boom that is pushing it past Japan as the world's number two economy.

The Communist Party continues to monopolize politics and rules out Western-style democracy. The Chinese government tightly controls the media and the Internet.

"I was listening to a live broadcast by telephone and could not believe it when I heard Xiaobo's name announced," Liu Xia said.


She told Reuters last Sunday that she doubted her husband had any chance of winning because of China's growing diplomatic and economic clout.

Liu Xiaobo was jailed as the lead author of Charter 08, a manifesto issued by Chinese intellectuals and activists calling for free speech and multi-party elections.

"Xiaobo is innocent. The constitution guarantees freedom of speech. They (the authorities) broke the law first," she said.

Beijing police offered to take Liu Xia to the prison in Jinzhou in the northeastern province of Liaoning, where her husband was being held, in an apparent effort to prevent foreign reporters from speaking to her.

"They are forcing me to leave Beijing," said Liu Xia as her brothers packed her bags with plainclothes police waiting for her outside.


"They want me to go to Liaoning to see Xiaobo. They want to distance me from the media," she said.

Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

link:

Nobel winner's wife: Prize brings hope - World news - Asia-Pacific - China - msnbc.com
 
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She's obviously not suffering too bad. After all she's living in a gated mansion. HOW MANY "POOR ADVOCATES" live in a GATED MANSION?!!!
 
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Private mansion???

Are these guys that rich or is the land price in beijing so low?

land price in beijing is over 10000 RMB per square meter on the outskirts outside 5th ring road. 300 square meter home (needed for such a mansion) = 3 million RMB for such a gated mansion's land alone. add 1 million for construction. where did the money for this mansion come from?
 
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land price in beijing is over 10000 RMB per square meter on the outskirts outside 5th ring road. 300 square meter home (needed for such a mansion) = 3 million RMB for such a gated mansion's land alone. add 1 million for construction. where did the money for this mansion come from?

May be he invited bets on his winning the Nobel Peace Prize...:P
 
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so we can see the contrast between liu's message and his own lavish lifestyle. on one hand he is an "advocate" for democracy. on the other he lives a lavish life with private mansions before his sentence. where did he get the money?!
 
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**** Engineering I'm going to become a democracy advocate right now! You get to live in a huge mansion you've got food and health covered for free. I'd probably spend my 15 years surfing the internet and playing video games.
 
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I agree with the article that Chinese people have little stomach for multi-party system. I applaud the decision awarding him the Nobel prize provided he is not a shill, he is a man of his own convictions.

The part that bothers me about him is wishing China was a Western colony for 300 hunndred years. British Raj only hired natives as bean counters, never trusted them with any higher positions. Their only intent was to rule, not to advance the native population.

I gotta say the house in where she is holding his picture looks very fancy to me !
 
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All these "dissidents" are paid handsomely, to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. The money is usually funnelled through NGOs financed by Western governments.
 
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No difference between Liu and a professional pimp.

As a pimp can sell his mother and sisters for money, Liu can sell his own mother (land) for money.

I am sure, Liu's fugly wife is giving regular sexual services to her Angloid masculine masters every night.

What a disgrace!!

China does not need external enemies as long as such masochist ethnic Chinese traitors are there in China. These low life self hating *** slaves are enough for self destruction of China.

They bite the hand that feeds them.
 
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