Chang Weiping

China: Jail sentence for lawyer who reported being tortured ‘an outrage’

Responding to the three-and-a-half year prison sentence handed to Chinese human rights lawyer Chang Weiping for “subversion of state power” today at Feng County Detention Centre, Shaanxi province, the Head of Amnesty International’s China Team, Sarah Brooks, said:

“It is an outrage that Chang Weiping faces jail simply for speaking out about the torture he says he faced at the hands of the police.

“He was convicted in a closed-door trial that even his wife was prevented from attending, and he has been denied regular access to his lawyer throughout his time in custody.

“Chang remains at risk of torture and other ill-treatment in jail and there are grave concerns for his physical and mental well-being due to the isolation and ill-treatment he has endured. The Chinese authorities’ appalling treatment of Chang Weiping has even extended to his family, who have reported facing intimidation and harassment to stop them speaking out about his plight.

“Chang Weiping is a dedicated advocate for human rights protections who has been jailed solely for exercising his right to freedom of expression. He must be released immediately.”

Background

Chang Weiping was today sentenced to three years and six months in prison for “subversion of state power” at Feng County Detention Centre, Shaanxi province, after he publicly detailed incidents of torture he says he experienced during detention in January 2020.

Chang is a human rights lawyer from Baoji City, Shaanxi, known for his work defending the rights of people facing discrimination based on their health status, gender identity or sexual orientation. He was first detained for 10 days in January 2020 after attending an informal, private meeting with other human rights activists in the city of Xiamen in December 2019. In January 2020, the authorities also revoked his law licence.

Ten months after his release, Chang posted a video clip on YouTube in which he shared details of how he had been subjected to torture during his detention. He said that police had tied him to a restraining device known as a “tiger chair” for 24 hours a day and that he had been interrogated 16 times over the 10 days. He also talked about being subjected to heavy surveillance after his release in January 2020.

Six days after posting the video, on 22 October 2020, he was again detained by the authorities. He was initially put under ‘Residential Surveillance at a Designated Location’, a measure that, under certain circumstances, enables criminal investigators to hold individuals for up to six months outside the formal detention system in what can amount to a form of secret incommunicado detention.

On 16 April 2021, Chang’s family received a notice that he had been charged with “subversion of state power”. He was only then allowed to meet his lawyer after being held incommunicado for nearly a year. Throughout his detention, authorities arbitrarily rejected his lawyer’s and family’s requests to meet him.

Chang was convicted of “subversion of state power” in a closed-door trial at the Feng County People’s Court, Shaanxi, on 26 July 2022.

Meanwhile, Chang’s parents and other family members have faced ongoing surveillance and intimidation. They have reported being followed whenever they leave the house, that their phones have been taken away and that any visitors they receive at home are questioned by the police. Chang’s wife said authorities threatened that she might lose her job if she continued to speak out on Chang’s case.