Chinese church leader sentenced
Activists call for U.S. action
BEIJING, China (AP) — A Chinese court has sentenced an underground Protestant church leader to three years in jail, his lawyer said Wednesday, and American activists called for U.S. President George W. Bush to raise the case during a visit to Beijing this month.
Pastor Cai Zhuohua was convicted on Tuesday of running an illegal business, said his lawyer, Gao Feixiong. He said Cai’s wife, Xiao Yunfei, was sentenced to two years and her brother, Xiao Gaowen, was sentenced to 18 months.
They were detained in 2003 in what activists say was a crackdown by China’s ruling Communists on independent religious activity.
The Chinese government allows worship only in churches run by state-monitored religious associations and strictly controls publication of Bibles.
Cai’s supporters in the United States called on Bush to make the case for religious freedom in China when he visits November 19-21.
“We want, of course, for him to raise this case and talk about increasing religious persecution and other human rights violations in China,” said Bob Fu, president of the China Aid Association in Midland, Texas — Bush’s childhood home.
Fu said a member of the group’s board of advisers, Deborah Fikes, met with Bush in the Oval Office this week to discuss Cai’s case.
“Everybody familiar with this case, who knows Pastor Cai and his family, knows they are very innocent,” Fu said by telephone from Texas.
Cai was detained with 200,000 copies of unauthorized Christian publications, according to his lawyers. They say he gave away the books for free and deny he was running a business.
Cai and his two relatives were sentenced by the Haidian District People’s Court in Beijing, Gao said. A court employee referred inquiries to the press office, where calls rang unanswered.
One of Cai’s sisters-in-law, Hu Jinyun, also was detained in the case but was released without sentence, he said.
Cai faced a maximum of 10 years in jail for the charge of illegal business practice, Gao said.
Gao said he was preparing an appeal.
Even with the shorter-than-expected term, “this sentence is ridiculous,” he said.
Fu said China was employing a new tactic in using economic charges to stop religious activity.
In a report released Tuesday, the U.S. State Department included China in a list of eight countries of “particular concern” for insufficiently respecting freedom of religion.
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