BEIJING—The health of a jailed Buddhist Chinese dissident outspoken on Tibet and other sensitive topics, is poor and he is not being allowed to communicate freely with his family, according to a source who met him recently.
Hu’s wife, Zeng Jinyan, disappeared prior to the Olympics and is believed to be under house arrest in an undisclosed location.
Hu Jia was found guilty of “inciting subversion of state power” in April for criticising the ruling Communist Party, a verdict that drew quick condemnation from the United States, Britain and the United Nations.
He is now serving a three-and-a-half year sentence in a prison in Beijing’s neighbouring city of Tianjin, and has been mentioned as a potential winner of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize.
The Communist regime this week attempted to put pressure on the Nobel Prize selection committee to not select Hu, by veiled threats and voicing of its ‘displeasure’.
Reuters reported that a source close to the activist who asked not to be identified and who was allowed to see Hu this week, said that although he was apparently not being beaten at this time, Hu had been placed in solitary confinement in chains at least once.
“Because Hu Jia spread discussion of human rights amongst prisoners that was not beneficial to the management of the jail, he was placed in solitary confinement for a day on Aug. 13, shut in a cell for 24 hours in handcuffs and leg chains,” the source said, citing prison officials.
Because of Hu’s high international profile, his treatment in jail is likely to be much more lenient than that meted out to other dissidents.
Other prisoners are not allowed to lend Hu reading materials, and his letters to his family are read by prison officials who demand rewrites if they are not satisfied with the contents, the source added.
As Hu is a devout Buddhist, he sticks to a strict vegetarian diet, which is causing nutritional problems for him in jail, the source said.
“I saw that his gums were pale, and I’m worried that he is anaemic and malnourished,” the source added.
Jail officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
Starting with advocacy for rural AIDS sufferers, Hu emerged as one of the nation’s most vocal advocates of democratic rights, religious freedom and self-determination for Tibet.
Hu was detained in late December after being under house arrest in a Beijing apartment complex since July, 2006.
With Reuters