Oslo, December 9, 2010—Today in Oslo, PEN International has reiterated its call, echoed by writers, journalists and essayists, as well as political and civic leaders around the world, for the immediate and unconditional release of Liu Xiaobo, recipient of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize.

Liu Xiaobo is a past president of the Independent Chinese PEN Center (ICPC) and is one of its 30 founding members. A delegation of 20 senior PEN members, led by International President John Ralston Saul, along with Writers in Prison Committee Chairperson Marian Botsford Fraser and ICPC President Tienchi Martin-Liao, are in Oslo and will be attending the Nobel prize-giving ceremony to represent Dr. Liu. 
 
PEN International will also be co-hosting a seminar in Oslo on Friday, December 10, along with Amnesty International, to highlight the ongoing suppression of writers and activists across China and to urge China’s government to embrace reform. 

John Ralston Saul comments, “It is the Chinese Constitution that commits their government to civil and political rights. Liu Xiaobo is a model of the serious citizen who embraces his full legal rights. He should be admired for this, not imprisoned. China needs citizens like Liu Xiaobo.”

There will likely be nobody present at tomorrow’s Nobel ceremony to receive Liu Xiaobo’s prize—he is currently serving an 11-year prison sentence in China and his wife, Liu Xia, is under house arrest and incommunicado. 

Since the announcement of the prize in October, scores of other writers, artists, academics, and activists in China have been silenced by the authorities. According to the ICPC, more than 30 of its own members, including board members and vice presidents, along with hundreds of other Chinese citizens, have been harassed, summoned for interrogation, detained under house arrest or prevented from traveling from mainland China in the last two months. 

“Liu Xiaobo will not be the last victim of China’s censorship and literary inquisition,” says Tienchi Martin-Liao. “As current Honorary President of the ICPC, Liu Xiaobo truly represents the spirit of ‘Free the Word.’ As Nobel Peace Laureate, his very absence at the Oslo ceremony tomorrow reinforces the power of the word to challenge and transform authoritarian regimes.”

Dr. Liu is a renowned Chinese writer and human rights activist who taught Chinese literature at Beijing Normal University until he was jailed for his part in the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. During these student protests, he had been instrumental in negotiating a peaceful withdrawal for several thousand protestors penned in by the military. He was later accused of inciting the protests and he lost his job at the university. He was detained under house arrest for nine months in 1995 and underwent three years’ reeducation through labor from 1996 to 1999.  All his writings have been banned in China, although he has continued to publish outside the country.

In 2008, Liu Xiaobo was detained for the fourth time by Chinese authorities for his participation in the drafting of Charter 08, a human rights manifesto which calls for greater freedom of expression and which has been signed by over 10,000 Chinese people from all walks of life. He was incarcerated for 11 years on December 25, 2009, after being convicted of “inciting subversion of state power.”

PEN International, through its Writers in Prison Committee, took up Liu’s case in 1990 and has been working to support him and other Chinese writers under threat for 20 years. He is also the 50th emblematic case commemorated by the Writers in Prison Committee, which celebrates its half-century in 2010.

PEN International counts many Nobel literature laureates among its global membership, including this year’s prize winner, Mario Vargas Llosa, who is a former PEN International president. However, Liu Xiaobo is the first PEN member to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Also in Oslo this week is “A Chair for Liu Xiaobo.” Created by students and staff at Lomond School in Helensburgh for the Scottish PEN Center, the chair has traveled to Oslo to become the visual centerpiece of PEN’s campaign to free Liu Xiaobo. The chair contains Dr. Liu’s image, along with one of his quotes in Chinese:

“I have no enemies and no hatred… …for hatred is corrosive of a person’s wisdom and conscience; the mentality of enmity can poison a nation’s spirit, instigate brutal life and death struggles, destroy a society’s tolerance and humanity, and block a nation’s progress to freedom and democracy. I hope therefore to be able to transcend my personal vicissitudes in understanding the development of the state and changes in society, to counter the hostility of the regime with the best of intentions, and defuse hate with love.”

The “empty chair” represents all those writers who are absent from the public sphere because they are imprisoned, censored or under threat, or have even been killed because of their writing. It has become a PEN tradition over the years to commemorate absent colleagues in this way. 

Kwame Anthony Appiah, president of the PEN American Center, was one of those who nominated Liu Xiaobo for the Nobel Peace Prize. He says, “The Nobel committee, in selecting Liu Xiaobo for the Peace Prize, has thrown the spotlight on his cause: the democratization of the country he loves and works for. The response of the Chinese government shows how far there is to go in that struggle. But his own quiet courage inspires all of us who care about freedom to work hard every day to help the Chinese achieve the fundamental freedoms that are the right of every human being.”

NOTES TO EDITORS:

PEN International celebrates literature and promotes freedom of expression. Founded in 1921, our global community of writers now spans more than 100 countries. Our campaigns, events, publications and programs aim to connect writers and readers wherever they are in the world.

John Ralston Saul, PEN International President, will be participating in a joint seminar with Amnesty International on Friday, December 10, at 09h00.  Also on the panel will be Tienchi Martin-Liao and Zhang Yu of the ICPC. This takes place at Amnesty International’s office at Grensen 3, Oslo. Please contact Carl Morten Iversen at +47 926 88 023 or [email protected]

To speak to the Independent Chinese PEN Center, contact Tienchi Martin-Liao at +49 176 5472 3721 or [email protected].  Alternatively, contact Zhang Yu at +46 8 500 22792 or [email protected]

For a quote from PEN American Center, contact Larry Siems at +1-646-359-0594 or [email protected]

For general media enquiries, contact Nicola Spurr at +44 20 7405 0338 or +44 772 686 7868 or [email protected]

Visit the PEN International web site at www.internationalpen.org.uk and find out more about Liu Xiaobo at http://www.internationalpen.org.uk/index.cfm?objectid=227779C9-3048-676E-26605C8214A0D2AE

Nicola Spurr, PEN International, +44 20 7405 0338 or +44 772 686 7868