CHINA: Artist Ai Weiwei faces enormous fines

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PEN INTERNATIONAL RAPID ACTION NETWORK
29 June 2011
RAN 16/11 update

CHINA: Artist Ai Weiwei faces enormous fines

On 28 June 2011, it was reported that Ai Weiwei, the internationally acclaimed artist who had been freed on bail a week earlier, had been visited by government tax officials with a demand for over 12 m yuan (c. 1.3 m Euro) in unpaid taxes and fines. Ai’s supporters in China and abroad believe that these heavy fines have been levied in retaliation for his criticism of the government. Ai Weiwei had been arrested in early April 2011 on for unspecified “economic crimes”. PEN International continues to monitor Ai Weiwei’s case, and has serious concerns about the continuing restrictions on his right to communicate with others. It also remains alarmed about the overall dire state of freedom of expression in China.

Ai Weiwei was arrested on 3 April 2011 on undefined charges of “economic crimes”. His arrest was widely condemned in China and abroad, including by governments and leading figures in the fields of the arts and human rights. He was released on 22 June 2011 on bail. During his imprisonment he was denied access to his family and lawyers, leading to alarm about his well-being. On his release he refused to answer questions, only to say that he is not allowed to give interviews to the press, or use Twitter or other social media. He is also banned from leaving Beijing.

On 28 June, the Associated Press reported that on the previous day, tax bureau officials came to his home and delivered a notice believed to be related to a bill of around 5m yuan (c. Eur 600,000) in unpaid taxes and further fines of about 7m yuan (c. Eur 900,000), believed to relate to the past ten years. Ai is said to have refused to sign the notice. His mother is quoted as saying no tax demands of this kind had been sent in the past ten years. Ai’s supporters claim that he is being penalised for his criticism of the Chinese government. For more read: http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2011/jun/28/ai-weiwei-tax-bill-china?INTCMP=SRCH

Background
Ai Weiwei was detained at Beijing International Airport on 3 April 2011 while preparing to board a flight to Hong Kong, where he had been due to participate in artistic exchange activities. Later that day police raided his home and studio, questioned his wife and eight assistants, and confiscated computers. No news was given about his whereabouts or the reason for his arrest until 7 April 2011, when it was reported by the official Chinese News Agency Xinhua that Ai Weiwei was under investigation for suspected involvement in ‘economic crimes’. His arrest appears to be part of a widespread crackdown on dissent in which writers, journalists and human rights defenders are amongst those to have been targeted since mid-February 2011 (see previous alerts for details).

Ai Weiwei, aged 53, is an internationally recognized artist who co-designed the Olympic Bird’s Nest stadium in Beijing. He is one of the most prominent of China’s government critics, and has commented frequently on social injustice, including the detentions of fellow dissidents and government corruption, on his widely followed Twitter page and blog. In recent years Ai Weiwei has been repeatedly harassed, and in August 2009 was badly beaten by Chengdu police for attempting to testify in the trial of imprisoned dissident writer Tan Zuren, with whom Ai had worked on an investigation into student casualties of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. On 14 September 2009, Ai was diagnosed with a cerebral haemorrhage which is believed to be linked to the police attack, and he underwent emergency brain surgery at a hospital in Munich, Germany. In January 2011 his Shanghai studio was destroyed by the authorities.

Ai Weiwei’s first book, Time and Place, was published by Guangxi Normal University Press in September 2010. The book is a collection of essays on art, architecture and reviews selected from his online publications in his blogs, which have been closed down since his detention. Its complete uncensored version in Chinese will be published in Hong Kong later this year.

Please send appeals:
– Welcoming the release on bail of Ai Weiwei, while expressing concerns that he remains under restriction, including denial of his right to freedom of expression;

– Asking for assurances that the tax evasion charges against him have not been applied in retaliation for his criticism of the government, concerns that are widely held within China and abroad;

– Reminding the Chinese authorities of their obligations under Article 35 of the Chinese constitution and Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which it is a signatory and seeking assurances that these international commitments are being adhered to;
– Calling for the immediate and unconditional release of all those currently detained in violation of their right to freedom of expression in China, as guaranteed by Article 19 of the United Nations Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which China is a signatory

Send appeals to:
His Excellency Hu Jintao
President of the People’s Republic of China
State Council
Beijing 100032
P.R. China

Director of the Beijing Public Security Bureau
FU Zhenghua Juzhang
Beijingshi Gong’anju
9 Dongdajie, Qianmen
Dongchengqu
Beijingshi 100740
People’s Republic of China.
Fax: +86 1065242927

Minister of Justice
WU Aiying Buzhang
Sifabu
10 Chaoyangmen Nandajie
Chaoyangqu
Beijingshi 100020
People’s Republic of China.

Minister of Public Security of the People’s Republic of China.
MENG Jianzhu
Gong’anbu
14 Dongchang’anjie
Dongchengqu
Beijingshi 100741
People’s Republic of China.

Please note that there are no fax numbers for the Chinese authorities. WiPC recommends that you copy your appeal to the Chinese embassy in your country asking them to forward it and welcoming any comments.

You may find it easier to write to the Chinese ambassador in your own country asking him or her to forward your appeal. Most embassies are obliged to forward such appeals to the relevant officials in the country. A letter or petition signed by an eminent member of your Centre may give make it more likely for your appeal to be considered. Similarly if your appeal is published in your local press and copied to the Chinese ambassador, this too may have greater impact.

See this useful link to find the contact details of the Chinese embassy in your country Chinese embassies abroad

**Please contact the PEN WiPC office in London if sending appeals after 15 July 2011**

For further information please contact Cathy McCann at International PEN Writers in Prison Committee, Brownlow House, 50/51 High Holborn, London WC1V 6ER, Tel.+ 44 (0) 20 7405 0338, Fax: +44 (0) 20 7405 0339, email: [email protected]