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Declaring We Are Ready for Freedom of Expression, Chinese and International Writers Demand Release of Jailed Colleagues Before
| Writers still in jail |
To the openning of Beijing Olympics Game |
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| Today | 41 | 214 day(s) left |
| Dec. 10, 2007 | 40 | 242 days left |
New York, Washington, Toronto, Beijing, December 10, 2007 World-renowned writers from China and North America marked International Human Rights Day today by launching 40:242 We Are Ready for Freedom of Expression, a campaign that challenges the Chinese government to release all of the writers and journalists it is holding in prisons before the August 8, 2008 opening of the Olympic Games. Noted Chinese authors Liu Xiaobo and Zheng Yi were among those joining international counterparts including Margaret Atwood, Francine Prose, and Salman Rushdie in issuing the challenge on behalf of PEN, the worldwide associatin of writers.
In August 2007, the Chinese government launched a major publicity offensive for the Olympics under the slogan “We Are Ready.” The writers’ campaign, a PEN initiative led by the Independent Chinese PEN Center and PEN centers in the US and Canada, mocks that public relations effort by reminding the world that China continues to deny its citizens the fundamental right to freedom of expression and suggesting that Chinese authorities have 242 days until the opening ceremonies to release 40 writers and journalists currently languishing in Chinese prisons.
“Today, on the 59th commemoration of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, we challenge you to demonstrate that China is in fact ready – not just to stage the Olympics, but to acknowledge, protect, and celebrate the full rights of its citizens,” the Presidents of the Independent Chinese PEN Center, PEN Canada,
“Without promoting human rights, which are the fundamental principle of universal ethics in
In
In the United States, were especially appalled that US-based internet providers have assisted Chinese authorities in censoring the internet and even in identifying and imprisoning dissident journalists and bloggers, said Francine Prose, President of
Its really very simple, former
For more information contact:
Isobel Harry, PEN
Yu Zhang,

