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Home›China›‘Tombstone’ | Beijing forbids Great Famine author from taking Harvard prize

‘Tombstone’ | Beijing forbids Great Famine author from taking Harvard prize

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February 17, 2016
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Yang Jisheng was awarded Harvard’s Nieman Fellows in December for “Tombstone”

Yang Jisheng was awarded Harvard’s Nieman Fellows in December for “Tombstone”

A former journalist with China’s official news agency says he has been blocked from traveling to the United States to accept a Harvard University prize for a 2008 book uncovering the devastating toll of the Great Chinese Famine of 1958-1961.
Harvard’s Nieman Fellows in December awarded Yang Jisheng for “Tombstone,” a 1,200-page account of the famine — which he estimated claimed at least 36 million Chinese lives — and a decades-long government effort to whitewash one of the worst man-made disasters.
Although more recent leaders have permitted, sometimes encouraged, re-evaluation of Mao-­era policies, any substantial discussion of national traumas like the Great Famine can be highly sensitive. “Tombstone,” for which Yang gained unprecedented access to restricted government archives, has been banned in Mainland China.
Yang said by phone yesterday that Xinhua had forbidden him to travel. He did not specify how Xinhua would prevent him from traveling or whether his passport had been confiscated, but Chinese retirees often depend substantially on their former employers for benefits and pensions.
Yang successfully left the country in November because he did not inform the authorities beforehand, but “this time I gave them a heads up, that’s why I can’t leave,” he said. He declined to comment further, saying he was forbidden to speak to foreign media.
On that trip, the 76-year-old writer received the Stieg Larsson Prize in Stockholm, which he said he “accepted with grief.”
“I grieve for the 36 million starved dead,” he said in a speech. “I grieve that this human tragedy that occurred five decades ago is still being covered up, while those who uncover this human tragedy are pressured, attacked and slandered.”
Aside from authoring books, Yang worked in retirement at a reform-minded history journal. He quit last year after being pressured by Xinhua party cadres, he wrote in a memo published online.
The news agency did not immediately respond to a fax requesting comment yesterday. AP

UN rights chief raises concerns with China over crackdown

The U.N. human rights chief says he has raised concerns with Chinese authorities over a crackdown against lawyers, advocacy groups and government critics in recent months.
Zeid Raad al-Hussein says there is a “worrying pattern” in China for civil society and notes that states have a duty to protect lawyers, journalists and members of non-governmental organizations.
The office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights said in a statement yesterday that police have detained about 250 human rights lawyers, legal assistants and activists since a “nationwide crackdown” began in July, though many have since been released.
Zeid also expressed concern about recent disappearances of booksellers from Hong Kong, and noted that leading human rights lawyers Li Heping and Wang Yu are among those facing a “subversion of state power” charge. Isolda Morillo, Beijing

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