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Liu Xiaobo: China's most prominent dissident dies | Liu Xiaobo: China's most prominent dissident dies |
(35 minutes later) | |
Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo, who was China's most prominent human rights and democracy advocate, has died aged 61. | |
The activist was being treated for terminal liver cancer in a hospital in north-eastern China. | The activist was being treated for terminal liver cancer in a hospital in north-eastern China. |
He had been transferred from prison last month, where he was serving an 11-year term for "subversion". | He had been transferred from prison last month, where he was serving an 11-year term for "subversion". |
A university professor turned tireless rights campaigner, Mr Liu was branded a criminal by authorities, and was repeatedly jailed throughout his life. | |
He was also subject to severe restrictions when not in prison, while his wife, Liu Xia, was placed under house arrest. | |
In the weeks leading up to his death, Mr Liu's case became mired in international controversy. | In the weeks leading up to his death, Mr Liu's case became mired in international controversy. |
Several Western countries urged China to allow Mr Liu to leave the country to seek palliative care elsewhere. A German and an American doctor who recently visited and examined him in a hospital in Shenyang both said he would be able to travel abroad. | |
But Chinese medical experts insisted that he was too ill to travel. | But Chinese medical experts insisted that he was too ill to travel. |
In a brief statement on its website, the Shenyang legal bureau said that Mr Liu had suffered multiple organ failure, and that efforts to save the activist had failed. | |
Mr Liu was a pro-democracy figurehead for activists outside mainland China, although many of his compatriots were unaware of his struggles because the authorities rigorously censored news about him. | |
The activist played a significant role in the Tiananmen protests of June 1989 which ended in bloodshed when they were quashed by troops. | The activist played a significant role in the Tiananmen protests of June 1989 which ended in bloodshed when they were quashed by troops. |
He and other activists negotiated the safe exit of several hundred demonstrators, and have been credited with saving the protesters' lives. | |
He was subsequently placed in a detention centre and released in 1991. | |
Analysis: The price of political defiance | Analysis: The price of political defiance |
By Carrie Gracie, China editor | By Carrie Gracie, China editor |
Chinese authorities refused Liu Xiaobo's dying request to be allowed to travel abroad for treatment. Instead he died as he had lived, under the close watch of the one-party state. | |
The life and death of this Nobel laureate underline the cost of political defiance in China. Liu Xiaobo had enjoyed a comfortable early career as a university professor, but the massacre which followed the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests was the fork in his path. | The life and death of this Nobel laureate underline the cost of political defiance in China. Liu Xiaobo had enjoyed a comfortable early career as a university professor, but the massacre which followed the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests was the fork in his path. |
Where many gave up demanding democracy, he stood firm and was jailed repeatedly. | |
When he won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010, he was serving an 11-year prison sentence for subversion. A furious Beijing subsequently placed his wife under house arrest. | |
Only in a hospital ward in the last days of his life have this suffering couple been reunited, only to be parted again by his death. | |
More from Carrie Gracie | |
Mr Liu's campaign to free those detained during Tiananmen landed him in a labour camp in north-eastern China for three years but he was permitted to marry poet Liu Xia there in 1996. | |
He was later freed, and continued to campaign for democracy. | |
The 11-year jail term he was serving when he died was handed down in 2009 after he compiled, with other intellectuals, the Charter 08 manifesto. | |
This was a call for an end to one-party rule and the introduction of multi-party democracy. Mr Liu was found guilty of trying to overthrow the state. | |
The dissident won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010 for his "long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China", but he was not permitted to travel to Sweden to accept it. | |
He was the second person to receive the award while in prison - the other was the German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky, who won in 1935 while incarcerated in a Nazi concentration camp. | |
In a statement, the Nobel Committee said the Chinese government "bears a heavy responsibility for his premature death". | |
Mr Liu's condition deteriorated shortly after he was admitted to hospital, according to the First Hospital of China Medical University in Shenyang. | |
It said several days of anti-infection and blood treatment had failed to halt his decline, and in the days leading up to his death he experienced organ failure and difficulty breathing on his own. |