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Liu Xia, the wife of Liu Xiaobo, holds a portrait of her husband at his funeral last year. She remains under de facto house arrest. Photo: AP

Wife of Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo ‘feels like she is serving a life sentence’ for ‘crime’ of loving Nobel Peace Prize winner

Latest recording of Liu Xia, whose husband died in jail, was released by friend campaigning for authorities to end de facto house arrest

Liu Xiaobo

Liu Xia, widow of dissident Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo, has said she felt that loving her husband was a “crime” for which she had received a “life sentence”, according to an audio recording released on Friday.

Liu Xia, 57, has been under de facto house arrest – despite facing no charges – ever since her husband was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010, in a move that angered Beijing.

Liu Xiaobo, a veteran of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, died last year while serving an 11-year jail sentence for “subversion”, making him the first Nobel laureate to die in custody since the era of Nazi Germany.

Liu Xia faces daily restrictions on movement and surveillance, although the Chinese authorities maintain she is free.

In an emotional phone call with her close friend Chinese writer Liao Yiwu last week, Liu Xia said, “they should add a line to the constitution: ‘Loving Liu Xiaobo is a serious crime – it’s a life sentence’”.

“They are going to keep me here to serve out Xiaobo’s sentence,” Liu said, between bouts of continuous sobbing.

“I want to see just how much more cruel they can get and how much more shameless they will become; I want to see how much more depraved this world is.”

A bust of Liu Xiaobo in the centre of Hong Kong set up by pro-democracy campaigners in the run up to the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre. Photo: AFP

Liao on Friday released a recording of the call through the US-based website China Change.

The German embassy offered in April to help Liu Xia travel to Germany but the move did not take place.

Liao asked her to wait until July to see if the authorities would allow her to travel out of China.

June is a month of particular political sensitivity for the ruling Communist Party, which heightens surveillance and censorship around June 4, the day the authorities cracked down on democracy protesters in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.

Liao said their conversation left him feeling shocked and anguished.

“The 29th anniversary of the Tiananmen massacre is approaching, and I decided to send out this message to the world, continuing to call for her to be freed,” he wrote in a letter that accompanied the recording. “Since when did love become a crime?”

Last month, dozens of the world’s leading writers and artists, from Michael Chabon to Paul Auster and Khaled Hosseini, called on China to release Liu Xia in an online campaign.

AFP reporters have tried to visit Liu’s home multiple times in recent years but were blocked each time by plain-clothes men.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Wife laments serving ‘life term’ for loving Liu Xiaobo
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