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Family seeks medical parole for jailed Chinese Covid-19 citizen journalist Zhang Zhan

  • Zhang has been on an intermittent hunger strike since her arrest in Wuhan in May last year
  • Brother says her relatives fear she might not ‘make it through the winter’

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Zhang Zhan live-streamed reports about the coronavirus epidemic in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. Photo: Handout
Almost two years after the coronavirus first struck the central Chinese city of Wuhan, life has largely returned to normal for most people in China.
But Zhang Zhan’s battle is far from over. The 38-year-old citizen journalist and former lawyer remains behind bars on a hunger strike, protesting against her four-year prison sentence for her coverage of the early days of the pandemic.

Family members say her weight has dropped perilously low and they fear she might not survive the winter.

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Zhang was jailed in December last year for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble”– a catch-all charge often used by authorities to stifle dissent.

The sentence was in response to reports that she live-streamed from Wuhan on social media platforms, including Twitter and YouTube, which are both blocked in China.

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She also wrote an article critical of the official response to the outbreak, accusing authorities of infringing people’s rights and covering up the severity of the epidemic.

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