Australian writer’s sentence upheld ahead of China premier’s visit, supporters say
- Yang Hengjun’s supporters urge PM Anthony Albanese to use his meeting with Chinese Premier Li Qiang to push for Yang to be released on medical parole
Australian writer Yang Hengjun’s suspended death sentence has been upheld by Beijing’s High People’s Court, with the decision relayed to Australian officials two weeks before China’s Premier Li Qiang arrived in Australia, his supporters said on Sunday.
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will meet Li, who is making the first visit to Australia in seven years by a Chinese premier, in Canberra on Monday. Albanese said last week he would raise Yang’s case with China’s second-highest ranked official.
Yang, a pro-democracy blogger and spy novelist, is an Australian citizen born in China who was working in New York before his arrest at Guangzhou airport in 2019.
A Beijing court handed Yang a suspended death sentence on espionage charges in February, which the Australian government described as “harrowing”. The case has cast a shadow over a recent rebound in bilateral ties that followed several years of strained relations between Beijing and Canberra. Yang has denied the charges.
In a statement on Sunday evening, Yang’s supporters said Beijing’s High People’s Court had reviewed and upheld the lower court’s sentence. Australian diplomats were informed on May 30 and were denied a consular visit last week, and Yang was being moved to a permanent prison after five years in a state security detention centre.