Hu Jia, 34, activist and dissident in the People’s Republic
of China,
was sentenced to three-and-a-half years on Thursday. The verdict was: guilty
of “inciting subversion of state power” for criticizing the Communist Party.
The United
States expressed an opposite opinion
regarding this issue and international human rights groups condemned the
verdict.
“In this Olympic
year, we urge China
to seize the opportunity to put its best face forward and take steps to improve
its record on human rights and religious freedom,” the U.S. Embassy said in a
statement, quoted by Reuters.
According to the official Xinhua news agency, Hu had made a
“confession of crime and acceptance of punishment” and his lawyers said he had
acknowledged “excesses.”
In a communist state, his acceptance of the prosecution's
allegations and of the fact that some of his statements were contrary to the
law, may lead to some additional questions.
Why wasn’t he allowed to speak for himself and other persons
revealed his intentions and the way he thought about the accusations? One
should know that foreign reporters and diplomats were excluded from Hu’s
hearing, Reuters reports.
His situation was preceded by another similar one; in March,
Yang Chunlin, who was also a Chinese dissident and a defender of human rights,
was sentenced to five years in jail for the same crime.
When someone dares to speak in public about the human rights
and tries to be the advocate of democratic rights, religious freedom and self-determination
for Tibet,
that person receives in exchange for those acts the sentence to jail.
Hu Jia's family became also a victim of a state which decides to punish the voices that don’t speak
like they should; Zeng Jinyan, Hu’s wife and their daughter have to stay under
house arrest.