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Nobel laureates urge China to release Liu Xiaobo

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Wang Dan (right) and Wuer Kaixi hold posters in front of Taiwan's presidential office calling Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou to help to free China's jailed Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo, in Taipei on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

More than 140 Nobel laureates led by Archbishop Desmond Tutu urged China on Wednesday to release Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, a rights activist jailed for subversion since 2009.

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In a letter also signed by 400,000 people from more than 130 countries, the laureates called on China’s president-in-waiting Xi Jinping to release Liu and his wife Liu Xia, who has not been charged but is being held under house arrest.

The petition was being submitted to Chinese embassies and diplomatic missions in Hong Kong, New York, Paris, Berlin and London.

The first step in political reform is to tolerate dissidents and cherish their value and contribution to society

“This flagrant violation of the basic right to due process and free expression must be publicly and forcefully confronted by the international community,” archbishop Tutu, a fellow Peace laureate, said in the petition.

In Taiwan, Wu’er Kaixi, a former leader of the 1989 Tiananmen protests and one of those who signed the petition, urged Beijing-friendly President Ma Ying-jeou to relay the appeal to Xi.

“Hopefully, through the petition President Ma would do something that would help the Chinese government’s release of Liu Xiaobo and his wife,” he told reporters.

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Another Tiananmen protest leader, Wang Dan, who like Wu’er Kaixi lives in exile in Taiwan, also signed the document.

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