A former lawyer and veteran activist left disabled by past police mistreatment went on trial on Thursday, the third dissident in a week to be prosecuted as China presses a sweeping crackdown to deter popular uprisings like the ones that shook the Arab world.
Looking thin and frail, Ni Yulan (倪玉蘭) lay on a bed and used an oxygen machine to help her breathe during the hearing, her daughter, Dong Xuan (董璇), said afterward.
Dong said she told the court about her mother’s run-ins with police since 2002 and how police beatings left her crippled.
Ni is charged with fraud, accused of falsifying facts to steal property.
She is also charged, along with her husband, with causing a disturbance at a hotel where they had been detained by police.
Ni and her supporters deny the charges and say she is being punished for her years of activism, especially her advocacy for people forced from their homes to make way for the fast-paced real-estate development that remade Beijing for the 2008 Olympics.
Her outspoken defense earned her the enmity of officials and developers. Her family’s house in an old neighborhood in the capital’s center was also razed and the couple became homeless.
Their trial comes at the end of a year that has seen Chinese authorities use disappearances, house arrest, lengthy prison terms and other means to prevent activists from drawing inspiration from the Arab Spring protests that unseated autocrats in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya.
In the past week, two longtime democracy and rights activists, Chen Wei (陳衛) and Chen Xi (陳西), were separately sentenced to nine and 10 years in prison.
Like those campaigners, the 51-year-old Ni has been previously jailed, twice in her case. In an interview with The Associated Press in June last year, Ni described abuse she suffered from police, saying guards beat her, insulted her and urinated on her face.
In detention in 2002, police kicked her knees until she was unable to walk, she said.
While serving the second prison term of two years, Ni was deprived of her crutches and had to crawl up and down five stories and across the prison yard every day for months, she said.
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