A Beijing human rights lawyer on Saturday said that he had been released from police custody, a day after being detained in a raid on his apartment.
Yu Wensheng (余文生), 48, said the police abruptly, and inexplicably, sent him home late on Friday night after questioning him about a letter he had written to senior Chinese leaders, in which he criticized the government’s crackdown on lawyers who take on politically sensitive cases.
The police officers who burst into his home late on Thursday night and led him away in handcuffs had said he would be criminally charged with “picking quarrels and stirring up trouble,” according to his wife, Xu Yan (許艷). That vague charge has increasingly been used by the Chinese authorities to silence government critics and other perceived troublemakers.
Yu’s release was a rare and unexpected bit of good news for Chinese rights lawyers. About two dozen Chinese legal professionals remain incommunicado many weeks after a wave of detentions began, targeting attorneys who defend dissidents, outspoken Christians, farmers fighting government land grabs and other politically vulnerable clients.
In an interview on Saturday, Yu said he was stunned that the authorities had set him free.
“The police had said: ‘We will 100 percent, 10,000 percent, criminally detain you,’” he said by telephone.
He said he thought that a surge of public pressure by friends and rights advocates might have played a role in his release.
Yu spent three months in police custody last year and said he was repeatedly tortured during questioning. He was not charged with any crime, but the police warned him to keep quiet and threatened to detain him again at any time, he said.
Although he was handcuffed during his 24 hours in police custody this week, Yu said, his interrogators were comparatively civil.
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