Dec. 5, 2013: From left, Lisa Peng, holding a photo of her father Peng Ming, Grace Ge Geng, holding photo of her father Gao Zhisheng, Ti-Anna Wang, holding photo of her father Wang Bingzhang, Bridgette Chen holding photo of her father Liu Xianbing, and Danielle Wang, holding photo of her father Wang Zhiwen, are introduced prior to testifying before the House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing entitled, "Their Daughters Appeal to Beijing: 'Let Our Fathers Go,! on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Five young women testified before Congress Thursday with the same desperate plea to the White House: help us free our fathers imprisoned in China.
The hearing before the House subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations came as Vice President Biden closed a two-day trip to Beijing as part of a tour through three Asian countries.
The five women, all in their late teens and early twenties, joined together to call on Biden to speak with the Chinese government on behalf of their fathers, all of whom are being held over their political activism in the country.
They also requested an Oval Office meeting with President Obama to plead their case.
Lisa Peng’s father Peng Ming, a human rights activist, has been imprisoned for nearly 10 years.
Lisa Peng’s father Peng Ming, a human rights activist, has been imprisoned for nearly 10 years.
She said at the hearing she is fighting with her “sisters” to meet with Obama to share their stories.
“I know that my dream to be reunited with my father and my father’s dream for his country can come true with your support, persistence, and affirmation of the universal and fundamental values of our country: freedom, democracy, and justice,” Peng said.
Another of the women, Grace Gao, told the subcommittee that though she is grateful to have gained freedom by living in America, she is pained that her father does not enjoy the same rights.
“Freedom has not yet come to my dad, so it still has not genuinely arrived for me and my whole family,” Gao said.
“I know that my dream to be reunited with my father and my father’s dream for his country can come true with your support, persistence, and affirmation of the universal and fundamental values of our country: freedom, democracy, and justice,” Peng said.
Another of the women, Grace Gao, told the subcommittee that though she is grateful to have gained freedom by living in America, she is pained that her father does not enjoy the same rights.
“Freedom has not yet come to my dad, so it still has not genuinely arrived for me and my whole family,” Gao said.
“I wish that President Obama and Vice President Biden could mention about my father’s name Gao Zhisheng in public occasions and urge the immediate release of my father without conditions.”
On Thursday, Biden met with American journalists working in Beijing after publicly criticizing how they're treated by China's government.
Biden listened to concerns from journalists who may be forced to leave China in what some have perceived as retaliation for stories that have reflected poorly on the government.
On Thursday, Biden met with American journalists working in Beijing after publicly criticizing how they're treated by China's government.
Biden listened to concerns from journalists who may be forced to leave China in what some have perceived as retaliation for stories that have reflected poorly on the government.
U.S. news organizations have warned China's actions could have a chilling effect on hard-hitting journalism and the ability for American reporters to operate in the country.
"Innovation thrives where people breathe freely, speak freely, are able to challenge orthodoxy, where newspapers can report the truth without fear of consequences," Biden said earlier Thursday as he addressed U.S. business executives in Beijing.
"Innovation thrives where people breathe freely, speak freely, are able to challenge orthodoxy, where newspapers can report the truth without fear of consequences," Biden said earlier Thursday as he addressed U.S. business executives in Beijing.
"We have many disagreements, and some profound disagreements, on some of those issues right now, in the treatment of U.S. journalists."
Daughters appeal for China to free jailed fathers
AFP
Washington — The daughters of five imprisoned Chinese activists appealed Thursday before the US Congress for their fathers' freedom, saying they have also suffered through Beijing's decisions.
Testifying before a House of Representatives committee, the exiled daughters spoke of surveillance while they were still in China and, later, the pain of learning of their fathers' treatment in prison.
Grace Geng, whose father Gao Zhisheng is one of China's best-known human rights lawyers, said that Chinese police accompanied her to school -- even following her to the restroom. Geng, now 20, fled with her mother and brother to the United States in 2009.
Gao -- who defended some of China's most vulnerable people including aggrieved villagers, underground Christians and members of the banned Falungong spiritual movement -- has previously spoken of physical abuse in detention. He has not been heard from since January when an uncle visited him in prison.
"I want to let you know that my father is still behind the bars and my mom is in poor health, struggling to support the family," Geng said.
Asked by a lawmaker if she had a message to China's president, Geng said: "Yes, I want to say to Xi Jinping... please release our fathers so they can come back with us."
Ti-Anna Wang, whose dissident father Wang Bingzhang is a US permanent resident but is serving a life term in China, called on US leaders to raise the prisoners' cases more forcefully.
"I believe high-level diplomacy is our fathers' best chance for freedom," she said.
Also appealing for their fathers' freedom were the daughters of Peng Ming, a reform-minded former official whose family says he was kidnapped to China from Thailand; Liu Xianbin, who is serving a 10-year jail term after posting pro-democracy articles, and Wang Zhiwen, a former railway engineer who practices Falungong.
Representative Chris Smith, who chaired the hearing, said that China's treatment of political prisoners caused "loss, bewilderment, emotional pain and agony" to their families.
"In a very real sense, everyone close to a prisoner of conscience goes to jail and lives a seemingly unending nightmare," Smith said.
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