The family of a Chinese scientist and businessman convicted of spying for Taiwan expressed shock and outrage at his execution and accused the Chinese government of keeping it “in the dark.”
Wo Weihan (伍維漢), 60, was executed on Friday after being convicted last year following a closed trial in which he was charged with passing “secret” Chinese military data to Taiwan.
His daughters, who both are Austrian citizens, said in a statement they had been promised one last meeting with their father on Friday but, as they tried to see him, were informed he had been executed.
“We, the family, were not allowed to say goodbye,” Ran and Di Chen said. “We were also denied the most fundamental and universal right of information about what was happening with our father. Throughout these four years since our father’s arrest, the family was kept in the dark.”
“The execution was carried out in secrecy while we hoped,” the statement, released in Beijing, said. “My father was put to death, so was our hope in the Chinese justice system.”
His execution drew international condemnation, including from the EU, which had lobbied for the release of Wo, who had lived in Austria during the 1990s.
The EU “deeply regrets the fact that China has not heeded the repeated calls by the European Union and several of its member states for this execution to be deferred and for the death sentence passed against Mr Wo to be commuted,” an EU statement said.
The fact that the execution was carried out on the day of the human rights dialogue between the EU and China “emphasizes the ruthlessness and coldness” of the decision, Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik said.
The US government charged that Wo’s confession had been coerced and questioned the validity of the spying charges brought against him.
A US State Department spokeswoman described her government as being “deeply disturbed and dismayed” by Wo’s death.
The information Wo was convicted of passing on to Taiwan included photocopies of publications accessed from the library of the Chinese Academy of Sciences as well as information about the health of a top Chinese leader.
The verdict against Wo said he had confessed, but Wo’s family said he confessed without a lawyer present and later recanted.
Ran Chen was allowed to meet Wo on Thursday as her sister flew to China. They both were promised a meeting with their father on Friday, but in the late afternoon, they were informed through the Austrian embassy that their father had been executed by gunshot, they said.
Ran Chen said Wo did not know of his impending death when they saw one another on Thursday and did not have any final words or leave a will for his family.
“These procedures degrade humanity,” she and her sister said. “Our hearts are bleeding.”
The Coast Guard Administration (CGA) and Chunghwa Telecom yesterday confirmed that an international undersea cable near Keelung Harbor had been cut by a Chinese ship, the Shunxin-39, a freighter registered in Cameroon. Chunghwa Telecom said the cable had its own backup equipment, and the incident would not affect telecommunications within Taiwan. The CGA said it dispatched a ship under its first fleet after receiving word of the incident and located the Shunxin-39 7 nautical miles (13km) north of Yehliu (野柳) at about 4:40pm on Friday. The CGA demanded that the Shunxin-39 return to seas closer to Keelung Harbor for investigation over the
National Kaohsiung University of Science and Technology (NKUST) yesterday promised it would increase oversight of use of Chinese in course materials, following a social media outcry over instances of simplified Chinese characters being used, including in a final exam. People on Threads wrote that simplified Chinese characters were used on a final exam and in a textbook for a translation course at the university, while the business card of a professor bore the words: “Taiwan Province, China.” Photographs of the exam, the textbook and the business card were posted with the comments. NKUST said that other members of the faculty did not see
An apartment building in New Taipei City’s Sanchong District (三重) collapsed last night after a nearby construction project earlier in the day allegedly caused it to tilt. Shortly after work began at 9am on an ongoing excavation of a construction site on Liuzhang Street (六張街), two neighboring apartment buildings tilted and cracked, leading to exterior tiles peeling off, city officials said. The fire department then dispatched personnel to help evacuate 22 residents from nine households. After the incident, the city government first filled the building at No. 190, which appeared to be more badly affected, with water to stabilize the
The Taipei City Government yesterday said contractors organizing its New Year’s Eve celebrations would be held responsible after a jumbo screen played a Beijing-ran television channel near the event’s end. An image showing China Central Television (CCTV) Channel 3 being displayed was posted on the social media platform Threads, sparking an outcry on the Internet over Beijing’s alleged political infiltration of the municipal government. A Taipei Department of Information and Tourism spokesman said event workers had made a “grave mistake” and that the Television Broadcasts Satellite (TVBS) group had the contract to operate the screens. The city would apply contractual penalties on TVBS