Chinese Blogger Who 'Slandered' PLA Over Border Clash With India Arrested In UAE, Faces Extradition
The Galwan Valley clash between the Indian Army and China's People’s
Liberation Army (PLA) last June was the deadliest border flare-up
between the two Asian powerhouses since the 1962 war. India said at the
time that it had lost 20 soldiers in the incident. In February this
year, China disclosed that four PLA troops were killed in the
altercation
Chinese blogger Wang Jingyu, who is wanted in his home country after
questioning the authorities over the border dispute with India, has been
arrested in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and is now facing extradition to
China, one of his friends told Sputnik.
"Wang was arrested at the Dubai Airport on 5 April, while he was on his way
from Istanbul to New York on an Emirates flight", said Baosheng Guo, a Chinese
dissident living in the US.
Wang Jingyu, a 19-year-old Chinese blogger, was arrested in the UAE and now faces extradition to #China.
— Dhairya Maheshwari (@dhairyam14) May 21, 2021
A lookout notice (in blue) was issued against Wang in February after he criticised the PLA over the #GalwanValley clash with #India.
He is currently lodged in a Dubai jail. pic.twitter.com/S6bH9JfhA8
In February 2021, Wang, a native of Chongqing, questioned the People’s
Liberation Army (PLA) over waiting for eight months before revealing the
number of dead soldiers in the border clash with India. In a post on the
Chinese microblogging site Weibo, he also doubted the PLA had truthfully
revealed its casualties during the border clash with India.
In February, Beijing for the first time revealed that it had suffered four
casualties in the Galwan Valley border clash with India in June last year. The
state-backed PLA Daily also disclosed the names of the four soldiers, almost
eight months after India unveiled that the clash with Chinese troops at the
Ladakh border site had left 20 of its soldiers dead.
Local police said that Wang had "slandered" the war heroes and issued a
lookout notice against him, as he was charged under a 2018 Heroes and Martyrs
Protection Law, which prohibits activities “diminishing” the valour of
martyrs.
Living in Istanbul since moving from China back in 2019, Wang told his friends
that he started to receive messages from “Chinese police” after his
controversial posts on Weibo.
“He was in Istanbul all the while. On 5 April, he bought a plane ticket to New
York via Dubai”, says Baosheng.
Wang, currently at a detention centre in the UAE, was arrested on charges of
criticising Islam upon arrival at Dubai Airport, per his case record with
Dubai's Public Prosecutor Office.
He was absolved of his charge on Thursday, after which he was told by his
lawyer that he could be extradited to China. Chinese Embassy officials in the
UAE have already made several visits to the jail as they try to convince Wang
to “cooperate” in the extradition back to his home country.
The UAE and China signed an extradition agreement back in 2004, but it was
only in 2017 that the first fugitive was deported to China from the Gulf
country, Xinhua reported.
In the case of Wang, the Chinese Embassy is already said to have invoked the
extradition agreement.
The teen dissident holds a People’s Republic of China (PRC) passport. Baosheng
says that it is “not clear” if he has an American Green Card.
Besides calling up his friends, including Baosheng, Wang also contacted
several journalists from the detention centre in a bid to highlight his case.
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