The wife of a detained Chinese human rights lawyer who had nearly completed a 100-kilometre (60-mile) march to highlight her husband’s plight said she had been placed under house arrest on Wednesday.

“On April 11, 2018, trapped at home by forty or fifty people. A friend who came to visit was stopped and beaten. I can only climb out the window to shout,” Li Wenzu wrote on her Twitter page on Wednesday afternoon.

The post included a video of Li sitting on a window ledge shouting and angrily gesturing to a crowd below.

In the video she described the plight of her husband Wang Quanzhang, an attorney who represented political activists and disappeared in a 2015 police sweep.

“He went to court for ordinary people. Now he’s been arrested for a thousand days without [us] knowing if he is alive or dead. I went to find my husband,” she said, referencing her march.

A close friend of Li’s confirmed to AFP that she was “being controlled” by state security officers.

“She still can’t leave her house,” the friend said Wednesday evening, requesting anonymity.

Li Wenzu
Li Wenzu. Photo: Li Wenzu, via Twitter.

Li’s husband Wang has been charged with “subversion of state power” but authorities have blocked family-appointed lawyers from visiting him.

As well as representing activists he also acted for victims of land seizures.

His wife and a small group of supporters set off last Wednesday on a march from Beijing to the “No. 2 Detention Centre” in the northeastern city of Tianjin, where officials last said Wang was being held.

On Monday, shortly after reaching Tianjin, police officers detained at least two members of the group for several hours and forced Li and her friends to return to Beijing.

“They tried to make me give up on this march to Tianjin… I did not agree. I said that I have the freedom to go where I want,” Li told AFP on Monday.

wang quanzhang
Wang Quanzhang. Photo: RFA.

AFP was unable to reach Li on Wednesday, and state security officials do not have any publicly listed contact details.

‘Legal limbo’ 

China’s ruling Communist party has repeatedly pledged to implement the “rule of law”, but analysts say cases like Wang’s highlight the stark limits of those promises.

“This sort of display of thuggery undermines the credibility of the Chinese criminal justice system,” Amnesty International China researcher William Nee, said.

The country’s courts are tightly controlled by the party, with forced confessions often used as evidence and guilty verdicts delivered in more than 99.9 percent of criminal cases.

Wang was one of more than 200 Chinese human rights lawyers and activists who were detained or questioned in the summer of 2015, the largest clampdown on the legal profession in recent history.

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While the majority were released on bail, a handful — including prominent lawyers Xie Yang and Li Heping — were convicted of various crimes and sentenced to up to seven years in prison.

Wang’s case is unusual because no trial date has even been announced. He is the last person in the so-called “709 crackdown” to remain in legal limbo.

Li has spent years trying in vain to obtain information on what has happened to her husband. Instead of answers, she has been put under constant police surveillance.

Li told AFP their five-year-old son is afraid of the state security officers who have permanently moved into an apartment below their home.

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