Freed China activist off to U.S.
By REUTERS | via CNN
February 24, 2007
BEIJING, China (Reuters) -- A 79-year-old prominent Chinese AIDS activist is to fly to the United States as early as Sunday to receive a human rights award after she was freed from house arrest thanks to U.S. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Gao Yaojie is to receive the Vital Voices Global Women's Leadership Award for Human Rights in Washington in March for helping bring to light official complicity in the spread of AIDS in her home province Henan in central China, where thousands of poor farmers sold blood in the 1990s and have been infected.
To prevent her from going and embarrassing China, police in Zhengzhou, provincial capital of Henan, placed Gao under house arrest on February 1. The move sparked an international outcry.
Henan authorities relented and freed her on February 16, days after Clinton, a Democratic presidential-hopeful, wrote to Chinese President Hu Jintao and Vice Premier Wu Yi, urging them to intervene and let Gao leave for the United States.
"World pressure was too heavy. Henan was ordered by the central government (to let me go) because China did not want relations with the United States to become too tense," the retired gynecologist told Reuters in her Beijing hotel room.
AIDS / HIV
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