โGao Zhisheng, Jimmy Lai, and countless others have been unjustly imprisoned for doing what every American takes for granted,โ says Rep. Chris Smith.
Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) on Sept. 11 introduced a bill aimed at freeing political prisoners in China and Hong Kong.
โAdvocating for political prisoners abroad is not just a moral obligationโit is central to Americaโs national interests,โ Smith said in a statement.
Smith, cochair of the Congressional Executive Commission on China and member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, has a substantial human rights record, including chairing more than 100 hearings on human rights abuses committed in China under the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
โThe competition between the United States and the CCP is, in essence, a contest between freedom and repression,โ he stated.
โIf we hope to shape a world that respects human dignity and the rule of law, we must stand with those in China and Hong Kong who are peacefully fighting for these values.โ
The Freedom for Gao Zhisheng Act is named after the Chinese human rights lawyer who went missing in August 2017. Gao was a devout Christian and self-taught lawyer who defended farmers whose land had been seized by the Chinese regime, families who lost loved ones in mining accidents, and Falun Gong practitioners who had been persecuted by the CCP.
Gao was convicted of โinciting subversion of state powerโ in 2006, and after eight years in prison, was subjected to house arrest until he disappeared. His wife, Geng He, fled to the United States in 2009 and has been advocating on behalf of Gao.
Political prisoners such as Gao and Jimmy Lai, a Hong Kong media magnate and pro-democracy advocate, cannot be left out of negotiations with the CCP, Smith said.
On Sept. 9, Smith joined Laiโs son, Sebastien Lai, to call on President Donald Trump to advocate for Laiโs release.
โIโm going to be bringing it upโIโve already brought it upโand Iโm going to do everything I can to save him,โ Trump said in August in an interview with Fox News Radio.