2011年11月28日 星期一

Chinese artist was kept in tiny cell: sister (AFP)

BEIJING (AFP) – Ai Weiwei was kept in a tiny cell and watched constantly by two guards during the nearly three months he spent in detention, the sister of the dissident Chinese artist revealed on Friday.

The guards, who worked three-hour shifts, even watched him when he showered, and the lights in his cell were kept on all night, Ai's sister Gao Ge told AFP.

Ai, an outspoken critic of the Chinese Communist Party whose detention sparked an international outcry, was released last month but has been told he cannot leave Beijing without official permission under his bail conditions.

Little has emerged about the conditions of Ai's incarceration since he was released and the artist has said he is not allowed to give media interviews as part of his bail conditions.

But his sister said Ai spent his time pacing up and down the tiny cell he was kept in.

"I don't know how many square metres the cell was, but he said he had an area of around six tiles to walk up and down," she told AFP by telephone.

"He said he walked a lot -- a distance equivalent to going from Beijing to Shanghai -- because he did not have anything else to do."

Gao said her brother, whose works have been shown around the world and who this week accepted a position with a German university, was not given access to newspapers or books during his detention, and was watched constantly.

"Two people watched him. They changed shifts every three hours and watched him 24 hours a day. They watched him very closely... whatever he did," she added.

"He said there was nothing (in the cell) -- no sunshine, no desk. Just a bed," she said.

Asked how her brother felt about his incarceration, she replied that "he accepted it", adding that he had not been tortured, but had lost a lot of weight during his time in detention.

The avant-garde artist, whose work was recently on display at London's Tate Modern gallery, was detained in April during a major government crackdown on dissidents in China and released last month.

Chinese authorities have charged Beijing Fake Cultural Development Ltd., a design firm they say is "controlled" by Ai, with evading "a huge amount of taxes".


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