Liu Xiaobo's widow Liu Xia is back in Beijing, relative says

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However, it's unclear where Liu Xia, who's been largely out of contact with the outside world since her husband died, actually is

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Liu Xia may be back in Beijing but relative says it's unclear exactly where she is.

The widow of late Chinese Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo has returned to Beijing but it’s unclear where she is, a family member said on Tuesday, about three weeks after her husband’s death.

Liu Xia was with her husband at a hospital in the northeastern city of Shenyang in his final days. But her whereabouts were unknown until now and she has remained largely out of contact with the outside world since his death on July 13.

The Hong Kong-based Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy quoted relatives of Liu Xia as saying that she was in Beijing on Tuesday but they were unable to speak to her directly.

“Liu Xia’s family members confirmed at 10am that both Liu Xia and Liu Hui [her brother] are in Beijing today,” the centre said in a statement, although it was unable to confirm whether she was at home.

But some of Liu Xia’s close contacts – including her lawyer, Mo Shaoping, and friends Ye Du, a dissident poet, and activist Hu Jia – said they had not heard any news of her whereabouts.

Hu said there was no sign to suggest that Liu was back home as of Monday evening, citing other activists who had checked on her apartment.

“Her being back in Beijing and back in her apartment are two different things,” Hu said. “She might still be locked up or she’s been placed with relatives in Beijing upon returning to the city.”

Liu Xiaobo, an outspoken critic of China’s Communist Party, was transferred to hospital after being diagnosed with liver cancer in June while he served an 11-year jail sentence for his part in drafting a document calling for peaceful democratic reform, known as “Charter 08”.

The dissident was sentenced in 2009 and his wife, an artist and poet, was put under house arrest after he won the Nobel Peace Prize “for his long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China”.

Edited by Jamie Lam

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