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Chen Guangcheng, Blind Chinese Activist, En Route To United States

By KAREN MATTHEWS 05/19/12 11:07 PM ET AP

NEW YORK — A blind Chinese legal activist who was suddenly allowed to leave the country arrived in the United States on Saturday, ending a nearly monthlong diplomatic tussle that had tested U.S.-China relations.

Chen Guangcheng had been hurriedly taken from a hospital hours earlier and put on a plane for the U.S. after Chinese authorities suddenly told him to pack and prepare to leave. He arrived Saturday evening at Newark Liberty International Airport and was whisked to New York City, where he will be staying.

Dressed in a white shirt and khaki pants and using crutches, his right leg in a cast, Chen was greeted with cheers when he arrived at the apartment in Manhattan's Greenwich Village where he will live with his family. The complex houses faculty and graduate students of New York University, where Chen is expected to attend law school.

"For the past seven years, I have never had a day's rest," he said through a translator, "so I have come here for a bit of recuperation for body and in spirit."

Chen urged the crowd to fight against injustice, and thanked the U.S. and Chinese governments, along with the embassies of Switzerland, Canada and France.

"After much turbulence, I have come out of Shandong," he said, referring to the Chinese province where he was under house arrest. The U.S. has granted him partial citizenship rights, he said.

Chen gave a short statement, which was greeted by cheers in Mandarin and English, but did not take questions from reporters.

The departure of Chen, his wife and two children to the United States marked the conclusion of nearly a month of uncertainty and years of mistreatment by local authorities for the self-taught activist.

After seven years of prison and house arrest, Chen made a daring escape from his rural village in April and was given sanctuary inside the U.S. Embassy, triggering a diplomatic standoff over his fate. With Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton in Beijing for annual high-level discussions, officials struck a deal that let Chen walk free, only to see him have second thoughts. That forced new negotiations that led to an agreement to send him to the U.S. to study law, a goal of his, at New York University.

"Thousands of thoughts are surging to my mind," Chen said before he left China. His concerns, he said, included whether authorities would retaliate for his negotiated departure by punishing his relatives left behind. It also was unclear whether the government will allow him to return.

In New York, he said China had promised him protection of his rights as a citizen there.

"I am very gratified to see that the Chinese government has been dealing with the situation with restraint and calm, and I hope to see that they continue to open discourse and earn the respect and trust of the people."

Chen's expected attendance at New York University comes from his association with Jerome Cohen, a law professor there who advised Chen while he was in the U.S. Embassy. The two met when Chen came to the United States on a State Department program in 2003, and Cohen has been staunch advocate for him since.

"I'm very happy at the news that he's on his way and I look forward to welcoming him and his family tonight and to working with him on his course of study," Cohen said.

Before he left China, Chen asked his supporters and others in the activist community for their understanding of his desire to leave the front lines of the rights struggle in China.

"I am requesting a leave of absence, and I hope that they will understand," he said.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland praised the quiet negotiations that freed him.

"We also express our appreciation for the manner in which we were able to resolve this matter and to support Mr. Chen's desire to study in the U.S. and pursue his goals," Nuland said in a statement.

The White House also said it was pleased with the outcome of negotiations.

China's Foreign Ministry said it had no comment. The government's news agency, Xinhua, issued a brief report saying that Chen "has applied for study in the United States via normal channels in line with the law."

Chen's supporters welcomed his departure. "This is great progress," said U.S.-based rights activist Bob Fu. "It's a victory for freedom fighters."

The 40-year-old Chen is emblematic of a new breed of activists that the Communist Party finds threatening. Often from rural and working-class families, these "rights defenders," as they are called, are unlike the students and intellectuals from the elite academies and major cities of previous democracy movements and thus could potentially appeal to ordinary Chinese.

Chen gained recognition for crusading for the disabled and for farmers' rights and fighting against forced abortions in his rural community. That angered local officials, who seemed to wage a personal vendetta against him, convicting him in 2006 on what his supporters say were fabricated charges and then holding him for the past 20 months in illegal house arrest.

Even with the backstage negotiations, Chen's departure came hastily. Chen spent the last 2 1/2 weeks in a hospital for the foot he broke escaping house arrest. Only on Wednesday did Chinese authorities help him complete the paperwork needed for his passport.

Chen said by telephone Saturday that he was informed at the hospital just before noon to pack his bags to leave. Officials did not give him and his family passports or inform them of their flight details until after they got to the airport.

Seeming ambivalent, Chen said that he was "not happy" about leaving and that he had a lot on his mind, including worries about retaliation against his extended family back home. His nephew, Chen Kegui, is accused of attempted murder after he allegedly used a kitchen knife to attack officials who stormed his house after discovering Chen Guangcheng was missing.

"I hope that the government will fulfill the promises it made to me, all of its promises," Chen said. Such promises included launching an investigation into abuses against him and his family in Shandong province, he said before the phone call was cut off.

Much as Chen has said he wants return to China, it remains uncertain whether the Chinese government would bar him, as they have done with many exiled activists.

"Chen's departure for the U.S. does not and should not in any way mark a `mission accomplished' moment for the U.S. government," said Phelim Kine, a senior Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch. "The harder, longer-term part is ensuring his right under international law to return to China when he sees fit."

___

Associated Press Writers Didi Tang, Gillian Wong and Charles Hutzler in Beijing, Andrew Duffelmeyer in Newark, N.J., and Matthew Lee in Washington, and videojournalist Annie Ho in Beijing contributed to this report.

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06:49 PM on 05/21/2012
USA should help its own citizen illegally blocked in China for 4 years come home!
www.change.org/petitions/help-my-father-dr-zhicheng-hu-come-home
01:14 AM on 05/21/2012
WHY, PRAY TELL, DOES NOT A SINGLE NEWSPAPER COVER THE FACT THAT ROMNEY'S INITIAL INCENDIARY COMMENTS ABOUT WHAT WAS HAPPENING TO THE DISSIDENT IN CHINA WERE PREMATURE?
sorry to shout. It pisses me off so much. The "left biased" (lol) press gives Republicans a pass very often. Or are they just lame?
I couldn't BELIEVE at the time how hard Romney came down on the American government DURING the crisis. I thought at the time it might even negatively effect things. I thought it wasn't wise. It's as if Romney forgets we are all on one side. I think it was foolish, things were in play...he should have waited a bit.
Instead he said it was "a day of shame for the Obama administration".
Look, there was a bad day. But the Obama administration right now happens to be the US Government...vs China, Romney, you should be on OUR side.
so maybe wait a bit before inserting yourself again, hmmm??
That' s my take on things giving what I've read, which isn't everything.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Comrade Komar
Not approved.
11:25 AM on 05/20/2012
Hillary Clinton needs to bring Yoani Sanchez and we may have a dissident wedding.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Comrade Komar
Not approved.
11:21 AM on 05/20/2012
I'm glad to see him here in America. We need more lawyers. I hope Mr. Chen will be allowed to practice law in the U.S.A. As a self-taught lawyer, he may be better than most American educated lawyers.
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10:27 AM on 05/20/2012
Chen's story is important because >. . . . . .

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. ...
~MARTIN luther King~
10:22 AM on 05/20/2012
And he's getting a position at NYU? And he's going to get great housing? And he'll get his medical covered? I think he got a great deal. Maybe now all the Chinese will become dissidents.
Where the hell do Americans go when they need work, housing and medical?
01:17 AM on 05/21/2012
please, I am sure he's privately funded and will have a job and insights unique to him and his situation. He may help thinkers learn more about China for one thing...and they are now are steepest competator and provocateur...have you seen the incendiary comments coming from the official press (mouthpiece of the party). They are quite war like, even, threatening and bellicose.
It helps us I think having this man here. I am pretty sure it does not take a single American job and no, it does not start a precedent that didn't exist before.
01:18 AM on 05/21/2012
yet I get it. I could use some of those benefits myself. It's hard not to go there, but as I said below, it's unlikely he's taking an American's job or money
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Siara
Obama 2012
09:03 AM on 05/20/2012
Am I the only one who gets the feeling that Chen has a massive ego?
mooncop1
Impeachment is a beginning, not an end.
07:58 AM on 05/20/2012
Old news the guy is already here.
07:11 AM on 05/20/2012
why come to the usa whats wrong with india or the dominican repub why not there
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Siara
Obama 2012
09:02 AM on 05/20/2012
More attention?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pcs5141
cut the crap
01:45 PM on 05/20/2012
FREEBEES
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06:48 AM on 05/20/2012
America will borrow money from China to take care of him and his family.
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CabCurious
let's be honest
11:07 AM on 05/20/2012
You mean... USA will SELL them debt to prop up their manufacturing engine while we prop up the global financial system.
03:39 AM on 05/20/2012
It seems this discussion forum is being dominated by the intolerant, those who lack empathy, or the usual Chinese citizens paid to write "pro-China" comments on websites. And for you social conservatives who are unabashedly pro-life - didn't you read about his fighting against forced abortions? are you so "blind" to recognize you should be championing his cause?
01:57 AM on 05/20/2012
China is well rid of Chen. He had two children and he was a huge drain on the state. Now American taxpayers will be stuck with the bill of housing him and his two cchildren, feeding all of them plus paying to educate them and Chen himself. The Chinese know a good deal when they see one.
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Bob in the country
Patriot,hobby Farmer
06:22 AM on 05/20/2012
amen
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
01:13 AM on 05/20/2012
lets hope China doesn't retaliate by cutting off trade with the US. Even just one day of trade cut off would completely destroy the USA, as we make next to nothing here anymore and couldnt start to make even the basic supplies we depend on China for if we had a 6 month warning of being cut off. All we make is lots of noise, and money in the stock market.
12:50 AM on 05/20/2012
"Contraversial blind activist heading for America"......Wasn't that what the headlines read the day Christopher Colombus set sail?
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
01:14 AM on 05/20/2012
considering Columbus never did hit America anyway, and the Vikings were actually here many years before Columbus, does it really matter.. Columbus day is more a joke , but only for the USA.
06:56 AM on 05/20/2012
What is your definition of "America"? The islands he did "hit" are part of the American continent. Nothwithstanding your assertion that the vikings were there before Columbus, their visit had no impact on the continent, as opposed to that of Columbus on behalf of the Spanish crown, which I admit had a negative impact on the continent as a whole, but also served to expand knowledge of the world as a whole. Re you comment about "...a joke, but only for the USA", are you just another hater of the USA?
07:11 AM on 05/20/2012
Slow down there proffessor...it was just a joke!
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thegreenehouse3
12:44 AM on 05/20/2012
Why has he been granted partial citizenship rights? He arrived just today and already has citizen rights? This is just craziness...
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
01:15 AM on 05/20/2012
Its an election year. Otherwise this guy wouldnt even be here, or in the news in America.