BEIJING (Reuters) – China has unexpectedly released five women activists on bail, two lawyers said yesterday, after a vocal campaign against their detention by the West and Chinese rights campaigners.
The women were taken into custody on the weekend of March 8, International Women’s Day, and detained on suspicion of “picking quarrels and provoking trouble”. They had planned to demonstrate against sexual harassment on public transport.
Their case has outraged a swath of Chinese society. Dozens of students and workers have signed petitions and held slogans calling for their release.
US Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of State John Kerry also called for their release, prompting China’s Foreign Ministry to lodge a formal protest with Washington. The European Union also expressed concern about the case.Now Wei Tingting, 26, Wang Man, 32, Zheng Churan, 25, Li Tingting, 25, and Wu Rongrong, 30, have been released on bail, Liang Xiaojun and Wang Qiushi, two lawyers involved in the case, told Reuters, citing accounts from family members.
Police did not immediately respond to a written request for comment. President Xi Jinping’s administration has detained hundreds of activists in the past two years, in what some rights groups say is the worst clampdown on dissent in two decades.