The Price of Speaking Out: The Challenges of Whistleblowing in China

The Price of Speaking Out: The Challenges of Whistleblowing in China

During ⁣the early 1990s,‌ a strange illness began ​to spread rapidly⁤ among villagers in central China. At that‌ time, HIV/AIDS had already emerged in ‌other parts of the ​world, including⁢ Europe and the United States, where ⁤cases were transmitted mostly through‍ sexual contact. In China, however, people were infected after selling their blood and plasma‌ or receiving transfusions⁣ contaminated ⁢in the trade.

Over the following⁤ decade, as many as 300,000 people in Henan province, the epicentre of‌ the trade,‌ were infected – ​a scandal exposed by local ‍retired gynaecologist Dr Gao Yaojie.

Dr Gao was China’s ⁣best-known‍ whistleblower, who exposed the​ source of ⁣China’s AIDS⁣ epidemic and⁢ spent the last 14 years of her life in exile. She died last December at the age ‍of‌ 95 in New York.

Despite ⁢official erasure, Chinese netizens mourned Gao’s death on the same Weibo “wailing wall” page where‌ they commemorated Li.

Gao’s descent from ⁢national prominence to relentless official persecution exposed just how ruthless Beijing could be, even at a ⁤time when it was seen as ‍opening⁤ up to the world.

“All ​she wanted was the freedom to speak ⁣out, to tell the⁤ whole world⁣ the ⁣truth ⁢behind China’s AIDS epidemic⁤ and​ to keep a record for history,” said former journalist Lin Shiyu, who edited most of ⁣the books Gao published while in exile in the US. “That was why she fled China.”

As ‌the⁤ yet-unsolved‌ origin of ‌the COVID-19 pandemic shows, the secrecy Beijing enforces has repercussions for the rest of the world. Across the globe, more ⁢than 7 million people have died from the “mysterious virus” that first emerged⁣ in Wuhan ⁣in late 2019,‍ according‍ to ‍the latest figures from ⁢the World Health Organization.

Gao did not set…

Post from www.aljazeera.com

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