Posted: 2024-06-15 03:57:49

A Chinese journalist who launched her country’s MeToo movement and was arrested the day before she was due to fly to Britain to study has been jailed for five years.

Sophia Huang Xueqin was sentenced by a court in Guangzhou on Friday. According to documents obtained by a group of activists campaigning for her release, she was found guilty of “inciting subversion of state power”.

Chinese journalist Huang Xueqin holds up a #Metoo sign for a photo in Singapore in September 2017.

Chinese journalist Huang Xueqin holds up a #Metoo sign for a photo in Singapore in September 2017. Credit: AP

Huang and another activist, Wang Jianbing, were arrested in September 2021, on the eve of her flight to Britain to begin a master’s degree at Sussex University on a Chevening scholarship, which is funded by the UK government.

The journalist kicked off the MeToo movement in China by publicising the case of a graduate student who made allegations of sexual harassment against her PhD supervisor at one of China’s most prestigious universities.

As other women came forward to tell similar stories of inappropriate male behaviour, the movement was quickly snuffed out by Beijing’s censors, who saw it as a threat to the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s grip on social and political order.

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Following a closed-doors trial on Friday, the court imposed the maximum jail sentence on Huang, along with a fine equivalent to almost £11,000 ($21,000).

Wang, a labour activist who was also prominent in the MeToo movement, was sentenced to three years and six months imprisonment.

As the Guangzhou People’s Intermediate Court gave its verdict on Friday, a heavy security presence formed around the building, with police questioning bystanders.

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