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US envoy: China should allow Nobel laureate treatment abroad

BEIJING (AP) - The new U.S. ambassador to Beijing said Wednesday that Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo should be allowed to receive treatment outside China after he was diagnosed with cancer while in prison for advocating democratic reforms.

China should allow 61-year-old Liu to seek treatment elsewhere "if it would be of help," Ambassador Terry Branstad told reporters at his first public appearance since arriving in Beijing this week.

The former six-term Iowa governor appointed as the envoy to China by President Donald Trump did not say if he'd spoken directly with Chinese authorities about the matter, emphasizing cooperation instead.

"It's important that we work together between our two countries to address these human rights issues," Branstad said.

Liu was given a medical parole and hospitalized after being diagnosed with late-stage liver cancer on May 23. His wife has said in video circulated by supporters that Liu's cancer has advanced beyond any potential treatment.

The writer and literary critic received the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize while serving an 11-year prison term for co-authoring Charter '08, a manifesto calling for an end to single-party rule in the Communist nation.

News of Liu's illness drew questions from his supporters and human rights advocates on whether China's government provided him with adequate care while incarcerated.

Chinese prisons are notorious for their harsh conditions, and it's common for released prisoners to return to society in a dangerously weakened state.

The Trump administration's handling of Liu's case could provide an early indication of how forcefully it is willing to push China on human rights.

On Monday, the State Department called for Liu's release as well as that of his wife, Liu Xia, who has lived for years under house arrest.

China should "provide them the protections and freedoms such as freedom of movement and access to medical care of his choosing, to which they're entitled under China's constitution and medical system and international commitments," the statement said.

On Tuesday, the State Department downgraded China to its lowest ranking on human trafficking, after the Trump administration had previously avoided public criticism of Beijing on human rights.

China has in past released high-profile dissidents on medical grounds and immediately exiled them to the U.S., notably veteran democracy campaigner Wei Jingsheng in 1997 and a leader of the 1989 student pro-democracy protests Wang Dan in 1998.

However, the government of President Xi Jinping has been considerably tougher on such matters, forbidding many of its critics to travel abroad while it pursues a sweeping campaign against dissent.

The government, which rejects the label of political prisoner and refers to Liu as a mere criminal, has angrily denounced calls for his release as a violation of China's internal affairs.

FILE - In this Dec. 6, 2012, file photo, Liu Xia, the wife of China's jailed Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo, poses with a photo of herself and her husband during an interview at her home in Beijing. The newly arrived U.S. ambassador in Beijing Terry Branstad said Wednesday, June 28, 2017, that the Nobel Peace Prize laureate should be allowed to get treatment outside China after he was diagnosed with cancer while imprisoned for subversion. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File) The Associated Press
Visitors pass by an ambulance outside the China Medical University No. 1 Affiliated Hospital where imprisoned Chinese Nobel Peace Prize laureate and dissident Liu Xiaobo is believed to have been transferred to after being diagnosed with late-stage liver cancer in Shenyang in northeastern China's Liaoning province, Tuesday, June 27, 2017. The deteriorating health of China's best-known political prisoner was immediately met with dismay and anger by the country's beleaguered community of rights activists and lawyers, who called it a blow to the democracy movement. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein) The Associated Press
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