Questions raised about Liu Xiaobo’s prison medical treatment
SHENYANG, China — As recently as February, Liu Xiaobo’s brother dismissed reports that the imprisoned Chinese Nobel Peace laureate might be ill. Then came the bombshell on Monday that Liu has been diagnosed with late-stage liver cancer and transferred to a hospital on medical parole.
A brief video has also emerged of Liu’s wife tearfully telling a friend that no treatment — surgery, radiation or chemotherapy — would work for Liu at this point.
The news has shocked and angered Liu’s supporters and human rights advocates, who are questioning if China’s best-known political prisoner received adequate care while incarcerated, or whether the authoritarian government deliberately allowed the 61-year-old to wither in prison.
Chinese prisons are notorious for their poor health care, lack of nutritious food and abusive conditions, and it’s highly common for prisoners to re-emerge in a deeply weakened state. That may be especially true for the prison in a small northeastern city where Liu has been serving an 11-year sentence for inciting subversion of state power.


