WASHINGTON: Two U.S. lawmakers have nominated Jimmy Lai, a former Hong Kong publisher now standing trial on national security charges, and three other jailed Chinese dissidents for the Nobel Peace Prize. While hundreds of people are often nominated for the annual prize, this nomination is certain to draw a sharp rebuke from Beijing.In a letter to the Nobel Peace Prize Committee released Thursday, Rep. Chris Smith, chair of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, and Sen. Jeffrey Merkley, the co-chair, nominated Lai, along with Uyghur scholar Ilham Tohti and legal activists Ding Jiaxi and Xu Zhiyong. All four are jailed for their peaceful activism.”All these individuals embody the spirit of the Nobel Peace Prize and justly deserve the award,” Smith, a New Jersey Republican, and Merkley, a Democrat from Oregon, wrote. “The Peace Prize will focus world attention on all those struggling to exercise their fundamental human rights in the People’s Republic of China.”Beijing has become assertive in defending its rights record and has accused the U.S. of using the issue as a pretext to suppress China’s rise. Last week, Chen Xu, the Chinese ambassador in Geneva, said during a United Nations-backed review of the country’s human rights record that China “upholds respect for and protection of human rights as a task of importance in state governance.”“We have embarked on a path of human rights development that is in keeping with the trend of the times and appropriate to China’s national conditions and so-called historic achievements in this process,” Xu said.During the review, Western governments and rights groups leveled criticisms at Beijing’s rights records and urged the Chinese government to stop criminalizing peaceful expression. They called for Lai’s release and the repeal of Hong Kong’s national security law, under which Lai is being prosecuted for calling for foreign sanctions on mainland Chinese and Hong Kong officials. If convicted, Lai could be jailed for life.
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