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Chinese Activist to Receive Passports in 2 Weeks


In this file photo taken May 2, 2012 and released by the US Embassy Beijing Press Office, blind activist Chen Guangcheng, center, holds hands with US Ambassador to China, Gary Locke, at a hospital in Beijing.
In this file photo taken May 2, 2012 and released by the US Embassy Beijing Press Office, blind activist Chen Guangcheng, center, holds hands with US Ambassador to China, Gary Locke, at a hospital in Beijing.
Blind Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng says he and his family will be issued passports to leave the country within the next two weeks.

Chen told Western reporters Thursday that Shangdong provincial security officials brought visa applications for him and his family to fill out the day before, and that passport photos were taken. On Wednesday, Chen discussed the issue in an interview with VOA's Mandarin Service.

"Today I applied for a passport. Today I filled forms out," Chen told VOA. "[They] said within 15 days [I will receive my passport]."

Once Chen and his family receive the passports, they can travel to the United States, where he has been offered a fellowship by New York University.

Chen fled to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing last month after escaping repressive house arrest in Shangdong province. He left the embassy and entered a hospital for treatment, after agreeing to a deal reached by U.S. and Chinese authorities that would allow him to stay in a "safe" place in China and study law.

But he changed his mind hours after leaving U.S. protection, saying his family had been threatened.

Officials in Shangdong province have charged Chen Guangcheng's nephew, Chen Kegui, with attempted homicide after he allegedly attacked local officials who broke into the elder Chen's house after his escape.

The advocacy group Chinese Human Rights Defenders says it learned that Chen Guangcheng's brother, Chen Guangfu, was tortured by authorities shortly after the other man's escape.

Chen is a self-taught lawyer and human rights activist who has been blind since childhood. He was given a four-year prison sentence in 2006 for exposing abuses under China's forced abortion policy aimed at population control. He was then subjected to an abusive house arrest after his release from prison in 2010.
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