A Chinese court has convicted one of China's most prominent human rights lawyers for seven online posts that criticised the government, but handed down a three-year suspended sentence that would result in his immediate release from custody.
The Beijing No. 2 Intermediate People's Court on Tuesday said Pu Zhiqiang was being punished on the charges of "inciting ethnic hatred" and "picking quarrels and provoking trouble", state television CCTV said on its microblog.
Pu, 50, was sentenced to three years in prison but given a three-year reprieve, said his lawyer, Shang Baojun.
The suspended sentence means Pu does not have to serve prison time as long as he stays under formal probation during that period, legal experts said.
It means that Pu would be released on Tuesday, Shang said, although he could be placed under "residential surveillance" - a form of detention in China that is used to keep dissidents in sites away from the public eye.
Pu has represented many well-known dissidents, including artist Ai Weiwei and activists of the "New Citizens' Movement", a group that has called on Chinese leaders to make their wealth public. He was the most prominent activist swept up in what rights groups say is the most severe clampdown on dissent in two decades in China.
Pu had spent nearly 19 months in detention before his trial last week, which lasted just over three hours. His lawyers said he could have faced an eight-year sentence.
Shang said Pu would not appeal against the decision, and said Pu was relieved about the court's decision.
Share

