MP FRANK DOBSON IN ROW OVER ‘VILE’ EXECUTION

Akmal Shaikh was executed in China on Tuesday

Dobson under fire from Hong Kong-born election rival George Lee

THE execution of Akmal Shaikh – the Kentish Town minicab driver caught with a suitcase of heroin in China – has sparked a fractious row in the south of the borough between election rivals.
Holborn and St Pancras MP Frank Dobson labelled the Chinese authorities “vile” for carrying out the death sentence on a man thought to be suffering from mental health illness.
But in a personal attack on the long-serving MP, Conservative election challenger George Lee – who was born in Hong Kong – said Mr Dobson should butt out and let China deal with drug traffickers how they see fit.
Mr Shaikh, who used to run Teksi Taxis in Fortess Road, Kentish Town, was given a lethal injection in China on Tuesday morning, despite appeals from the British government for clemency.
He spent two years in a Chinese jail after being found entering the country with four kilos of heroin.
His relatives and supporters say he was fooled into smuggling the drugs by criminals who preyed on his vulnerable mental state.
Both Mr Dobson and Mr Lee were contacted by campaigners calling for Mr Shaikh to be reprieved. Mr Dobson contacted senior British government officials while Mr Lee spoke to the Chinese ambassador in London.
But in the aftermath of his death, the pair have clashed, with Mr Lee clearly furious at Mr Dobson’s decision not to mince his words about the Chinese authorities.
While Mr Dobson ­criticised the “tyranny of China”, Mr Lee said it was drugs that are “vile” and it was “good for China to have such strong laws on drug trafficking”.
The case has escalated into an international dispute with Prime Minister Gordon Brown and cabinet members attacking their Chinese counterparts – and strong words being thrown back in return.
China’s judiciary does not believe Mr Shaikh was unwell at the time of the trial and refused any fresh psychiatric assessment before he was executed, despite criticism that it was failing in its basic human rights responsibilities.
Mr Dobson, who was contacted by the family nine months ago, said: “It was plain as plain can be that he could not be regarded as in his right mind or be held responsible for what he says or does. But that’s the tyranny of China. If a tyrant leader decides to save someone’s life then it is saved. If they decide not to, they are not. This is how it has been handled. I do regard it [China] as a vile regime and this is further confirmation of that.”
Mr Lee, who won a Home Office scholarship to study Chinese politics at Trinity College Cambridge, and later became a high ranking officer for the Metropolitan Police, said: “What Mr Dobson said is outrageous. Mr Dobson is a left-wing socialist – he wanted this kind of dictatorship as a student and supporter of Mao in the 1970s.”
Mr Lee, whose poster appears in the windows of Chinese restaurants across the constituency, said: “I’m against capital punishment. But I have worked as a policeman in China and I think drugs are vile. There are 1.5 billion people in China – they have been running the country for 5,000 years and doing quite well. They think, ‘who is the West to tell China how to run its drugs policy?’ The western way of doing things is not necessarily the right way.”
He added: “China is not as rough as London. There are no yobs spitting in your face or going round with hoods. There is nothing like the anti-social behaviour.
“I was asked to help and so I did what I could. But Gordon Brown is an idiot. He was clearly privately asking for a favour from China but at the same time publicly condemning them at Copenhagen [climate change summit]. That has really annoyed the Chinese and it did not help at all.”
In a statement this week, Mr Brown said he was “appalled and disappointed”. Clive Stafford Smith, from the human rights group Reprieve, called the events “simply disgusting”.
But a spokesman for the Chinese embassy in London said: “It is important that the independence of the Chinese judiciary be respected. As for his possible mental illness, which has been much talked about, there apparently has been no previous medical record.”
He added that four kilograms of heroin – estimated to have a street value in the UK of around £250,000 – would have “threatened numerous families”.
Mr Shaikh sent hundreds of emails to global news agencies and politicians and, according to fresh evidence secured by Reprieve, entertained a series of delusions of grandeur including setting up an airline in Poland and becoming a pop star. The father-of-five thought he could promote world peace with a song about rabbits.
Members of Mr Shaikh’s family and supporters staged a candle-lit vigil opposite the Chinese embassy in Portland Place, Marylebone, on Monday night, while on the other side of the world Mr Shaikh was learning there would be no last-minute reprieve.
A statement from Mr Shaikh’s family said: “The family express their grief at the Chinese decision to refuse mercy; thank all those who tried hard to bring about a different result – including Reprieve, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, those who attended the vigil, and the organisers of the Facebook group who garnered more than 5,000 members in a few short days.”
EXCLUSIVE by TOM FOOT

Comments

George Lee

George Lee is in unique position to help solve this misunderstanding; but calling Frank Dobson and idiot does not help. Dobson has a lifetime of public service and I believe his hatred of oppression, his hatred and mistreatment of the mentally ill, and of summary injustice is genuine. George Lee says he has done what he can. He has a duty to do better. He should now call on China to hold a an independent inquiry into this miscarriage of justice. Of course he knows that this is impossible, but he should do so all the same, to demonstrate that he too genuinely believes in fair trials for all. He obviously will not want to stick his neck out, because he will them be called a traitor by Chinese people, China Inc. will ignore him and he will get no business and financial benefits from his election.
George Lee could help us understand China better. He could also explain to us how can we promote human rights such as fair trials to a one party dictatorship. George Lee can not have it two ways. In his remarks about the difference between East and West, is he implying that free speech, democracy and and fair trials are not universal human rights? Why is democracy, free speech and justice not good for Chinese people? If he does not believe in our rights and values, why is he standing for election to represent our people? Presumably he has business and financial interests in China, where the one party state is deeply involved in business. If he gets elected, getting good deals for his ethnic Chinese constituents will not be good enough; neither will helping Chinese investors to buy British companies. His China connection should not prevent him from speaking up for free speech and fair trials.

He could help us by explaining how we can improve the presentation of our message. Obviously, both Governments need to improve. Britain needs to stop invading foreign countries, or we have no moral authority. And be sensitive about the feelings of people that have been invaded by Britain in the past, especially when that invasion was to secure the importation of drugs. The Internet postings on this subject on Chinese bulletin boards in recent days show that many Chinese hate Britain as a former drug pusher. But China needs to allow fair trials, free speech, free elections, before other countries will respect it. Executing a mentally ill person was not smart, and the Chinese legal system is a joke, as this case has shown yet again. To say the judiciary is independent is hilarious; defence lawyers are regularly detained and obstructed by the police on government orders and judges are instructed on how to judge. Only a week ago, on Christmas Day, Lu Xiaobo was sentenced to 11 years for peacefully calling for democracy in China.

As for the death penalty, this case provides ammunition for abolition campaigners: it underlines one of the strongest arguments against it: when injustice occurs, as it may have in this case, it is irreversible. Was Shaikh sane? We will never know for sure.

In Britain, you are innocent until proved guilty, and innocent while reasonable doubt remains. The burden of proof for the defence of insanity is reversed; the insane must prove his insanity. But his lawyers have a right to call professional psychiatric and other witnesses, and this was not allowed. Since he did not have a fair trial, he should be remembered as an innocent person who died to expose the need for true justice in China.
So George Lee was a Chinese policeman! Does George Lee know the image that many Britons have of the Chinese police? They are an arm of the Chinese state, deeply involved in suppressing dissent, suppressing free speech, and preventing protest against government policies in China, many of which are deeply unjust, such as the forceful eviction of residents by communist officials in search of quick profits, the imposition of illegal taxes in rural areas, and the harassment of Christians for peacefully worshipping according to their belief.

And the Chinese police have a mixed record when it comes to preventing common crime; there is evidence that they are deeply corrupt, as can be seen from the huge number of so called hair dressers which are really brothels, saunas which are really brothels, and KTV parlours which are really a front for prostitution, all of which are allowed to operate openly in China despite the criminalisation of prostitution in China. These establishments could still be seen on streets all over China, and suggest that police corruption is normal in China.

A lot of people will be thinking, good for George Lee, but when will a Briton be allowed to stand for election in a free election in China? Never, until the CCP allows free and fair elections, or is violently overthrown, and until the Chinese state stops its xenophobia towards foreigners.

By the way, some of those Internet postings in China have already been deleted by censors...

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