In a sharp rebuke to Beijing, the Nobel Committee  named imprisoned Chinese scholar Liu Xiaobo the 2010 Peace Prize winner  for "his long and nonviolent struggle for fundamental human rights in  China." The decision by the five-member committee appointed by the  Norwegian Parliament comes over the objection of the Chinese government,  which considers Liu a criminal.
But when the Norwegian Nobel Committee chairman,  Thorbjoern Jagland, announced the award, commenting that, "China has  become a big power in economic terms as well as political terms, and it  is normal that big powers should be under criticism," it's been reported  that the broadcast on the BBC and CNN went black. This will have  affected both tourist and upmarket foreign hotels as well as places  where foreigners gather, with the blackout extending to reports on the  Prize which later aired. Major mainland news portals have yet to publish  news of Liu's prize. On Sina Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter, users  were briefly permitted to post his name. There have also been  complaints that text messages containing "Liu Xiaobo" were blocked by  the major cell phone service providers.
The Chinese government has since responded to Lui's  award. "To give the Peace Prize to such a person is completely contrary  to the purpose of the award and a blasphemy of the Peace Prize," Chinese  Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu said in a statement posted on the  ministry's website. He added that the award could harm China's relations  with Norway. 
A literary critic who was a leader of the 1989  antigovernment protests in Beijing, Liu, 54, has endured multiple bouts  of detention and house arrest for criticizing the authoritarian rule of  the Chinese Communist Party. Last year, he was sentenced on Christmas  Day, when much of the foreign press was away, to 11 years in prison for  "inciting subversion of state power." He is now held in a cell with five  common criminals at Jinzhou Prison in Liaoning province, about 500 km  northeast of Beijing, where his wife Liu Xia lives. The evidence against  him was a series of essays he had written questioning the authoritarian  rule of the Chinese Communist Party and Charter 08, a human-rights  manifesto that he co-authored. In January, a group including VÁclav  Havel and Peace Prize laureates Desmond Tutu and the Dalai Lama  co-signed an article saying Liu deserved the prize for "his bravery and  clarity of thought about China's future."(See pictures of Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo.)
While a few Peace Prize laureates had been previously  locked up by the regimes they rallied against - most famously Nelson  Mandela in apartheid-era South Africa - it is rare for the award to be  given to someone still imprisoned. Liu now joins Burma's Aung San Suu  Kyi and German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky, who won the 1935 prize while  jailed by the Nazis, as the only Nobel Peace Prize laureates honored  while in detention. While oddsmakers had listed Liu as the favorite for  this year's prize, many of his closest supporters doubted his chances.  "I don't think he can win," his wife told TIME before the announcement.  "But whether he wins or not, this will help bring attention to his  case."
The Nobel Prize has long been a sensitive subject for  China. While physicists such as Frank Yang and Lee Tsung-Dao and  novelist Gao Xingjian have won the prize after leaving China, no  mainland Chinese resident has ever won a Nobel. The Dalai Lama, the  exiled Tibetan spiritual leader whom China considers a citizen, was  awarded the Peace Prize in 1989 after the Chinese government's bloody  crackdown on demonstrators in Beijing. Last year Shanghai-born Charles  K. Kao shared the Physics Prize for his work on fiber optics, but he now  holds U.S. and U.K. citizenship. The People's Republic hungers for a  Nobel it can call its own. But it opposed the prize for Liu. Foreign  Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said earlier this month that Liu broke the  law, and "his actions are completely counter to the purpose of the  Nobel Prize." In September, the head of the Norwegian Nobel Institute  told the Norwegian news agency NTB that he had been warned by a Chinese  diplomat that awarding Liu would damage relations between Oslo and  Beijing. (See how Beijing clamped down after the release of Charter 08.)
Coming at a time when China has successfully hosted  an Olympic Games and a World Expo, the prize will take some of the shine  of the nation's triumphant rise and bring renewed attention to the  Communist Party's authoritarian rule. While China's economic boom has  lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty, China suffers from pervasive  corruption, arbitrary rule of law and persecution of religious and  ethnic minorities. Much of the social control in the Mao eras has  withered, but those, like Liu, who challenge the rule of the Communist  Party can still suffer severely.
Liu's honor is unlikely to have any immediate impact  on those problems. And in the short run it could make life worse both  for Liu himself and reformers within and outside the government. But  Liu's supporters say it will have an effect. "Every Chinese person  should be proud and happy," says Mo Shaoping, a lawyer who represented  Liu until he was blocked by the government."Liu Xiaobo is so far the  only Chinese-educated Chinese person to have won the Nobel prize in  China. I think this means that the Nobel Prize committee has recognized  Liu's efforts in peacefully promoting China's democratic transition.  Third, I think this might in the future earn him an early release from  prison."
Perry Link, a Sinologist at University of  California-Riverside who worked with Liu to translate Charter 08, a  pro-democracy document demanding political reforms, says, "The biggest  benefit, in my opinion, would be that a prize for Liu Xiaobo would help  millions of Chinese, both inside China and around the world, to see and  feel more clearly that 'China' can be much more than the Chinese  Communist Party." Activism by Liu and others shows that "China can be  something different, something better than a worn-out old-style  authoritarian government," says Link. "Giving the Prize to Liu would  provide a huge boost to that new vision of what a healthier China can  be."(See how Chinese dissidents tried to propagate Charter 08.)
Liu helped create one such vision two years ago with  Charter 08, a manifesto that called for extensive reforms to the Chinese  political system including democratic elections, separation of powers  and an independent judiciary. The 4,000-word document was originally  signed by 303 Chinese intellectuals, and once posted online, thousands  more people both in China and overseas added their names. While most of  the original, China-based signers were detained, interrogated or  otherwise harassed by police, Liu suffered the most extreme penalty. The  goal, say human rights activists, was to intimidate those who might  rally against the authoritarian rule of the Communist Party.
Liu was initially dismissive of the possible impact  of the manifesto, says Link, but he changed his mind and became a fervid  organizer, volunteering to sign first, knowing that would make him the  target of retaliation. That parallels his response to the demonstrations  of 1989. Liu, who had developed a reputation as an "angry young man"  for his acerbic criticism of Chinese literature, was dismissive of  previous student demonstrations. But as he watched the protests in  Tiananmen Square grow, he flew back to China from the U.S., where he was  a visiting scholar at Columbia University. In Beijing, he became a  leading advocate for democratization of the protest groups and tried to  prevent further bloodshed by negotiating with People's Liberation Army  troops and urging protesters to evacuate Tiananmen Square on the night  of June 3.
He expressed a similar calm and forbearance during  his trial last year, responding not with anger but magnanimity. Liu said  he had no hatred for the police, prosecutors or judges who put him  behind bars. Rejecting such toxic emotions was critical for the overall  good of the nation, he wrote in a final statement to the Beijing court.  "Hatred is corrosive of a person's wisdom and conscience; the mentality  of enmity can poison a nation's spirit, instigate brutal life and death  struggles, destroy a society's tolerance and humanity, and block a  nation's progress to freedom and democracy."
                                  
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