Political Hotsheet
By

Corbett B. Daly /

CBS News/ May 3, 2012, 4:51 PM

Chinese dissident Chen makes direct appeal to Congress

Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng phoned a congressional hearing

Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng phoned a congressional hearing pleading for asylum for himself and his family, Thursday, May 3, 2012.

UPDATED 5:55 p.m. ET

(CBS News) -- The blind Chinese activist who recently left the U.S. embassy in Beijing on Thursday made a surprising and direct appeal to lawmakers on Capitol Hill to come to the United States.

Calling in to the Congressional Executive Commission on China, dissident Chen Guangcheng told lawmakers he is concerned for the safety of his family and he wants to thank Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for her efforts to help him over the past few days.

"I hope I can get more help from her," he said over speakerphone to the two Republican lawmakers who were present.

The 40-year-old lawyer became famous last week after had taken refuge in the U.S. embassy after escaping more than a year and a half of house arrest. In a deal between the U.S. and China, Chen was then released to a Chinese hospital and is now under Chinese control. Chen initially said he wanted to stay in China but shortly after leaving the embassy he changed his mind.

"The thing I (am) most concerned (about) right now is the safety of my mother, my brothers, and I really want to know what's going on with them," Chen said through a translator at Thursday's congressional hearing.

Chen said he wanted to come to the United States for some "rest," because he has not rested for 10 years.

Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng phoned congressional hearing

The dramatic appeal is the latest turn in Chen's case, which has put a strain on U.S.-China relations and has even made its way into U.S. presidential politics.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton are in China now for a previously scheduled meeting with Chinese officials on economic and security issues.

Republican White House hopeful Mitt Romney accused the Obama administration of putting economic concerns above Chen's freedom and called it a "day of shame for the Obama administration," if accusations that Chen was shooed out of the embassy ahead of those talks are true.

"It's also apparent according to these reports, if they are accurate, that our embassy failed to put in place the kind of verifiable measures that would ensure the safety of Mr. Chen and his family," Romney said.

Romney blasts Obama administration's handling of Chinese dissident case
For administration, a delicate dance over Chinese dissident

U.S. officials have said that Chen left the embassy voluntarily and did not seek asylum while he was legally on U.S. soil at the diplomatic mission in Beijing.

White House spokesman Jay Carney defended the administration's handling of the dissident's situation based on what he wanted at the time. Carney did not address Chen's apparent change of heart.

"U.S. officials and State Department officials made clear to the Chinese that we would, in the implementation of this agreement, continue to monitor Mr. Chen's case," Carney told reporters at the White House.

Additional reporting by Jill Jackson and Carter Yang.


© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
111 Comments Add a Comment
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LilithAdams says:
Why do we even care about him? He left his family behind to suffer - he had to know that they would be in danger~~~~~~~~~~~that makes him a worm. Why do we care about him? He is none of our business and who ever let him in to the US Embassy should be fired-or more.
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audemus says:
I wish I could "phone in" during a Congressional hearing.
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shnovitz says:
It's difficult to understand all these unkind comments. Do any of you have an idea of what it's like to live in a totalitarian State? A State where people are frightened at all times, can be murdered with impunity, or simply disappear into a dark hole of a prison forever? Don't USA citizens care about anyone but themselves?

This man is obviously desperate, and very frightened about the welfare of his family. And so he should be. China does not consider humans to have rights, not unless they're part of the government or very wealthy. What I REALLY don't understand is why the West puts up with China, and why we do not simply boycott trade with them, divest from them, place sanctions against them. After all, that's what so many want for Israel, a struggling democracy in which EVERYONE has human rights and free speech - yet you ignore the atrocities of China. Israel is a tiny, Jewish country where Jews can at last live in freedom - and you can't stand that, so you treat them like dirt. But you suck up to China. Pathetic.
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Searching_For_Rule_Of_Law says:
IT'S A DAMN SHAME!!.. I'd stand a better chance of getting Justice as a blind Chinese dissident than as a US citizen.. WHAT ABOUT THE RIGHTS OF U.S. CITIZENS.. Rampant Judicial Corruption in New York turns everyday citizens into activists, but nobody cares.. nobody covers it..
--Michael A. Hense Is Searching For Rule Of Law In America
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lifestylesuccess says:
How the United States would have reacted if during the "Occupy Wall Street" protests, a foreign embassy had "brazenly and openly received those condemned by American politicians as 'rabble' and 'rioters'"?
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ruskyruss says:
Chen's a bit of a presumptuous ass, wha?
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pbcityvet says:
As a country we would peaved that another country would be trying to tell us how to handle our domestic issues. Stay out of China'a business and they will stay out of ours.
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Rocksman says:
I'm thinking Chen is a bit of a whack job.
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Eugene2012 says:
How does a blind Chinese activist obtain the phone number of the Congressional Executive Commission on China?
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nearl451 replies:
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You are on to something there. He doesn't. Someone arranges this type of call.
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littleredtop says:
Who does this blind guy think he is ET?
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