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Police detained Liu a day ahead of the charter's release, possibly because they considered him a key organizer, in addition to his role in drafting and revising the document, his lawyer Mo Shaoping has said. Mo said Wednesday that Liu Xia was advised by police to find a new lawyer for her husband because Mo was among the charter signatories. China's official Xinhua News Agency reported Wednesday that Liu had been engaged in "agitation activities, such as spreading of rumors and defaming of the government, aimed at subversion of the state and overthrowing the socialism system in recent years." It cited no specific examples and said that Liu allegedly confessed while in police custody. Liu Xia and Mo both said they did not believe Liu had confessed to the charge. They said he more likely acknowledged authoring essays that the prosecution plans to use as evidence. The singling out of Liu for prosecution seems to be an effort to warn others involved in the charter. Other signatories have been called in for talks with police but not arrested. A Peking University law professor, He Weifang, was reassigned to a post in the far western Xinjiang region after signing the document in an apparent rebuke. Earlier this month, the leader of the U.S. House of Representatives, Democrat Nancy Pelosi, called for Liu's "immediate and unconditional release." She also wrote a letter to Chinese President Hu Jintao last month asking that Liu and other Chinese "prisoners of conscience" be released.
Liu had been held in an unknown location since December. The San Francisco-based Dui Hua Foundation said earlier this month he was being kept at a hotel on the outskirts of Beijing
-- a claim that could not be verified. Chinese law limits such "house arrest" to six months and Mo demanded on June 8 that Liu be released immediately, saying that it was illegal to hold him any longer.
[Associated
Press;
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