Back issue
Woman arrested for heckling Chinese President Hu at White House
Wang Wenyi, a 47-year-old journalist with a Falun Gong-run newspaper, was charged in US federal court after using her press credentials to enter the White House South Lawn and heckle Chinese President Hu Jintao during his appearance with President Bush.
Read the full dispatch
Saturday, April 22, 2006 Wang Wenyi, who was seen on television heckling Chinese President Hu Jintao during his White House appearance this week, was formally charged in a United States federal court for the misdemeanor of willfully intimidating, coercing, threatening, and harassing a foreign official. According to the Secret Service, Wang Wenyi gained press credentials for working with the Falun Gong-run newspaper The Epoch. She then stood on a camera stand and shouted in Chinese: "Stop oppressing the Falun Gong," as well as "Your time is running out," and "Anything you have done will come back to you in this lifetime." She also shouted in English, "President Bush, stop him from persecuting the Falun Gong." The Falun Gong is a religious group who is currently being persecuted in China for unconventional beliefs. Wang Wenyi was then "escorted" by the Secret Service away from the South Lawn where the appearance was taking place. Over 35 supporters attended Wang's arraignment on Friday. If she is convicted, she could receive up to six months in jail and a $5,000 fine. This is the 47-year-old Wenyi's second incident in five years involving protest of a Chinese leader. July 2001, she confronted then-President Jiang Zemin during a tour of Malta. According to Wang, she introduced herself to Jiang and then urged him "to stop the killing of Falun Gong practitioners in China." Security officials dragged her away, but Jiang called her back and spoke to her in Chinese saying that the "Falun Gong practitioners were killing themselves." Wenyi's court-appointed lawyer, David Bos, challenged the criminal charge on the basis of free-speech. "It's making the First Amendment rights of all Americans just evaporate," he said, while he said Wang's remarks were "relatively innocuous." The first amendment to the U.S. constitution states; "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech ... (or the freedom) to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." Hu is in the U.S. for a weeklong conference with President Bush. Reference Congress of the United States. Bill of Rights — US National Archives, March 4,1789 Sources Associated Press. Woman Charged in Protest Against Hu — Yahoo News, April 21, 2006 Hu heckler on harassment charge — BBC News Online, April 21, 2006 Paul Reyes. Wenyi Wang, White House Heckler, Charged with Threatening Chinese President — American Chronicle, April 22, 2006 Peter Kaplan. China heckler at White House charged in court — Reuters, April 21, 2006
Source: Woman arrested for heckling Chinese President Hu at White House — originally published on Wikinews™ and summarized/modified via AI. Licensed under CC BY 2.5.
The people's front page
12 headlines filed
Hu’s That Heckler? White House Presidential Vetting has Gong Wrong
7.9JudgeJournalist charged for am-Bush at White House
7.9JudgeFalunsuccessful Heckling: Chinese Journalist Goes Out with a Wang
7.3JudgeWenyi gonna learn it matters Hu you insult
6.9JudgeMowing the Lawn: Fed Court Punished Hu’s Heckler
6.9JudgeWenyi see an opportunity, Hu gotta take it
6.3JudgeHu Let This Woman Into the White House? Press Credentials Have Falun into the Wrong Hands
6.1JudgeBush makes statement: Everybody Wang Gong Tonight
5.6JudgeHold the press leads to amBush
5.4JudgeWhite House Security Freefalun Wenyi Can’t Control Hu Enters
4.9JudgeWenyi going to learn
4.5JudgeWenyi Wang You’re Finger at the President, You Get Charged
3.1Judge