Australian journalist Cheng Lei discusses the 'big sin' that landed her behind Chinese bars

The Australian journalist has given harrowing details of her three years in Chinese prison.

A woman smiling as she's on the phone

Cheng Lei has described celebrated her freedom with family, in her first live interview since coming home. Source: AAP / Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade / PR Image

Key Points
  • Australian journalist Cheng Lei returned to Australia last week after three years in a Chinese prison.
  • In her first interview since returning to Australia, she discussed why she was detained.
  • Cheng said she is still adjusting to being home, with celebrations tinged with fear.
Australian journalist Cheng Lei was jailed in China for three years after breaking an embargo following a briefing by Chinese officials by mere minutes.

The Melbourne mother-of-two was arrested in August 2020 and held in a Chinese jail, spending months in isolation.

She was accused of national security-related offences but the circumstances surrounding her detainment have not been made public until now.
An embargo is an agreement between a journalist and other parties, such as governments or companies, to hold off publishing information until an agreed time.

The former anchor for the state-run China Global Television Network broke the embargo by just a few minutes, she revealed in her first interview since her release and

"Essentially you broke an embargo," Sky News reporter Annalise Neilsen put to Cheng.

"Yes," Cheng responded.

She said in China that was considered a "big sin".
"You have hurt the motherland, that the state's authority has been eroded because of you," she explained.

"And what seems innocuous to us here, I'm sure it's not limited to embargoes, but many other things are not in China, especially I'm given to understand the gambit of state security is widening."

Cheng Lei free but living in fear

The 48-year-old broke down as she spoke about seeing her children and mother for the first time on Wednesday after

"We just all screamed and my mum wept and I just held onto her," she said.

Cheng went to a Vietnamese restaurant with her family and had a celebratory champagne before heading to the Queen Victoria Market during her first few days of freedom.

She was held in isolation for about six months and allowed 30-minute-long consulate visits while in prison.
Cheng said it would take time to adjust back to normal life as she was still afraid of something happening, such as her children being taken away.

"I keep expecting people to drop out of the sky and arrest me," she said.

Cheng case resolved through 'legal processes in China': PM

Last week, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Cheng's return was not part of a deal struck with Beijing and her release followed the completion of China's judicial process.

"Her matter was concluded through the legal processes in China," he said.

"This is something that … I pay tribute to all who have made representations, both on the political level whenever we have met with our Chinese counterparts."
The federal government continues to advocate for the release of , whose health is deteriorating.

He has been detained since January 2019 and continues to await a verdict in his case with his judgement deferred.

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3 min read
Published 18 October 2023 8:21am
Source: AAP



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