Liu Xiaobo's wife fears she may not be allowed to collect his Nobel
12 Oct 2010
The wife of imprisoned Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo fears the Chinese government will prevent her from collecting the Peace Prize on her husband's behalf amid rising anger in Beijing at the announcement awarding the prize to her pro-democracy activist husband.
In a telephone interview with the Guardian, Liu Xia said police officers had surrounded her home and warned her that she could not leave without a minder.
"They have told me not to go out, not to visit friends. If I want to see my parents or buy food, I can only go in their car," she said. "I don't even talk to my neighbours because I don't want to get them into trouble."
During a prison visit on Sunday, Liu Xiaobo asked her to collect the prize at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway, on 10 December. But she was doubtful she would get as far as the airport.
"I can't even get out of my home, how could I go out of the country?"
The Nobel Prize Committee said it hoped one of the couple would attend the ceremony, but it would go ahead without the winner as it did for Burmese democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and former Polish president Lech Walesa.