Outspoken Chinese professor said to be released from detention in Beijing

Xu Zhangrun of Tsinghua University has been one of the few Chinese academics willing to openly and bluntly criticise the Chinese government. PHOTO: AFP

BEIJING (NYTIMES) - An outspoken Chinese law professor who has denounced the harsh policies of China's Communist Party under President Xi Jinping was released from detention on Sunday (July 12), a week after the police took him away, two people familiar with the professor said.

Professor Xu Zhangrun of Tsinghua University in Beijing has been one of the few Chinese academics willing to openly and bluntly criticise the Chinese government. In two essays this year, he said that official delay and prevarication had stoked the coronavirus outbreak that emerged in China late last year.

"When decisions lead to policy failure, not only should the course be corrected, those responsible must acknowledge their mistakes, appeal in all humility for public forgiveness and be held accountable," Prof Xu wrote in an essay in May, according to a translation by Prof Geremie Barme, an Australian Sinologist.

Prof Xu, 57, first attracted widespread notice in 2018 for a long essay that lamented China's increasingly authoritarian turn under Mr Xi, the Communist Party leader. Soon after taking power, Mr Xi launched a drive to discredit liberal ideas such as universal human rights and constitutional limits on party power.

Prof Xu was barred from teaching and research by Tsinghua University last year, sharply reducing his income, and he has been warned about his criticisms of the Chinese government. Even so, he has continued to write trenchant essays that have been published abroad and told friends that he accepted the possibility of detention.

The police took Prof Xu from his home in north Beijing on Monday, and friends said that officers accused him of using prostitutes while travelling in south-west China, an accusation the friends called a slur. The detention prompted widespread criticism abroad, including from the Trump administration and the European Union.

"We are deeply concerned by the PRC's detention of Professor Xu Zhangrun for criticising Chinese leaders amid tightening ideological controls on university campuses in China," Ms Morgan Ortagus, a spokesman for the US State Department, said on Twitter, referring to the People's Republic of China.

Two people familiar with the professor and his family said that he had returned to his home on Sunday morning. Both people asked that their names not be used, citing fear of recrimination by the Chinese authorities.

The police in Changping, the northern district of Beijing where the professor lives, did not confirm his release, just as they did not confirm his detention last week.

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.