Beijing - Prosecutors have charged environmental activist Wu
Lihong with extortion from industrial plants that he accused of
polluting Taihu Lake in eastern China's Jiangsu province, state media
said on Wednesday.
The prosecutors in Jiangsu's Yixing city accused Wu, who was once
nominated as one of China's top 10 environmentalists, of extorting
55,000 yuan (6,875 dollars) by threatening to expose the plants'
pollution, the official Xinhua news agency said.
The agency quoted prosecutors as saying Wu's diary listed
'blackmail targets and showed amounts of money he had planned to
extort from each factory or enterprise.'
The Yixing court had not set a date for the trial of Wu, 39, who
had fought for years against the pollution of Taihu.
Water supplies from the lake had to be cut to 2 million people
in nearby Wuxi city in late May because excessive pollution had
promoted the growth of a pungent blue-green algae.
After police arrested Wu in mid-April, a friend said police had
initially accused him of contacting foreign media.
Wu had worked for years to uncover illegal water pollution by
businesses and had denounced the inaction of corrupt officials. He
has repeatedly been arrested and threatened.
Wu grew up beside Taihu, the third-largest freshwater lake in
China, which is located in the Yangtze Delta plain on the border of
Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces.
He began lobbying the central government early last year, arguing
that Yixing had failed to meet environmental protection standards.
Despite his protests, the national environmental protection bureau
awarded the title of model city to Yixing in November.
Wu took scores of photographs and nearly 100 samples of polluted
water, and he and his friend had planned to take their case to a
Beijing court on April 22, World Earth Day.
Relatives and a lawyer were not allowed to meet Wu after his
arrest on April 13, his wife said last month to Deutsche
Presse-Agentur dpa.
Wu's wife, Xu Jiehua, said Chinese authorities had advised her not
to have any more contact with foreign media.
'They warned me that it would be better if I didn't speak any more
to foreign journalists or it could hurt my husband,' Xu said.
Taihu is known for its fish industry and as a tourist attraction
because of its scenic beauty, but it is also highly polluted.
The lake provides much of the drinking water in the thickly
populated area despite it worsening pollution, caused by discharges
of wastewater and from factories.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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