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Liu still China's invisible man two years after Nobel

Two years after his Nobel peace prize, Liu Xiaobo remains imprisoned, relatives are under house arrest and his supporters are cowed into silence.

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A security guard prevents a photographer from taking photos outside Liu Xiaobo's apartment in Beijing on Wednesday. Photo: AP

Two years after his Nobel peace prize, Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo remains imprisoned, relatives are under house arrest or cowed into silence and, supporters say, the democratic change he sought seems further away than ever.

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As the Nobel committee in Oslo prepares to award this year’s prestigious prize on Friday, the dissident writer remains the world’s only jailed Nobel peace laureate, with more than seven years left to go of a Chinese prison term for subversion.

Little is now known about Liu, 56, and his current condition – he is said to suffer from hepatitis – due to a curtain of silence drawn across him and his family by China’s government, which was deeply embarrassed by the award and reacted angrily.

This makes it difficult to confirm whether Liu is even still at the prison in Liaoning province in northeastern China where he was initially jailed.

Liu’s wife Liu Xia, remains under house arrest at their home in Beijing to prevent her speaking about her husband’s case, while his brothers continue to decline media interviews for fear of losing their occasional visitation rights to him.

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“I don’t have any information about Liu Xiaobo and I have been unable to reach Liu Xia,” Dai Qing, a fellow activist who is close to the couple, told reporters.

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