US Bid To Name China Embassy Road After Wuhan Doctor

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2020-05-08 HKT 10:48

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  • Republican Senator Tom Cotton moved a proposal to rename the street to 'ensure the name Li Wenliang is never forgotten'. File photo: AFP

    Republican Senator Tom Cotton moved a proposal to rename the street to 'ensure the name Li Wenliang is never forgotten'. File photo: AFP

US lawmakers have proposed renaming the street in front of China's embassy after the late Wuhan doctor punished after warning about the new coronavirus, a step sure to outrage Beijing.

The measure would rechristen the section of the Washington street in front of the embassy "Li Wenliang Plaza" instead of the innocuous current name of "International Place”.

Li was one of a group of doctors who shared posts on social media in December warning that a virus was spreading in Wuhan.

He was reprimanded by police and made to sign a statement promising not to commit any more "law-breaking actions." 

He died from the illness in February, triggering a nationwide outpouring of grief and a rare apology by police for his treatment.

"We'll ensure the name Li Wenliang is never forgotten – by placing it permanently outside the embassy of the nation responsible for the deaths Dr Li tried to prevent," said Senator Tom Cotton, a Republican known for his hawkish views on China.

The measure, also backed by Senator Marco Rubio, was introduced simultaneously in both chambers of Congress.

Lawmakers similarly proposed in 2014 to rename the street after Liu Xiaobo, the Nobel Prize-winning writer who was imprisoned after calling for democratic reforms.

China denounced that effort and the proposal died in the House of Representatives after then president Barack Obama's administration indicated he would veto it for the sake of cooperation with Beijing.

After the US proposal on Liu Xiaobo, some Chinese proposed naming the street outside the US embassy in Beijing after Edward Snowden, the former intelligence contractor who fled the United States to unveil government snooping on its citizens. (AFP)

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