After the protests, Wu'er Kaixi was number two on China's
list of most wanted student leaders. He fled to France through Hong Kong under the aegis of
Operation Yellowbird, and then studied at
Harvard University in the United States. After one year of study there, he moved to the
San Francisco Bay Area and continued his studies at
Dominican University. Afterward he emigrated to Taiwan, where he has married a Taiwanese woman and started a family. He was a talk show host for a local radio station from 1998 to 2001. In his book,
Jesus in Beijing: How Christianity is transforming China and Changing the Balance of Power, David Aikman claims Wu'er Kaixi converted to Christianity in 2002, but this has never been substantiated and Wu'er Kaixi himself has made no public statements about the issue of faith. Wu'er Kaixi appears frequently on television programs as a political commentator. His standpoint has been to defend the democracy on the island, and promoting civil society. He has often criticized the
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), leading some to consider him to be a
Pan-Blue supporter. However, he is now identified as a supporter of
Pan-Green politics, and has made statements strongly criticizing the KMT as well. In a June 2014 interview with the New York Times, he stated that while he was 'not a nationalist', if asked to 'choose today', he would 'join the majority of Taiwanese people here for independence. The reason Taiwanese people say we aren't sure, we want to maintain the status quo, is that the status quo is that the mainland's missiles aren't dropping on our heads. That is the status quo they want to maintain. It's not that they like the idea that Beijing claims Taiwan as part of them. It's not so much that they like that China prevents Taiwan from entering any international arena. It's not that they want to reserve a chance to one day go back to China. It's not that. It's just that we don't want war.' Wu'er Kaixi has expressed a strong desire to return to mainland China to see his parents, whom he has not seen since 1989 after fleeing mainland China under Operation Yellowbird. He has been unable to enter the mainland, and his parents have been unable to obtain passports to see him overseas. On 3 June 2009, he arrived in
Macau in transit to mainland China intending to surrender and clear his name in court. On 4 June 2010, he was arrested by Japanese authorities in Tokyo, when he tried to force his way into the Chinese embassy in order to turn himself in. He was released two days later without charge. On 18 May 2012, he tried to turn himself in the third time to the Chinese embassy in Washington, D.C., where the Chinese embassy decided to ignore him completely. He again attempted to turn himself in at Hong Kong in late 2013, and was deported to Taiwan once again. In December 2013, Wu'er Kaixi helped with the launch of a Chinese version of the anonymous and ephemeral communication platform
Kwikdesk. In 2019, during the 30th anniversary of the
Tiananmen Square Massacre, Wu'er Kaixi testified before the
United States House of Representatives. His testimony was filmed for the feature documentary
The Exiles (2022) which won the
Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the
Sundance Film Festival. In 2019, he was detained in Taiwan on suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol. In 2024 he suffered a fall that placed him in a serious coma. ==Politics==