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China activist to go on trial this week: family
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 27, 2011


Chinese rights activist Ni Yulan and her husband will go on trial this week after representing victims of land grabs, their daughter said Tuesday, as China cracks down on political dissent.

Ni and Dong Jiqin were detained in April as Chinese authorities rounded up scores of rights defenders and activists amid anonymous Internet calls for protests in China similar to those that have swept the Arab world.

The couple will appear in court in Beijing on Thursday on charges of "inciting a disturbance", their daughter Dong Xuan told AFP, adding they would plead not guilty.

"The police have not allowed me to see my parents since they were detained more than eight months ago," she said. "Our lawyer saw my mother last week and said she was not in good health."

The couple has provided legal assistance to numerous families around China who have been forcibly evicted from their homes in government-backed land requisitions.

Their battle to oppose the land grabs began in 2001 after their courtyard home in central Beijing was requisitioned and marked for demolition.

One village in southern China, Wukan, recently revolted against officialdom in protest at years of illegal land grabs by local Communist leaders. Talks with a senior official defused the standoff last week.

The senior provincial official, Zhu Mingguo, said the country should be ready for more Wukan-style protests as people demand their rights, state media reported Tuesday.

Trained as a lawyer, Ni, 51, was sentenced to a year in jail in 2002 for "obstructing official business" and for two years in 2008 for "harming public property" -- charges brought against her as she tried to protect her home.

She was also disbarred from legal practice in 2002. The couple say they have not been compensated for the loss of their home.

The Hong Kong-based group Chinese Human Rights Defenders says Ni was left disabled after being beaten by police in 2002 and suffers from severe health problems.

She is unable to stand and is also suffering from swollen lymph nodes, and cannot afford medical treatment, the rights group has said.

The trial comes after a court in southwest China's Guizhou province Monday sentenced veteran activist Chen Xi for 10 years for subversion. Another longtime dissident, Chen Wei, was jailed for nine years in Sichuan province, also for subversion.

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China's Wen speaks up for land rights: Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) Dec 27, 2011 - China's Premier Wen Jiabao Thursday said the government must guard land rights of hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers, a report said, just days after a bitter land row grabbed worldwide attention.

Championed as a leader of the common Chinese, Wen spoke of farmers' rights even as memory of a drawn-out protest by the villagers of Wukan in southern China over illegal land grabs remained a fresh symbol of rising public anger.

"Land-use and distribution rights are a collective benefit and the legal property granted to rural people by law. No one has the right to deprive them," Wen said at a government meeting in Beijing, according to Xinhua news agency.

Any failure in the coming year to protect land rights, he warned, could impact China's development and social stability.

China must "dramatically increase the share of gains that goes to farmers", Wen said.

Wen's remarks come amid central government warnings of tough economic times ahead and as he and other top Communist Party leaders stress social stability in preparation for handing over the reins to their successors next year.

Ten days of unrest in Wukan, Guangdong province, over confiscated farmland and the death of a protest organiser became a symbol of rising public anger over a plethora of perceived injustices, from corruption to income disparities.

Wukan's residents ended their stand-off with the local government after the deputy Communist party secretary for Guangdong called their complaints "reasonable" and said three detained protest leaders would be freed.

On Monday, Zhu Mingguo, a senior Communist official, said the protests resulted from local leaders' failure to address the villagers' complaints and consult them on land use decisions.

He compared the situation in Wukan to an apple that appears healthy but is "rotten to the core" and warned of further unrest in China if such problems were not addressed.



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South China town unrest cools after dialogue
Beijing (AFP) Dec 24, 2011
Tenuous calm returned Saturday to a south China town that was the scene of violent clashes between police and protestors this week, after local residents said officials had agreed to a dialogue. Locals of Haimen township who had blocked a highway for a fourth day on Friday to protest a planned power plant expansion - throwing bricks and getting hit by police tear gas - said the peace could ... read more


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