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China lawyer held ahead of Tiananmen anniversary: associate
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 06, 2014


Military protest suspended in Bolivia amid talks
La Paz (AFP) May 06, 2014 - Bolivian non-commissioned officers returned to duty Tuesday after suspending a 15-day protest against the South American country's military leadership, spokesmen for the soldiers said.

The sides have set up working groups to discuss the grievances raised by the mainly indigenous officers, including alleged racial discrimination by the military high command.

Lorgio Cartagena, who led the protest movement, said there would be an "intermission" in the protests.

"We are open to dialogue," he said.

Felix Magne, a non-commissioned officer who has served as a spokesman for the group, said the protesting sergeants and other officers "are returning to our military units, ready to fulfill the law."

Disgruntled sergeants launched the unprecedented protest movement April 22 when they marched through La Paz in uniform to protest the firing of several comrades.

The protests uncorked demands that the military reform a system that systematically blocks enlisted ranks from getting specialized training or advancing beyond the rank of sergeant.

The military initially responded by sacking more than 700 non-commissioned officers for rebellion but backtracked late last week, reinstating 430 of them. The remainder will be gradually returned to active duty.

The enlisted ranks of Bolivia's 38,000-strong military are filled mainly with indigenous Aymara and Quechua people, while the upper echelons comprise mainly mixed-race officers of partly European descent.

One of China's most celebrated human rights lawyers was detained Tuesday, an associate told AFP, a month before the highly sensitive 25th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown.

Pu Zhiqiang was held by police in Beijing "over charges of creating disturbances", said lawyer Si Weijiang.

"He is now held at the Beijing No. 1 detention centre," Si said.

Authorities routinely round up outspoken critics of the Communist Party in the weeks before key events.

Pu -- who has represented dissident artist Ai Weiwei and is a prominent rights campaigner -- attended a seminar in Beijing on Saturday to mark the brutal suppression of huge anti-government protests in Tiananmen Square, according to online reports.

Academics and other members of China's rights movement attended the event, along with the mother of a dead protester, the reports said.

Democracy activist Hu Shigen, who was among the attendees, was also detained soon after the event, said the overseas campaign group China Human Rights Defenders.

"Hu Shigen also criminally detained at Beijing No. 1 detention centre," it said on Twitter.

Hu was released from prison in 2008 after serving 16 years of a 20-year sentence for trying to organise memorials for the Tiananmen massacre.

Hundreds of people -- by some estimates, thousands -- died in the June 4, 1989 crackdown. Beijing called the demonstrations a "counter-revolutionary riot".

Some of Pu's associates said online that he was initially questioned by police soon after the meeting.

An official from Beijing police told AFP he was unable to comment when asked about Pu's detention.

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