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SINO DAILY
China steps up political arrests, prosecutions: rights group
By Tom HANCOCK and Felicia SONMEZ
Beijing (AFP) Jan 8, 2015


Hong Kong student leader Wong slams authorities in court
Hong Kong (AFP) Jan 8, 2015 - The teenage face of Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement, 18-year-old Joshua Wong, slammed the authorities Thursday in a court appearance linked to mass protests which brought parts of the city to a standstill for months.

Wong was one of 29 activists at the High Court for a preliminary hearing on possible criminal contempt charges for blocking the police clearance of one of the main protest camps in November.

China has pledged that voters in Hong Kong can elect the city's next chief executive in 2017 -- the first time there has ever been a public vote. But it insists that only two or three candidates can stand and that they will be vetted by a loyalist committee, a decision that sparked protests which ended last month.

Authorities say the demonstrations were illegal and police have vowed to target the "principal instigators" in an ongoing investigation.

The activists were given the chance to address the court, with some shouting, "I want true democracy", calls that were echoed by supporters in the public gallery.

"The government is using legal procedures to suppress the Umbrella Movement," Wong said, referring to the name for the pro-democracy campaign.

"It is wasting taxpayer's money... to stop people from taking future action."

Wong is the founder of the student protest group Scholarism and became one of the most prominent voices of the pro-democracy movement during the street protests.

Another student leader, Lester Shum, 21, accused the authorities of "abusing legal proceedings".

"The court is being used as a political tool for suppression," he said.

Before the hearing, the group had gathered outside holding yellow umbrellas -- the symbol of the movement.

The justice department said in court Thursday that it would pursue criminal contempt cases against 22 of the activists who appeared, including Wong and Shum, but did not lay official charges, requesting more time to gather "documentation".

Bailiffs and police cleared the Mongkok protest camp -- scene of some of the most violent clashes during the demonstrations -- in late November leading to at least 150 arrests.

The contempt charges relate to the violation of the injunction order to clear the site.

Wong said Tuesday he had also been summoned to a police station to provide "assistance in an investigation" next week but had not been told what charges he might face.

Other activists say they too have been asked to attend police stations later this month.

The police said in a statement they would "continue to conduct a comprehensive investigation and collect evidence impartially, and do not rule out arrest action."

Hong Kong legal analyst Simon Young said it was important for the criminal justice system to respond to the protests "because of concerns with the people's perception of the rule of law".

But it should be "measured and appropriate", he said.

"These were genuine acts of civil disobedience where people were acting out of their conscience," said Young, who is associate dean for Hong Kong University's Faculty of Law.

Hong Kong was handed from Britain back to China in 1997 and enjoys freedoms not seen on the mainland.

China arrested or prosecuted more than 2,300 people for political offences in 2013, the vast majority in secret, an advocacy group reported Thursday as the ruling Communist party continues a crackdown on dissent.

A total of 2,318 people were arrested or indicted on charges of "endangering state security", the US-based Dui Hua Foundation said, citing statistics from China's central prosecution office.

Another US-based group, Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD), issued a separate report Thursday detailing the alleged torture and illegal detention of artists and activists in three Chinese cities.

The offence of "endangering state security" replaced that of "counter-revolution" in the 1990s, and is primarily aimed at suppressing political dissent, but also applies to espionage.

In recent years it has been applied to members of Tibetan and Uighur minority ethnic groups who have demanded greater civil rights or spoken out against alleged government abuses.

Dui Hua said that the names of just 31 of the suspects were made public, adding: "A lack of transparency in endangering state security cases continues to be a serious hurdle."

The majority of those whose cases were known to Dui Hua in 2013 appeared from their names to be Tibetan or Uighur, despite such groups making up a small minority of China's population.

Since Xi Jinping became China's president in 2013 the Communist party has launched one of its toughest crackdowns on political critics in decades.

The number of arrests and prosecutions for endangering state security was around three times that of a decade ago, when Xi's predecessor Hu Jintao took power, Dui Hua said.

The rise came despite authorities' increased use of non-political charges which would not count as endangering state security, such as "picking quarrels" and "running an illegal business", to prosecute dissidents.

China has also cracked down on fringe religious groups under Xi, with official statistics showing 1,554 trials in 2013 for membership or leadership of "illegal cults", a 60 percent rise year on year, Dui Hua said.

Figures for 2014 have not been released, but the year saw several high profile state security cases, including Uighur academic Ilham Tohti, who was convicted of separatism and sentenced to life in prison.

His conviction drew outrage from rights groups, who said he had been punished for his persistent moderate criticism of China's policies in the mainly Muslim far-west Uighur homeland of Xinjiang.

Chinese authorities regularly say they handle cases in accordance with the law.

- 'Torture and ill treatment' -

Separately, CHRD said in its report that four detainees -- Wang Zang, Li Biyun, Sun Desheng and You Baofen -- "have been subjected to torture and other ill treatment by police or prison guards" in recent weeks.

"Typical for such cases, authorities have refused to investigate the complaints filed by lawyers, which means that those responsible are unlikely to be brought to justice," CHRD said.

Leaders have recently promised to strengthen the rule of law "with Chinese characteristics", but critics say harsh treatment of prisoners remains common.

Last month, in a rare admission of deep-seated flaws in China's justice system, the state-run China Daily newspaper said in an editorial that "it has not been rare" for police to extract confessions through torture.

Poet Wang Zang was among 10 Beijing-based artists detained in October after arranging a small gathering in support of pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong.

Wang initially had been locked up for 15 days inside a padded room at "what appeared to be a military camp," CHRD said, adding that after five days of interrogations with no sleep, the poet "suffered a heart attack".

In the southern metropolis of Guangzhou, police "dumped" activist Li Biyun on the side of a road, hooded and with her hands tied behind her back, when they released her last month, according to the group.

Sun Desheng, a writer and activist who stood trial in November, had been subjected to beatings at a Guangzhou detention centre, CHRD said, while petitioner You Baofen was detained in a psychiatric facility since September, in violation of China's 2013 mental health law.

China sacks Nanjing city party chief amid probe
Shanghai (AFP) Jan 8, 2015 - China has removed the Communist Party chief of Nanjing city from his post for violating the law, state media said Thursday, after Beijing's corruption watchdog said it was investigating him amid allegations of corruption.

The official Xinhua news agency said Yang Weize, 52, was suspected of "serious discipline and law violations", mirroring language the ruling party's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) used when it announced Sunday that he was under investigation.

Xinhua gave no further details of Yang's alleged misdeeds, but the phrase is usually code for graft, which has become endemic in China.

Caixin magazine said the CCDI received a tip accusing him of wrongdoing while in his previous posts in Wuxi and Suzhou cities, but the report gave no details.

Yang had been Nanjing party secretary since early 2011 and has spent his entire political career in his native province of Jiangsu, of which Nanjing is the capital.

His previous positions included party secretary of Wuxi and mayor of Suzhou, as well as jobs in Jiangsu's transport department.

Caixin suggested his case was linked to Zhou Yongkang, China's powerful former security chief, who was arrested and expelled from the ruling party last month.

"During his stint in Wuxi, Yang frequently visited the hometown of Zhou Yongkang," the magazine said. "Many officials used these visits as a pretext for establishing and strengthening connections with Zhou's family in hopes of advancing their careers."

Authorities said Wednesday that Zhou's case had been sent to prosecutors. Charges against him include taking bribes and leaking state secrets.

Communist leader Xi Jinping launched a much-publicised drive against corruption after he came to power two years ago, vowing to target both high-level "tigers" and low-ranking "flies".

But analysts say China has failed to implement institutional safeguards against corruption, such as an independent judiciary and free media, leaving anti-graft campaigns subject to the influence of politics.


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SINO DAILY
China ex-security chief's graft case sent to prosecutors: govt
Beijing (AFP) Jan 7, 2015
China's powerful former security chief Zhou Yongkang moved one step closer to trial Wednesday as authorities announced his case had been sent to prosecutors, amid a much-touted anti-graft sweep. Zhou, whose arrest and expulsion from the ruling party last month sent shock waves through the Communist elite, is the highest-ranking figure to become ensnared in Chinese President Xi Jinping's camp ... read more


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