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China's Ai Weiwei loses appeal against tax fine
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 20, 2012



Chinese artist and fierce government critic Ai Weiwei said Friday his challenge against a $2.4 million fine for alleged tax evasion that he says is politically motivated had failed.

Ai, who spent 81 days in secret detention last year as police rounded up dissidents amid online calls for Arab Spring-style protests in China, was barred from attending the Beijing Chaoyang court as the ruling was delivered.

Speaking at his studio in Beijing after receiving the news from his lawyer, the outspoken 54-year-old told reporters he was "very disappointed" by Friday's ruling -- which had been widely expected -- and would appeal it.

"China keeps telling other countries they are a rule of law country... But we only hope they implement the laws they themselves drew up," he said.

Ai, an internationally acclaimed artist whose works have been exhibited around the world, has accused China's Communist regime of seeking to "crush" him for his social activism.

On his release from detention last year he was accused of tax evasion linked to Fake Cultural Development, a company that he founded but which is now registered in his wife's name.

Last November the Beijing tax bureau issued a bill for 15 million yuan ($2.4 million) in alleged back taxes and penalties against the company, prompting an outpouring of public support for Ai.

Supporters came from far and wide to help him raise the $1.3 million he needed as a bond to challenge the charge, with some even throwing money over the walls into his courtyard home, including banknotes folded into paper planes.

At a June 20 hearing, lawyers for Fake argued that the Beijing tax bureau had acted illegally in fining the company.

But on Friday Ai said the court had "completely rejected" the challenge, and that he did not expect future legal efforts to succeed.

"This is not an independent legal system, so the result will definitely be that we will lose," said Ai. "Their whole accusation has no basis, there are so many violations of procedure and their calculation is all based on no facts."

The court on Friday morning rejected lawyers' requests to see evidence against the company, produce witnesses and have an independent auditor verify figures, said lawyer Pu Zhiqiang, calling the decisions inappropriate.

The legal team planned to sue the court for acting improperly and would also appeal the decision, he said.

"This is not only for this company. It's also for all the taxpayers and for others who might be punished," he said.

Ai was barred from attending last month's hearing due to a year-long bail period during which his movements were severely limited and police were permanently stationed outside his home.

The bail conditions expired last month, but he has been told he is still not allowed to exit the country -- leaving him unable to see his own exhibitions overseas.

On Friday police were stationed outside his home in Beijing and there was a heavy police presence outside the court, underscoring the sensitivity of the case. An AFP journalist was ordered to leave the area.

Before his detention the burly artist travelled extensively, holding exhibitions of his installations, sculptures and photographs in many countries around the world.

The value of his work has shot up since his detention thrust him into the global spotlight, and in October Britain's influential Art Review magazine named him the most powerful figure in the art world.

His latest high-profile piece of work is a pavilion for this year's London Olympics that he helped build with Swiss firm Herzog & de Meuron, with which he had previously collaborated to create Beijing's Bird's Nest Stadium.

Ai contributed to the design of the pavilion at London's Serpentine Gallery, reportedly using Skype to coordinate with the company as he was unable to leave Beijing.

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China steps up fight against Tibetan separatism
Beijing (AFP) July 22, 2012 - China's propaganda chief has ordered officials to intensify the fight against separatism in Tibet, a report said Sunday, following a series of self-immolations in protest at Beijing's rule.

Li Changchun, ranked fifth in the hierarchy of the ruling Communist Party, called for the campaign during an inspection tour of Lhasa, where he visited the Jokhang Temple, the centre of Tibetan Buddhism, the People's Daily reported.

"The lifeblood of Tibet rests in ethnic unity, social harmony and stability," the paper quoted Li as saying during his visit to the Himalayan region last week.

"We must guide officials and the people to continually strengthen their understanding of the great (Chinese) motherland and people and deepen and expand the fight against separatism."

Li, China's top propaganda official, also urged an education campaign to "underscore the historic fact that Tibet is an inseparable part of China", and which should form "the ideological basis for the fight against separatism and the maintenance of stability".

During his trip, Li also visited the Potala Palace, once the home to the Dalai Lama, Tibetan Buddhism's highest spiritual leader who fled Tibet following a failed uprising in 1959.

Li's comments come after a teenage Tibetan Buddhist monk self-immolated in a Tibetan-inhabited region of neighbouring southwest China last week, the 42nd Tibetan to set fire to themselves in recent months.

The 18-year old monk, identified as Lobsang Lozin, set himself alight in Bharkham county in Sichuan province, which borders Tibet, as he marched towards a government office, the India-based Central Tibetan Administration said in a statement.

The monk died on the spot, the statement said.

Tibetans have long chafed under China's rule over the vast Himalayan plateau, saying that Beijing has curbed religious freedoms and their culture is being eroded by an influx of Han Chinese, the country's main ethnic group.

Beijing, however, says Tibetans enjoy religious freedom and have benefited from improved living standards brought on by China's economic expansion.

On May 27 two men set themselves on fire in front of the Jokhang Temple, the renowned centre for Buddhist pilgrimage, in the first such incident to occur in Lhasa.

Lhasa was the scene of violent anti-Chinese government protests in 2008, which later spread to other areas inhabited by Tibetans, and authorities have kept the city under tight security ever since.



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SINO DAILY
Teenage Tibetan monk 'self-immolates' in China
Beijing (AFP) July 17, 2012
A teenage Tibetan Buddhist monk set himself on fire in southwest China Tuesday, the exiled Tibetan government said, the latest in a series of self-immolation protests against Chinese rule. The 18-year old monk, identified as Lobsang Lozin, set himself alight in Bharkham county in Sichuan province as he marched towards a government office, the India-based Central Tibetan Administration said i ... read more


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