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Chinese youths die in police custody: state media

In a survey published by the Chinese magazine "Juvenile Crime Research" last week, 47 percent of criminal suspects polled said they had suffered police brutality under questioning. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 31, 2009
Chinese prosecutors have accused police of torturing a young murder suspect to death, while two juvenile inmates have died under suspicious circumstances, state press said Tuesday.

Prosecutors in northern Shaanxi province said high school student Xu Gengrong died on March 8 after police tortured him to extract a confession over the murder of a female classmate, the China Daily reported.

China Central Television said in a report on its website that the youth's heart failed after a marathon torture session.

Meanwhile, the Beijing News said two teenagers were found dead at a juvenile detention centre in central Hunan province over a four-day period in early March.

Six police officers have been arrested over Xu's death, which has played prominently in the nation's press after repeated calls by officials and rights groups to end the alleged widespread practice of torture in China's jails.

There were calls at this month's annual session of parliament for greater protection of suspects after a Chinese prisoner was beaten to death by fellow inmates.

The United Nations Committee Against Torture last year expressed deep concern over allegations of widespread torture in China and called on the government to probe rights abuses in its prisons.

In a survey published by the Chinese magazine "Juvenile Crime Research" last week, 47 percent of criminal suspects polled said they had suffered police brutality under questioning.

The Beijing News said the parents of the two young men who died in Hunan suspected police brutality was behind their deaths, as the body of one youth had a large open wound and his wrists were black and blue.

Prison officials said the deaths occurred under "normal circumstances," the paper said, without elaborating.

In yet another incident, up to 10,000 people took to the streets in rural Jiangxi province in China's south, overturning vehicles to protest the beating death of a man by municipal security guards, the China Editor and Journalist news website reported Tuesday.

The protest took place on Monday, blocking a major highway, after the man was killed by up to 20 security guards in Pingxiang prefecture during a dispute over the demolition of his sister's home, the report said.

Local officials could not immediately be reached for comment by AFP.

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China to reopen Tibet to foreign tourists: official
Beijing (AFP) March 30, 2009
Tibet will reopen to foreign tourists on April 5, an official was quoted on Monday as saying, in a sign that authorities may ease a crackdown imposed for the anniversary of a failed Tibetan uprising.







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