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Detained China human rights lawyer 'confesses': state media
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 19, 2015


Family of deceased Tibetan monk detained: rights group, media
Beijing (AFP) July 17, 2015 - Police detained two family members of a deceased Tibetan monk on Friday, a rights group and media said, one day after his body was cremated in prison against his family's wishes.

Tenzin Delek Rinpoche's sister and her daughter were taken away by police at 8:00 am local time (0000 GMT) in the southwestern city of Chengdu, Students for a Free Tibet (SFT) said, citing Geshe Nyima, Delek's student and cousin.

The police were from Lithang, or Litang in Chinese, Delek's hometown, SFT said.

The US-funded Radio Free Asia (RFA), citing Tibetan sources, also reported that the pair, whom RFA identified as 55-year-old Dolkar Lhamo and her daughter Nyima Lhamo, were detained on Friday.

When contacted by AFP, a woman who declined to give her name at the Lithang police station said she was not aware of the case.

Chinese security forces had also briefly detained two of the monk's sisters for not signing his health record earlier this week, rights groups said.

Delek, 65, was 13 years into a life sentence for terrorism and separatism, imposed following a trial observers said was deeply flawed, when authorities announced news of his death at the weekend.

Rights groups said the circumstances of his death remained unclear.

He was convicted of separatism and involvement in a bombing in a public square, but his supporters insisted he was innocent.

Several protests in Delek's hometown and in the southwestern city of Chengdu, where he was jailed, have taken place since his death was announced, according to the US-based International Campaign for Tibet (ICT) and other Tibetan rights groups.

Police opened fire when around 1,000 people gathered near government offices in Nyagchuka county this week to protest the death, injuring about 20 people, the British-based Free Tibet group said.

Access to Tibetan regions is tightly controlled by the Chinese government and local media is barred from reporting issues the government deems sensitive.

China, which has ruled Tibet since 1951, has been accused of trying to wipe out its Buddhist-based culture through political and religious repression and large-scale immigration by Han Chinese, the country's ethnic majority.

China says Tibetans enjoy extensive freedoms and that it has brought economic growth to the region.

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama fled Tibet after an abortive uprising in 1959 and established his government-in-exile in Dharamsala, India.

A prominent Chinese human rights lawyer has "confessed guilt" a week after being detained in a massive crackdown on legal activists, China's state-run media said.

Zhou Shifeng is one of more than 130 lawyers detained or called for questioning by Chinese state-security this month, according to tallies by rights groups.

The lawyer provided legal aid to families of children poisoned by milk powder from a powerful dairy firm, and this year defended an 81-year-old writer detained for criticising the ruling Communist party.

Zhou has reportedly not been able to meet with a family-appointed defence attorney. But the official Xinhua news agency said late Saturday that he "admitted guilt," and pleaded for a "second chance."

"Some things about my actions at the law firm were illegal... my mistakes were serious," the report cited Zhou as saying, apparently while in police custody.

Xinhua said that nine other lawyers connected to Zhou's law firm had been detained on criminal charges, along with several associates.

The detained lawyers "gave interviews to foreign media, spreading opinions attacking the party and the government, slandering the legal system and other such negative views," Xinhua added.

Those detained include female lawyer Wang Yu, known for defending poverty-stricken victims of forced demolition, sexual assault, illegal detention and other abuses.

In an apparent effort to put pressure on Wang's family, her 16-year-old son has been questioned several times this week by police in the city of Tianjin, a family friend told AFP.

Police are stationed outside Wang's parent's apartment in the city, and "follow the family whenever they go out," said the friend who asked not to be named for fear of reprisal.

China's courts have a near-100 percent conviction rate. State-run media said last year that police using torture to extract confessions was "not rare" in the country.

The ruling party says it hopes to promote "rule of law," and a growing number of lawyers over the past decade attempted to expose official abuses using the courts.

But President Xi Jinping has stressed the party's ultimate authority over the legal system, and limits on activism have tightened.

Chinese rights lawyers previously faced physical attacks, house arrest and prison sentences, but analysts see the latest crackdown as the heaviest yet.

More than 200 legal activists have been targeted by police since July 9, according to Britain-based Amnesty International.

Those detained include 130 lawyers, according to tallies by activists in China.

Zhou's family has appointed lawyer Yang Jinzhu to act as a defence attorney, but police have not allowed him to meet with his client, the Hong Kong-based advocacy group Rights Defense Network reported.

China's state media frequently reports "confessions," from criminal suspects who are still detained without access to lawyers, a practice decried as a violation of legal procedure.


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