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Police warn China activist against speaking out
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 17, 2011


Chinese police have warned prominent government critic Hu Jia that he will be detained again if he continues his activism and speaks to foreign media, human rights defenders said Monday.

Hu, one of China's leading rights campaigners, was released from prison in June after completing a more than three-year sentence for subversion.

Police told Hu on Friday that he would be placed under "administrative detention" if he violated "any of the terms of his deprivation of political rights", Hong Kong-based Chinese Human Rights Defenders said in a statement.

Administrative detention allows police to hold anybody without trial or charge for a certain period and is typically used against people considered threats to social order, often activists.

Despite official efforts to muzzle him, the 38-year-old has vowed to continue his activism and has been campaigning for the release of other dissidents.

Last month, Hu publicly criticised proposed changes to Chinese law that would make it legal to detain suspects for up to six months, without charge, in secret locations away from police stations and official prisons.

Although not officially legal, so-called "disappearances" have become a popular method of silencing dissidents in a crackdown that began in February, when calls for Arab-style protests began appearing on Chinese websites.

Hu has also joined a growing online campaign to free blind activist Chen Guangcheng, who has been under house arrest in eastern China since completing a jail term of more than four years in September 2010.

Hu has posted photos of himself on his Twitter account wearing black sunglasses and a white T-shirt with an image of Chen and the words "Free Chen Guangcheng".

Police also told Hu on Friday that he was barred from travelling to Shandong province to visit Chen nor was he allowed to visit Liu Xia, the wife of jailed dissident Liu Xiaobo, who won the Nobel Peace Price in 2010.

Rights groups say the government has placed Liu Xia under house arrest without charge since her husband won the award.

Hu told AFP last month that despite an official ban on him expressing "opinions publicly" after his release from prison, he was determined to speak out.

"I told the police clearly -- I won't be restricted on issues concerning citizens' rights and benefits as well as freedom," Hu said.

"In this country the government is the one that violates human rights, police officers are performing tasks that violate human rights... so I must express my resistance in public, express my condemnation."

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S.African court challenge over Dalai Lama visa drama
Cape Town (AFP) Oct 17, 2011 - Two South African opposition parties on Monday lodged a court challenge against the government's handling of a failed visa bid by the Dalai Lama to attend Desmond Tutu's 80th birthday celebrations.

The Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) and the Congress of the People (Cope) filed papers in the Cape High Court to "challenge the legality and constitutionality of government's conduct which led to the effective denial of an entry visa".

"There must be redress. Injustice of this type cannot be allowed to stand and must be reversed through the courts," the parties said in a joint statement.

The Dalai Lama called off his trip days ahead of Tutu's birthday earlier this month, saying he had received no news about his visa, two years after South Africa denied him a visa over fears of jeopardising ties with China.

The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader was meant to deliver an inaugural peace lecture in Cape Town to wrap up a three-day birthday celebration for Tutu who is a fellow Nobel Peace Price laureate and close friend.

The government's refusal to announce if it would grant or deny a visa dominated local headlines and sparked a fiery attack by Tutu that Pretoria was kowtowing to please China which is a key trade partner.

China regards the Dalai Lama as a "splittist" and frowns on his overseas travel.

"In the end, government refused to make a decision in fear of having the courage of its own convictions. If the Government wanted to deny a visa and declare the Dalai Lama undesirable, it has the statutory authority to do so," said the two parties.

"However, under the rule of law and in a democratic and civilized country, the government does not have the liberty of circumventing the law by just not deciding."

IFP leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi has invited the Dalai Lama to attend a prayer breakfast next March, the statement added.

In polls two years ago, the two parties won a combined total of just under 12 percent of the 400 seats in the National Assembly which is dominated by the ruling African National Congress who won just under 66 percent.

The court hearing is scheduled for November 22.



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Beijing (AFP) Oct 17, 2011
A packed tourist bus overturned in a rural area of south-central China, killing 10 people and injuring 33, state media reported early Monday. The accident occurred on Sunday afternoon near a village in Yongshun County in Hunan province when the bus carrying almost 50 passengers overturned, the Xinhua report said, citing the county government. Thirty-three passengers were injured and take ... read more


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