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SINO DAILY
Three "civil disobedience" activists in China subversion trial
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 23, 2015


Chinese police vanquish Spartan invasion of Beijing
Beijing (AFP) July 23, 2015 - Beijing police said Thursday they halted the march of dozens of semi-naked young foreigners dressed as Spartan warriors because the muscular contingent had disturbed public order by drawing large crowds onto the city's busiest streets.

Wearing dark capes and skimpy shorts as part of a restaurant marketing stunt, pictures of the foreigners went viral online, with some showing at least two of the performers pinned down to the ground by blue-shirted police. It was not clear whether any of them were arrested.

Chinese media reported the incident on Thursday with headlines including "Beijing police put valiant Spartan warriors under control".

Some images featured the warriors holding aloft cups of fruit and vegetables, rather than swords, with restaurant company Sweetie Salad saying in a statement it hired the "foreign models" to deliver food to customers to celebrate its first anniversary.

The number of onlookers "far exceeded our expectations" and the police handling on the spot was "timely", it said in an apologetic post on its verified account on China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo.

"We have deeply recognised that as a start-up company, we lack experience in organising large-scale offline activities," it said, adding it will "strictly follow the police's instructions" in future business operations to "ensure social order" is not affected.

"We would like to thank the police again for their guidance and maintenance of our activity," it said.

Chinese authorities are sensitive about events involving large crowds, particularly after a stampede killed 36 people on New Year's Eve in Shanghai.

Beijing police said in a Sina Weibo posting that they stopped the show because it had "received reports from the public saying there were dozens of foreign males wearing shorts and attracting a crowd... (this) affected the order in the surrounding areas".

Officers had "put some people under control" and police were working on the case, they said without elaborating.

Three Chinese activists who allegedly attempted to start a non-violent civil rights movement stood trial on Thursday, a relative told AFP, as the ruling Communist party continues a crackdown on dissent.

Tang Jingling, Wang Qingying and Yuan Xinting each face possible 15 year jail sentences for "inciting subversion of state power," their lawyers have said.

Police recommended the trio be prosecuted for having "participated in the non-violent Citizen non-cooperation Movement," according to a statement posted online by their lawyers.

Their trial began on Wednesday in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, Tang's wife Wang Yanfang told AFP in a brief text message.

China's ruling Communist party has for decades jailed activists seen as a threat to its rule, with dozens imprisoned since President Xi Jinping took office two years ago.

The Communist party controls the country's courts and the three men are almost certain to be found guilty and jailed.

Hong Kong media said there was a heavy state security presence outside the courthouse, adding that police detained several activists who turned out to support the trio.

The three distributed books about non-violent resistance and "wilfully incited the subversion of state power and the overthrow of the socialist system," police said in their statement to prosecutors.

They added that the activists had rented an office to study, print, and mail several books including one titled "On Strategic Nonviolent Conflict: Thinking about the Fundamentals".

The three are also accused of disseminating "From Dictatorship to Democracy," by Gene Sharp, an expert on non-violent social movements.

The books "have been confirmed to have serious political transgressions," police added in their statement.

China's state security have detained or called in for questioning more than 200 human rights lawyers and activists this month, in what analysts have called one of the biggest crackdowns on dissent in years.

Tang, 44, was himself a prominent human rights lawyer who had aided farmers attempting to take local officials accused of illegal land seizures to court.

He announced the founding of a small-scale "Non-violent Civil Disobedience Movement" in 2006, according to US-based group Human Rights in China.


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