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SINO DAILY
China detains 'rumour-monger' over riots
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) June 16, 2011

Police in southern China have announced they have detained a person suspected of spreading rumours on the Internet that triggered violent clashes and a major security clampdown.

The three-day riots in Guangdong province, China's industrial heartland, last week were the latest in a line of flare-ups in the country, which analysts say highlight resentment towards an unresponsive government.

The public security bureau in Guangzhou city announced on their official page on Weibo, China's equivalent of Twitter, that the suspect surnamed Chen was detained Tuesday and had confessed to publishing false information online.

The clashes in Xintang, a district in the greater Guangzhou area, began last Friday after rumours spread that police had beaten a street hawker to death and manhandled his pregnant wife.

Authorities were forced to deploy hundreds of officers and armoured vehicles as the protests continued into the weekend, with people hurling bricks and bottles at local officials and police, and vandalising ATMs and police posts.

Armed police reportedly used tear gas to disperse the crowd, and at least 25 people have been arrested so far.

"It was very scary -- the scariest thing I have encountered since I was born," Chao, the 27-year-old owner of a denim shop in Xintang, told an AFP reporter on Wednesday.

Chao said that at one point, there were a "few thousand rioters" facing off against a massive police force, adding: "They burnt down one of the buildings."

"Together they flipped police cars and set them on fire. A few hundred policemen then came. They started beating people indiscriminately with metal batons," he said, declining to give his full name.

The man rumoured to have been killed was presented at a press conference by authorities spooked by the scale of the protests. The man told reporters on Sunday that he, his wife and their unborn baby girl were "doing very well".

"The false information spread on Weibo, QQ (China's popular instant messaging service) and online forums had a nasty influence on society," the police said late Wednesday.

Residents told AFP by phone on Thursday that the streets of Xintang were calm, although armed police were still carrying out patrols.

The Guangzhou riots followed hot on the heels of a mass protest in the central province of Hubei last Thursday, when 1,500 people clashed with riot squads following the alleged death in police custody of a local legislator.

Earlier last week, hundreds of people battled police and destroyed cars in another incident in Guangdong, after a factory worker was wounded in a knife attack over a wage dispute.

And late last month, thousands of ethnic Mongols protested in northern China for several days after the killing of a herder laid bare simmering anger over what some perceive as Chinese oppression.

The protests have compounded the jitters of a government already wary about the potential for Arab-style unrest to spread to China, and for rising inflation to spark more violence.




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EU urged to press China in rights dialogue
Beijing (AFP) June 16, 2011 - China and the European Union on Thursday opened their regular dialogue on human rights amid a nationwide clampdown on dissent, with activists calling on the EU to be firm with Beijing.

The one-day session is the first in a year after China -- furious over the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize last year to jailed dissident Liu Xiaobo -- cancelled a human rights meeting planned for December 2010.

The dialogue, which normally takes place twice a year, is an opportunity for EU officials to convey to Beijing their thoughts on the rights situation in China, and to raise individual cases.

The Chinese government, wary of the possibility of protests similar to those that have swept the Arab world since the start of the year, is in the midst of a serious clampdown on dissent, with scores of lawyers and activists detained.

Among the high-profile cases of interest to Europe is the fate of prominent artist-activist Ai Weiwei, whose whereabouts remain unknown since he was taken away in April on suspicion of economic crimes.

Other hot-button cases are that of Liu's wife Liu Xia, who has been under house arrest for months, and veteran activists Ran Yunfei, Ding Mao and Chen Wei, who have been charged with "inciting subversion of state power."

China is represented in the talks by officials from the foreign affairs and public security ministries, and the State Ethnic Affairs Commission, according to a European diplomat involved in preparations for the discussions.

It is expected to raise what it sees as rights violations by Europe, such as civilian deaths in air strikes in Libya, the drowning of North African refugees in the Mediterranean, and the deportation of Roma gypsies from France.

The US-based Human Rights Watch urged the European Union "to take immediate steps to transform the dialogue into an instrument for progress," calling the current crackdown the "most intense" in a generation.

"It should establish benchmarks, such as releasing individual political prisoners, and providing the whereabouts and condition of everyone who has been disappeared since mid-February," the group said in a statement.

"If such easily verifiable benchmarks are not met, the EU should explain publicly the reasons for not proceeding with the next round."

HRW added that if the EU did not press for specific results, "it will effectively mean that it has surrendered to Chinese government efforts to limit international public scrutiny and discussions about its human rights record."





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SINO DAILY
Faced with unrest, wary China flexes muscle
Beijing (AFP) June 15, 2011
China has put on a display of force to quell recent violent bouts of unrest - events that analysts say highlight resentment towards an unresponsive government grappling with economic and social strife. Protests against local authorities have erupted over everything from social injustices to ethnic tensions, compounding the jitters of a stability-obsessed government already wary about inflat ... read more


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