20100427 China stepped up repression of dissidents last year
Prev Up Next

¡@

¡@

China stepped up repression of dissidents last year

AFP AND AP, BEIJING
Tuesday, Apr 27, 2010, Page 1


Human rights activists in China faced an increase in government pressure last year, a rights group said in its annual report released yesterday.

The Chinese Human Rights Defenders, a loose-knit group organized through the Internet, said more rights campaigners were detained or questioned in China last year than in recent years.

¡§Two-thousand nine stands out as a particularly repressive year in terms of the Chinese government¡¦s aggressive tactics against human rights activists,¡¨ Renee Xia (®L¿@), the group¡¦s international director, said in a statement. ¡§One only needs to look at the long list of imprisoned human rights defenders ... who paid heavy tolls for their fight against injustice in the past year.¡¨

The group cited the jailing of veteran dissident and writer Liu Xiaobo (¼B¾åªi), 54, in December for 11 years for his role in co-­authoring a bold manifesto calling for political reform in China.

The jailing of leading activists Tan Zuoren (ÃÓ§@¤H) and Huang Qi (¶Àµa) after they conducted independent investigations into school collapses in the massive 2008 Sichuan earthquake also revealed a government eager to crackdown on dissent, it said.

Besides jailing dissidents, the Chinese government last year also clamped down on non-­governmental organizations, human rights lawyers, online citizen journalists and petitioners, the report said.

¡§Chinese civil society is facing a serious attack ... More human rights defenders were detained, summoned by police for questioning, or subjected to ¡¥soft detention¡¦ in 2009 than in recent years,¡¨ the group said.

Meanwhile, a Tibetan writer who had signed an open letter critical of the Chinese government¡¦s quake relief efforts in ­Qinghui Province has been detained by police, a family friend said.

The writer, who publishes under the name Zhogs Dung, but whose real name is Tagyal, was among eight authors and intellectuals who signed a letter dated April 17 that expressed sorrow for the disaster that left more than 2,000 people dead ¡X most of them ­Tibetan ¡X but also urged wariness of Chinese government relief efforts.

On Friday, a half dozen police officers showed up at the Qinghai Nationalities Publishing House, where Tagyal worked, and escorted him away, a blog post written by a friend said.

They searched his home and library, confiscating his computers.

Afterward, they showed his arrest warrant to his wife, and asked her to bring bedding for him.

¡@

 Prev Next