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Australian-Chinese man missing after
protest
REUTERS , BEIJING
Friday, Jun 04, 2010, Page 5
A Chinese-born Australian activist, who changed his name to
get round a ban on his return, has been missing for more than a day after making
a one-man protest in Shanghai, a campaign organizer said yesterday.
Zhang Xiaogang (±i¾åè), originally from China¡¦s southern province of Guangdong, is
a computer engineer who became a human rights and democracy campaigner after
1989. He now works as a taxi driver in Australia to give him more time for
activism.
He was in China as part of the ¡§Gongmin Walk 2010,¡¨ an international project to
promote human rights and civil society in China, said Yang Jianli (·¨«Ø§Q), a
fellow exile and president of Initiatives for China, which is organizing the
walk.
Zhang had hoped to reach Beijing to commemorate the 21st anniversary of the June
4 military crackdown on pro-democracy protests centre on Tiananmen Square and
petition the government on behalf of Chinese citizens forcibly evicted from
their homes.
He has been unreachable since Wednesday morning. He had videotaped a one-man
protest at the site of the Shanghai World Expo before his disappearance.
Yang wore a T-shirt saying ¡§Support the victims of the Shanghai Expo¡¨ in English
and Chinese ¡X referring to ordinary citizens forced to leave their homes to make
way for the multi-billion dollar event, and a short clip showed him walking
around the site, apparently ignored by other visitors.
¡§I think the video caused the problem. I would guess there are a lot of video
cameras around the site, I figured they would have caught him on the cameras and
followed him back to his hotel room,¡¨ said Yang, who lives in exile in Boston.
The Australian Embassy in Beijing declined immediate comment.
Zhang, who is in his mid-50s, was blocked on recent attempts to return to China,
and changed his name and got a new passport to secure his visa for this trip,
said Yang, who was himself released in 2007 after serving five years in a
Chinese prison on charges of sneaking into the country and spying for Taiwan.
Tanks rolled into Tiananmen Square before dawn on June 4, 1989 to crush weeks of
student and worker protests. Public memories have faded but the Communist Party
still fears any commemoration could challenge its continued hold on power.
Last year China blocked the Twitter microblogging service ahead of the
anniversary, and it has remained shut ever since.
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