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Amnesty condemns 'detentions' linked to Xi letter
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 25, 2016


Chinese flags defaced in Prague ahead of president's visit
Prague (AFP) March 26, 2016 - Dozens of Chinese flags that had been hung up in the streets of Prague ahead of a landmark visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping were defaced overnight, police said on Saturday.

"Several dozen Chinese flags were splattered with a black substance overnight," police spokesman Jan Danek told AFP, saying one or two unknown vandals were involved.

The flags had been hoisted in the Czech capital in recent days, notably on the road between notably between the airport and Prague Castle, the presidential palace.

"An inquiry has been opened, and police are going to examine video surveillance cameras from the streets," he said.

The Chinese leader is expected to arrive for a two-day visit on Monday following an invitation from Czech President Milos Zeman before travelling to the United States to attend a nuclear security summit which begins on March 31.

The visit, the first by a Chinese head of state to the Czech Republic, will be focused on economic ties, and the two leaders will unveil a "strategic partnership".

But demonstrators who oppose Beijing's policy in Tibet are expected to stage several protests, including one on Tuesday evening near Prague Castle, the CTK news agency said.

Protestors are also planning to hang up near the airport a giant photo of the Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of the Tibetans alongside one of former president Vaclav Havel (1936-2011), a former dissident and human rights activist.

China has ruled Tibet since 1951, a year after invading, and considers the Himalayan region an integral part of its territory.

Beijing says it has brought economic development to Tibet and has questioned the sincerity of the Dalai Lama, who fled for India after a failed uprising in 1959. Beijing accuses the Nobel Peace Prize winner of supporting separatism and violence in the region.

Amnesty International on Friday condemned reported Chinese detentions linked to a letter calling on President Xi Jinping to resign, after a US-based dissident said his parents and brother were missing.

The reported detentions of New York-based Wen Yunchao's family members would be the latest in a widening crackdown following publication of an anonymous letter calling on Xi to step down for the good of the country.

Wen cited a relative as saying the three were "taken away" from their home in the southern province of Guangdong by government officials. Wen said his father had warned him he was suspected of distributing the letter.

Four members of staff at Wujie News, a state-backed website which carried the letter earlier this month before deleting it, have been missing since last week, a reporter at the outlet earlier told AFP.

China Researcher at Amnesty International William Nee said: "The authorities should call off the political hounding of those suspected to be behind the open letter and release all those detained in connection with it".

"The persecution of family members of dissidents is a draconian and unlawful tactic that makes a mockery of China's claims to respect the rule of law," he added.

The letter, seen by AFP in a cached form, berated Xi for centralising authority, mishandling the economy and tightening ideological controls.

Media criticism of top leaders is almost unknown in China, where the press is strictly controlled by the ruling Communist Party.

"Due to your gathering of all power into your own hands... we are now facing unprecedented problems and crises in the politics, economics, ideology, and culture," it said.

The BBC on Friday cited sources as saying a total of 20 people have been detained in connection with the document.

Wen said his father had earlier told him that officials in Guangdong believed he had "helped spread" the letter and his brother would lose his job if he did not reveal its source.

"I believe the disappearance of my parents and brother is directly connected to this," he said.

Chinese journalist Jia Jia was detained at Beijing's main airport ahead of a flight to Hong Kong last week, with rights groups linking his detention to an official probe into the letter.

Lawyer Yan Xin told AFP that Jia had been released on Friday evening, without giving details.


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Previous Report
SINO DAILY
China media staff detained after Xi 'resign' call: source
Beijing (AFP) March 24, 2016
Four staff of a Chinese media outlet that carried an anonymous letter calling on President Xi Jinping to resign have been missing for over a week, a colleague said Thursday. A letter appeared on the Wujie News website earlier this month accusing Xi of a litany of policy mistakes and asking him to step down for the good of the country, before it was deleted. Media criticism of top leaders ... read more


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