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China rights lawyer trial held behind closed doors
By Eva XIAO, Pak YIU
Tianjin, China (AFP) Dec 26, 2018

China arrests Marxist student leader for celebrating Mao's birthday
Beijing (AFP) Dec 26, 2018 - Chinese police detained a well-known Marxist student activist at a top university on Wednesday, a witness said, for attempting to commemorate the 125th birth anniversary of Mao Zedong, whose legacy in China remains controversial.

A student eyewitness told AFP that Qiu Zhanxuan, the head of Peking University's Marxist society, was forced into a black car by seven or eight plain-clothes officers near the subway station outside the university's east gate.

Qiu was "screaming and resisting arrest", the student said, declining to be named due to the sensitive nature of the issue. "I heard him say I am Qiu Zhanxuan... I did not break the law. Why are you taking me away? What are you doing?"

The eyewitness said police showed their "public security department documents", when questioned by onlookers.

Peking University and the Ministry of Public Security did not respond to requests for comment.

Considered China's most prestigious university, Peking University has a history of student activism with its alumni playing a key role in the pro-democracy Tiananmen protests in 1989.

But campus activism has been quashed under President Xi Jinping.

In August, a police raid swept up student activists at several universities, beating some of them and confiscating their phones for supporting a labour rights movement.

The Jasic Workers Solidarity group rose to prominence this summer when student activists backed its efforts to form a workers' union at Jasic Technology, a welding machinery company in southern Guangdong province.

In April, Peking University faculty tried to silence another student, Yue Xin, who co-authored a petition demanding details of a sexual abuse case at the school.

"I believe it's ridiculous. Is there anything wrong with commemorating Mao?" the eyewitness, also a member of the campus Marxist society, said.

"The faculty has always prevented activities by the Marxist society... It's difficult to spread information, posts on online campus bulletin boards would be deleted and WeChat (messaging) accounts would be blocked... Information about the arrest was strictly blocked by the school."

The Communist party in recent years has tried to distance itself from the legacy of Mao. Once hailed as China's "great helmsman", there were no official events to mark his 125th birth anniversary Wednesday.

Despite Qiu's arrest, Marxist students from across Beijing gathered at an undisclosed location to organise a "flash-mob style event" Wednesday afternoon, a labour rights NGO worker in close contact with Marxist student groups told AFP.

Another group of students, who travelled to Mao's home village Shaoshan in central China's Hunan province, posted a video of them singing revolutionary songs on social media.

The trial of a prominent Chinese human rights lawyer took place Wednesday but was closed to the public because of "state secrets", a northern Chinese court said.

Wang Quanzhang, 42, who defended political activists and victims of land seizures, disappeared in a 2015 sweep -- known as the "709" crackdown -- aimed at courtroom critics of Communist authorities.

Charged in January 2016 with alleged "subversion of state power", Wang had been in legal limbo -- detained without a trial date -- until Monday, when his government-appointed lawyer finally contacted his wife with the court date.

"The defendant... was tried in the first instance of the Tianjin Second Intermediate People's Court today," the court said in a statement.

"Due to the state secrets involved, the court decided not to open the trial to the public. The verdict in this case will be pronounced at a later date."

The closed-door proceedings were conducted in a heavily-guarded courthouse in the northern city of Tianjin, with Wang's wife prevented from attending the session and at least two activists detained for protesting outside the building.

Wang's wife, Li Wenzu, was on Tuesday placed under de facto house arrest with "more than 20" security personnel outside her apartment.

In an account posted on Twitter early Wednesday morning, a supporter Wang Qiaoling detailed how she and Li were barred from leaving a Beijing housing compound by groups of police officers for over an hour.

- 'Another potential enemy' -

"The authorities in cases like these see the defendant as their enemy and anyone close to them as either a potential tool to be manipulated... or as another potential enemy to be controlled," Eva Pils, a professor specialising in human rights law at King's College London, told AFP.

"Placing Li Wenzu under house arrest would fall in that category."

Just before 10:00 am (0200 GMT), AFP journalists witnessed Heilongjiang activist Yang Chunlin getting arrested after he protested outside the court in Tianjin, describing the situation as "fascist rule" and "absurd".

Several plainclothes officers set on Yang and bundled him into a waiting black SUV.

Witnesses told AFP that Zhang Zhecheng, a rights activist from central China, had been taken away at about 8:15 am after holding up a sign calling for Wang's release.

Wang is charged with being influenced by "infiltrating anti-China forces", of being trained by a foreign group and accepting their funding, and of having subversive thoughts as a result.

The documents seen by AFP say he worked with Peter Dahlin, a Swedish human rights activist whose group offered training to lawyers who have tried to use the tightly controlled Chinese judiciary to redress apparent government abuses.

Dahlin was deported in 2016 after a 23-day detention.

Wang is also accused of hyping up and distorting facts in cases he worked on, including a "cult" he was defending.

- 'Stay quiet' -

In Hong Kong, about 50 people marched to China's liaison office on Wednesday, demanding the release of Wang and others detained during the 709 crackdown.

The sweep has dealt a blow to China's human rights defence movement, with most lawyers either jailed, disbarred or under heavy surveillance, making it impossible for them to work, said Human Rights Watch China researcher Yaqiu Wang.

"The Chinese government, paranoiacally, sees grassroots Chinese activists and organisations working with foreign non-government organisations as attempts to foment a 'colour revolution' to challenge the Communist Party's grip on power," she said.

Li and three others last week shaved their heads in protest of Wang's indefinite detention and tried to submit a petition to the courts but were prevented from doing so by the police.

"Family members of detained activists are often warned to 'stay quiet' to avoid their loved ones getting harsher sentences," said Doriane Lau, China researcher at Amnesty International.

"In the hope of getting the activist out earlier by succumbing to the threats of the authorities, family members and friends avoid bringing the case to journalists or calling for support on social media."


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SINO DAILY
Germany backs Canada over citizens held in China
Berlin (AFP) Dec 23, 2018
Germany expressed serious concern Sunday about the detention of Canadian nationals in China, a day after Ottawa called on allies for support in securing their release. The German foreign ministry said it was closely following the cases of former diplomat Michael Kovrig and consultant Michael Spavor. "We are deeply concerned that political motives could have played a role in the detentions of the two Canadian citizens in China," a ministry spokesman said in a statement. "We call for the cases ... read more

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