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China ups security for Panchen Lama's visit
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Aug 11, 2011

Armed police stood guard Thursday outside a Buddhist monastery in northwestern China ahead of an expected visit by the government-appointed Panchen Lama, witnesses and a rights group said.

The Panchen Lama -- the second highest Tibetan Buddhist leader -- was chosen by China in a 1995 ceremony overseen by the Communist Party, which had rejected a boy selected by the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader.

Local residents contacted by telephone said armed police occupied the streets around the Labrang Tibetan Buddhist Monastery in Gansu province, where deadly clashes broke out when monks protested Chinese rule in 2008.

The International Campaign for Tibet said Panchen Lama Gyaincain Norbu, who often extols Beijing's rule over Tibet, was expected to visit Labrang in the next few days.

"Security has been stepped up in the Labrang area... and foreigners have been told to leave due to an anticipated visit by the Chinese governments hand-picked Panchen Lama," the group said in a statement.

Labrang is one of the most important Tibetan Buddhist monasteries outside Tibet, and the ICT said Norbu would not be welcomed there.

The group said that "informed" Tibetans in the area believe Norbu's visit may lead to an extended stay, and he may visit other monasteries. Security cameras have been installed around residential parts of the monastery.

"There is no historical precedent for a Panchen Lama to be based at Labrang Monastery," the group's statement said. "Monks fear more repression."

Gansu has a large population of ethnic Tibetans, many of whom accuse the government of trying to dilute their culture.

The owner of a hotel near the monastery said the streets were empty and police were enforcing a curfew until late afternoon.

"There are armed police on every street," he told AFP over the telephone.

One local travel agent reached by phone said no trips to the monastery, a popular tourist destination, would be allowed until August 17, although another agent said that only foreign tourists were barred.

The violence at Labrang in April 2008 followed similar eruptions in Tibet's capital Lhasa that March.

Gendun Choekyi Nyima, the Panchen Lama picked by the Dalai Lama, has not been seen since 1995. He is believed to be under a form of house arrest.




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US urges China to restore writer's liberties
Beijing (AFP) Aug 11, 2011 - The United States urged China on Thursday to restore a dissident writer's freedoms a day after he was allowed to leave a detention centre on condition he limit his movements and contacts.

Blogger Ran Yunfei, 43, was sent home for six months of "residential surveillance" after his release from a detention centre in his home city of Chengdu in southwest China.

"We urge the Chinese government to completely restore Ran Yunfeis personal liberties and treat him in accordance with Chinas commitments under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights," a spokesman for the US embassy in Beijing told AFP.

The US plea comes days before US Vice President Joseph Biden visits Chengdu on August 20-21, one stop on an official visit coinciding with the arrival of incoming US Ambassador to China Gary Locke.

Ran was detained on February 20 on charges of "inciting subversion" linked to alleged involvement in online calls for Chinese citizens to join anti-government protests echoing unrest in the Middle East and North Africa.

Ran was one of dozens of writers and activists swept up in a widespread crackdown on what hardline factions in Beijing perceived as an organised threat to the lone supremacy of the ruling Communist Party.

"Since [Ran's] detention in February we have raised our due process and human rights concerns about his case directly with the Chinese government," the US embassy spokesman said in an email to AFP.

On Tuesday, Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, a prominent critic of China's Communist leaders who is widely followed in US diplomatic circles, used Twitter to plead for support for Ran and human rights activist Wang Linhong.

Wang, a 56-year-old woman, is set to go on trial in Beijing on Friday for "creating a disturbance" in March when she protested outside the trial of three fellow activists in the southern city of Fuzhou.





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SINO DAILY
Ai Weiwei hits out again at Beijing
Beijing (UPI) Aug 10, 2011
Ai Weiwei, one of the harshest critics of the Chinese government, used Twitter to hit out against the detention of two other activists. Ai, an international artist who himself was detained for 80 days before being released in June, also described the effect of detention on two people who had been held the same time he was but who are now free. In a tweet posted Tuesday, he urged ... read more


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