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Dissidents say China relatives released in letter probe
By Tom HANCOCK
Beijing (AFP) March 30, 2016


New Hong Kong independence party slammed by Chinese media
Beijing (AFP) March 30, 2016 - Young Hong Kongers who set up a party calling for independence from the mainland were labelled "political hooligans" by Chinese media on Wednesday, which questioned the legality of their ideas.

The Hong Kong National Party, made up of around 30-50 university students and young professionals, launched on Monday in a bid to tap into residents' "fervent longing for independence".

"Independence is the only path of survival for Hong Kong," party convener Chan Ho-tin, in his 20s, told reporters.

There have been growing calls for independence from the mainland from Hong Kong's youth, over fears Beijing is seeking to curb freedoms in the city.

But a scathing piece in China's Global Times, which is close to the mainland's ruling Communist Party, dismissed the new party as troublemakers.

"Hong Kong independence is a fake proposition without any possibility of realisation," it said on Wednesday.

"We hope Hong Kong's mainstream society is strong and mature enough to handle these political hooligans."

The piece also raised questions over whether advocating independence should be protected by freedom of speech.

"In the legal circle, the consensus is that turning illegal ideas into action is not related to freedom of speech and therefore should result in legal consequences," it said.

Hong Kong's freedoms are protected by a 50-year agreement signed when Britain handed the city back to China in 1997, but there are fears those freedoms are dying.

Fears have been fuelled by the disappearance of five Hong Kong booksellers, known for salacious titles critical of Beijing, who later turned up on the mainland.

Four of the men are now under criminal investigation in China and the fifth is flitting between Hong Kong and the mainland, where he says he is "assisting" with the investigation.

Critics have dismissed his release as "freedom with Chinese characteristics".

The booksellers' case is the latest in a string of troubling incidents, including attacks on journalists and accusations Beijing is interfering in the city's politics and education.

Those, and the failure of mass protests in 2014 to win political concessions from Beijing, have led to the rise of "localism" dominated by young activists who want more autonomy and say they are willing to take radical steps.

Localists were part of street battles with police in February and have also been making inroads into mainstream politics -- one localist leader took tens of thousands of votes in a parliamentary by-election last month.

Two overseas dissidents said on Wednesday that Chinese police had released family members they claimed were detained as part of an official probe into a letter calling on President Xi Jinping to resign.

Germany-based writer Chang Ping (pictured) and New York-based activist Wen Yunchao said their relatives had been held in connection to the anonymous missive that appeared online earlier this month.

Chang told AFP that his father and two brothers had been released on bail, but their activities were still restricted.

Police said they were bailed on Tuesday.

Wen told AFP that his father, mother and brother had been released after being held in Guangzhou in southern Guangdong province.

The three were not charged with any crime and security officials accompanied them to tourist sites during their detention, he added.

"I think my family's release is related to Xi Jinping's visit to the US," he said, referring to the Chinese President's participation in a Washington summit this week.

Wen earlier claimed that his father warned before his detention that officials in Guangdong believed the exiled activist had "helped spread" the letter.

Germany-based journalist Chang Ping said at the weekend that police in the southwestern province of Sichuan detained his family to pressure him to retract an article he wrote for German media.

The article accused Chinese police of holding journalist Jia Jia in connection with the anonymous letter.

Jia's detention was condemned by rights groups. He was released on Friday.

The anonymous 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 unheard of in China, where the press is strictly controlled by the ruling Communist Party.

- Multiple detentions -

Chinese authorities have detained several people in what appears to be a reaction to the letter, which was attributed to "Loyal Communist Party Members".

It appeared on Wujie News, a state-backed website on the opening day of a high-profile political conclave, before it was deleted.

Those held include at lest four staff members at Wujie, who went missing around two weeks ago, a source at the outlet told AFP.

The BBC reported last week that a total of 20 people had been held in the probe.

Police in Sichuan province said Chang's three relatives had been held for suspected arson, and released a letter by Chang's brother Zhang Wei to state media in which he denied being held for political reasons.

Zhang's letter called on Chang "not to make these kinds of false statements which are even attacks on relevant departments and staff," according to the state-run Sichuan Online website.

It added three were held for accidentally burning woodland while making traditional graveside offerings to relatives, the report added. AFP could not confirm the origins of the letter.

A woman surnamed Tang at the Forestry Police bureau of Xichong county, where Chang's family members were held, told AFP: "They have carried out bail procedures and all three left public security at 2pm yesterday."

The fire was still under investigation, she added.

Chang said in an email to AFP that his father's and brothers' bail release meant they were "still marked as criminals".

He added: "They exist under the control and threat of the police, and they still do not enjoy freedom of expression because of fear".


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Previous Report
SINO DAILY
China 'rounds up overseas dissidents' relatives' over letter
Beijing (AFP) March 28, 2016
Chinese authorities have detained the relatives of several dissidents living abroad, they said, as part of a widening crackdown following the publication of a letter critical of President Xi Jinping. Germany-based journalist Chang Ping said local authorities in the southwestern province of Sichuan had detained his two younger brothers and a younger sister in connection with suspicions that h ... read more


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