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Supreme Court weighs rights for funeral-protesting church

US lawmakers press Obama on Chinese dissidents
Washington (AFP) Oct 6, 2010 - US lawmakers have urged President Barack Obama to speak up to China to ensure the safety of two prominent dissidents, one of whom is a favorite to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Thirty lawmakers asked Obama to raise the cases of writer Liu Xiaobo, thought to be in contention when the Nobel is announced Friday, and human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng, when he meets next month with Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao. "We write to ask that you urge President Hu to release two emblematic Chinese prisoners of conscience, Liu Xiaobo and Gao Zhisheng," 29 of the House members across party lines wrote in a letter released Wednesday. In a separate message, Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, pressed Obama to seek the dissidents' "unconditional release." "Your personal attention to Dr Liu and Mr Gao's detentions could be instrumental in securing their freedom," she wrote.

Obama is expected to meet his Chinese counterpart on the sidelines of the November 11-12 summit of the Group of 20 major economies in Seoul, South Korea. Liu, 54, was jailed for 11 years in December on subversion charges after co-authoring "Charter 08," a bold call for democratic reform that was signed by hundreds of Chinese after it was circulated on the Internet. China's foreign ministry last week warned that Liu was not suited for the Nobel Peace Prize as he was "sentenced to jail by Chinese judicial authorities for violating Chinese law." Gao, who has taken up some of China's most sensitive cases such as underground Christians and the Falungong spiritual movement, has gone missing twice since last year. His family has escaped to the United States. Gao's wife, Geng He, said she last spoke by telephone with him in April.

"I have absolutely no idea where he is now," Geng, who lives in California with their 17-year-old daughter and seven-year-old son, told AFP. "I'm very, very worried. I know from past experience that every time he disappears, it's usually tragic -- he is under close monitoring or suffers a lot of torture," she said. Geng said that she and her son barely recognized Gao when they saw pictures of him this year before he again vanished. In their last conversation, she said she asked Gao to see a dentist. "I told him that it looked like he had aged 20 years. His teeth looked so bad and black and I asked if he could go see a dentist," she said. Geng appealed to the United States and other nations to keep pressing on her husband's case. "Gao's life and safety can only be guaranteed if the international community keeps up the pressure on the Chinese government," she said.

In their letter, the members of Congress voiced concern that China was putting growing pressure on human rights lawyers. "We strongly believe that the United States government and international community must not allow China to continue to cross this line," the lawmakers wrote. "If lawyers are hauled away for the 'crime' of defending their clients, then even the pretense of rule of law in China has failed," they wrote. Obama has sought to broaden relations with a growing China on issues ranging from climate change to the global economy. His administration has claimed success, with China last week agreeing to resume military ties with Washington. But human rights activists have accused the administration of downplaying human rights. In a break with past practice, China did not release any dissidents when Obama paid his maiden visit to Beijing last year.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 6, 2010
The US Supreme Court Wednesday weighed whether an anti-gay religious group that pickets military funerals with signs that read "Thank God for dead soldiers" is exercising its right to free speech or invading a grieving family's privacy.

With large crowds gathered outside, the nine justices heard arguments from a lawyer for the Kansas-based Westboro Baptist Church, who said the case was about free speech, and a lawyer for the father of 20-year-old Marine Lance Corporal Matthew Snyder, who was killed in Iraq and whose funeral was picketed by members of the church.

Snyder's funeral in 2006 was a private event that was disrupted by private individuals who had "specifically targeted the Snyder family by name," argued Sean Summers, lawyer for the father of the fallen Marine.

Summers said the US Constitution's first amendment, which guarantees Americans the right to free speech, had no role to play in the case pitting the Snyder family against Westboro Baptist church, who have disrupted many funerals of US soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Westboro Baptists' lawyer, Margie Phelps, daughter of church patriarch John Phelps, argued that Snyder had intentionally turned his son's funeral into a public media event and the protesters had shown up to debate with him and others attending the funeral "on the sins of America and the wages of war."

The First Amendment protected their right to do that, she said.

Margie Phelps told reporters later that publishing an obituary turned a private figure into a public one, and their funeral into a public event.

The church to which she belongs believes that soldiers' deaths are God's punishment on the United States because the country tolerates homosexuality.

"All we wanted to do was bury Matt in a decent, civilized way," an emotional Albert Snyder told reporters on the steps of the court after the hearing.

"But the Phelpses' conduct was so extreme, it's beyond the bounds of basic human decency," he added.

Kansas Attorney General Steve Six said in a friend-of-the-court brief filed with attorneys general from 47 other states in support of the Snyders that the Phelpses had "attacked, denigrated and violated" the "solemn right of privacy in one of the most sacred traditions of human civilization."

"Mr Snyder is a private individual, he's entitled to have a funeral in a private way. The First Amendment does not allow the Westboro Church to hijack that event," Six said.

Nearly half the US Senate has also filed an amicus brief in support of Snyder, as have several veterans' organizations.

"We have to get back our common sense and common decency," said Bob Gehr, a 67-year-old army veteran who served in Korea.

"We hope Mr Snyder wins the case," he said, holding up both hands with fingers crossed.

But the church also has its supporters, many of them advocates for First Amendment rights, including top media outlets.

The Washington Post wrote in an editorial: "If Westboro's vitriol is deemed unworthy of First Amendment protection and a private citizen can sue to silence the church -- or shut it down -- then everyone's rights will be eroded."

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press filed a friend-of-the-court brief with 21 media organizations, including the New York Times and wire services calling on the justices to decide in favor of free speech.

They cited the "important constitutional ramifications for reporters" that the case could have.

The Supreme Court has very rarely limited First Amendment rights, even though most free speech cases involve "unpopular speech, offensive views," said CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin.

In a landmark case earlier this year, the justices upheld the right to free speech in a case involving videos or pictures depicting extreme acts of cruelty inflicted on animals.

But law student Matthew White and several others outside the court said the church's messages were "incitement," which is not covered by the First Amendment.

"I don't think they have to carve out an exception to the First Amendment because these can be clearly seen as fighting words and incitement," said White.

"Ruling against Phelps wouldn't require any precedent-changing decisions," he said.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule on the case in early 2011.



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