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Tibetans arrested outside Chinese president's hotel
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) March 30, 2012


New Delhi police detained another five Tibetan demonstrators on Friday outside the hotel of Chinese President Hu Jintao amid a raging debate over this week's crackdown on the exile population.

Hundreds of Tibetans have been rounded up by security forces in the Indian capital and placed in preventative detention in a heavy-handed police operation criticised by community leaders for its severity.

Tibetan areas have been flooded with police, with many locals confined to their homes, while demonstrations have been prohibited in areas near the Chinese president.

People of Nepalese origin and from India's far north-east have also complained they have been harassed by police because of their "Tibetan features" in apparent racial profiling.

"We are refugees but we enjoy every right to protest. The Delhi police is stopping every Tibetan who wants to stand up against the Chinese injustice," said Tenzing Norbu at the India-Tibet coordination centre in New Delhi.

"India has bilateral ties with China and we respect their diplomatic relations but India cannot impose unjust laws on Tibetans."

In the demonstration on Friday, five protestors with messages such as "Tibet Will be Free" daubed on their chests were bundled into nearby police vehicles at the luxury hotel where Hu has been staying since Wednesday.

Sujit Datta, a professor at the Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi who specialises in India-China relations, said the government should have engaged with Tibetan leaders beforehand rather than simply resorting to repression.

"The Indian government has mismanaged the Tibetan protest through ham-handed and inconsistent measures. They have showed no sensitivity towards the protestors," he said.

"The Tibetans are frustrated and the Indian government should recognise this."

Earlier in the week, a 27-year-old Tibetan exile set himself on fire in a demonstration against alleged Chinese abuses and the lack of religious freedom in Tibet. He later died after suffering more than 90 percent burns.

Hu left New Delhi early Friday after attending the fourth summit of the BRICS bloc of emerging nations which brings together China, Russia, India, Brazil and South Africa.

The presence of tens of thousands of Tibetans in India, as well as exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, is an irritant in the often prickly bilateral relations between India and China.

Activists and the Tibetan government in exile in the Indian hillstation of Dharamshala help highlight alleged human rights abuses in Tibet where media access is tightly restricted.

Chinese officials on Thursday blamed the Dalai Lama for the death of the Tibetan protester this week and said they "appreciated" the Indian government's actions to prevent disruption to the summit.

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Chinese journalist jailed after Bo criticism: group
Beijing (AFP) March 30, 2012 - A Chinese journalist was jailed in 2010 after criticising a prominent anti-gang campaign launched by Bo Xilai, the politician at the heart of a major scandal, a rights group said Friday.

Bo, a rising star once tipped to join the top echelons of power in a key leadership transition later this year, was ousted as Communist Party leader of the megalopolis of Chongqing on March 15.

On Friday, the Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD) group revealed that Gao Yingpu -- a journalist in the sprawling city in southwest China -- was jailed for three years in 2010 for "endangering state security" after a secret trial.

Quoting his wife, CHRD said Gao had criticised a campaign launched by Bo in Chongqing in 2009 that saw scores of mobsters and corrupt officials jailed or executed in an anti-graft drive that riveted China and drew wide praise.

Gao's wife was not immediately available for comment when contacted by AFP, and it is not know why she chose to speak out now.

In the years that followed the campaign's launch, details have emerged about alleged disregard for the rule of law -- with accusations of widespread use of torture to extract confessions.

At the time, they were mostly swept under the carpet.

But since Bo's sacking, weeks after Wang Lijun -- his former police chief and right-hand man -- fled to a US consulate and reportedly demanded political asylum in a serious embarrassment for the the ruling party, more damaging information has begun to emerge.

A British businessman, who had done work for a strategic-intelligence firm and whose death in Chongqing last November has raised suspicions of foul play, is rumoured to have been linked to Bo and his family.

The British government has called on Chinese authorities to investigate his death.

Wang, meanwhile, has been placed under investigation. The reasons behind his apparent attempted defection are still unclear, although reports suggest he may have been involved in probing one of Bo's family members for corruption.



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SINO DAILY
Chinese journalist jailed after Bo criticism: group
Beijing (AFP) March 30, 2012
A Chinese journalist was jailed in 2010 after criticising a prominent anti-gang campaign launched by Bo Xilai, the politician at the heart of a major scandal, a rights group said Friday. Bo, a rising star once tipped to join the top echelons of power in a key leadership transition later this year, was ousted as Communist Party leader of the megalopolis of Chongqing on March 15. On Friday ... read more


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