>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / ASIA / STORY
Olympics: China defends arrest of rights activist
Thu, Jan 03, 2008
AFP

BEIJING - CHINA on Thursday defended its arrest of a prominent human rights campaigner after activists called it another move by authorities to silence critics ahead of the Beijing Olympics in August.

'China is a country of the rule of law. Everyone is equal before the law and no one is above it. We will deal with this case according to law,' foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said when asked about the arrest of Hu Jia.

Ms Jiang made no further comment on the case involving Mr Hu, who according to his associates and other activists was taken away by police on Dec 27 on charges of inciting subversion.

Beijing-based Hu, 34, and his wife, Zeng Jinyan, have thrown the spotlight on human rights abuses in China and spent many periods under house arrest over the past few years because of their campaigning.

They have a six-week-old daughter.

They helped expose a government-backed blood donation drive in central China which led to an Aids epidemic among thousands of unsuspecting farmers.

The Paris-based organisation Reporters Without Borders has called for Mr Hu's release.

The president of the European parliament, Hans-Gert Poettering, has called for Hu's release to show China's commitment to human rights in its Olympic year, according to reports.

Another prominent Chinese activist, Qi Zhiyong, told reporters on Thursday that Mr Hu remained in a Beijing detention centre and that a rights lawyer was trying to gain access to him.

China's communist rulers have pledged to ease curbs on media and individual freedoms ahead of the Olympics.

But activists have reported an intensifying crackdown on critics of the government as authorities seek to silence dissent as much as possible before the Olympics draws even more of the world's attention to China. -- AFP

 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Olympics: China defends arrest of rights activist
   
 
  Hundreds flee as high waves strike Indon coast
   
 
  Bird flu kills 350 ducks in northern Vietnam
   
 
  Thais mourn death of king's sister
   
 
  Taiwan launches vote-buying probe ahead of polls
   
 
  Mochi kills 2 in Tokyo during New Year's
   
 
  Pakistan opposition wants better security ahead of Feb 18 vote
   
 
  Fire rages through China office block
   
 
  Indonesian naval chief visits S'pore
   
 
  Jakarta bracing for potential floods
   
>> RELATED STORY
Olympics: China defends arrest of rights activist
China Eastern hits back at criticism in SIA deal
Chinese major aircraft makers to build big planes
Fire rages through China office block
Chinese farmers happier' but wealth gap grows

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Investor Relations: Four Singapore firms invest $127m in Tianjin

Wine,Dine&Unwind: Prices rise, buyers hoard tinned pork as supplies dry up

Travel: Tibet-China railway link brings tourists to Buddhist holy sites

Health: Beijing spitters do their part for 'green' Olympics

Motoring: China's former F1 track chief jailed 4 years

Digital: Lured by her LEGS

Business: China developer buys Sentosa Cove plot

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
Search: