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Chinese rights activist faces trial for subversion
Fri, Feb 01, 2008
AFP

The detention of Hu, 34, indicates that China is determined to stamp out dissent ahead of the August Beijing Olympics.

"We were informed that Hu Jia has been formally charged," said Li Fangping, one of Hu's lawyers.

"The case is still under police investigation but will be handed over to prosecutors by next month or early April. It could go to court a month later, in May."

The charge of incitement to subvert power against Hu is often used to detain activists for years after secret trials and can lead to lengthy jail terms.

Hu's lawyers have not been allowed to see him since his December 27 arrest and he has been denied bail. Police said the case involved "state secrets", which allows them to deny access to a suspect.

Last week police rejected a bail plea, saying the AIDS activist and civil rights campaigner was a danger to society.

Hu's wife and fellow activist Zeng Jinyan has been under house arrest at the couple's Beijing home with their infant child since the police raid six weeks ago.

Li said lawyers were trying to arrange to visit her before the Lunar New Year on February 7. But he was not optimistic. The last time he tried, police placed Li himself under house arrest, he said.

Hu, one of China's most active human rights campaigners, began working as an AIDS volunteer in the 1990s before starting to document rights abuses by the government.

Activists and human rights groups have said Hu's detention was part of a crackdown by Beijing on its critics ahead of the Olympics, violating promises it made to win its bid to host the Games.

The European Union and the United States have demanded his release.

Many intellectuals and activists have been placed under house arrest or had other restrictions imposed on them in recent weeks, the China Human Rights Defenders said in a report in January.

The group, a network of domestic and foreign activists, said the crackdown was expected to intensify as the Games approached.

The detention of Hu, 34, indicates that China is determined to stamp out dissent ahead of the August Beijing Olympics.

"We were informed that Hu Jia has been formally charged," said Li Fangping, one of Hu's lawyers.

"The case is still under police investigation but will be handed over to prosecutors by next month or early April. It could go to court a month later, in May."

The charge of incitement to subvert power against Hu is often used to detain activists for years after secret trials and can lead to lengthy jail terms.

Hu's lawyers have not been allowed to see him since his December 27 arrest and he has been denied bail. Police said the case involved "state secrets", which allows them to deny access to a suspect.

Last week police rejected a bail plea, saying the AIDS activist and civil rights campaigner was a danger to society.

Hu's wife and fellow activist Zeng Jinyan has been under house arrest at the couple's Beijing home with their infant child since the police raid six weeks ago.

Li said lawyers were trying to arrange to visit her before the Lunar New Year on February 7. But he was not optimistic. The last time he tried, police placed Li himself under house arrest, he said.

Hu, one of China's most active human rights campaigners, began working as an AIDS volunteer in the 1990s before starting to document rights abuses by the government.

Activists and human rights groups have said Hu's detention was part of a crackdown by Beijing on its critics ahead of the Olympics, violating promises it made to win its bid to host the Games.

The European Union and the United States have demanded his release.

Many intellectuals and activists have been placed under house arrest or had other restrictions imposed on them in recent weeks, the China Human Rights Defenders said in a report in January.

The group, a network of domestic and foreign activists, said the crackdown was expected to intensify as the Games approached.

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