Chinese activists disappearing after call for Jasmine Revolution, reports say
Three human rights lawyers have reportedly vanished and not been heard from in the past two weeks, and more than 100 other people have had their movements restricted, while six activists face subversion charges, possibly for posting information online about the Jasmine rallies," according to a Hong Kong-based rights group.
Meanwhile, the Chinese government is threatening foreign correspondents that their visas will be revoked if they continue to try to report on demonstrations held there, according to reports.
The move is the latest in a series of harsh measures authorities have taken to ensure that popular movements aimed at overthrowing autocratic regimes in the Middle East do not spread to China, writes the Christian Science Monitor.
The mysterious group running the Jasmine Revolution campaign called this week for fresh protests Sunday. Calls often come via an anonymous statement posted on the U.S.-based Chinese language news site Boxun, which is blocked in China.
Jiang Tianyong, an activist lawyer in Beijing, vanished Feb. 19, a day before the protests called for in Internet postings in the Chinese capital, according to China Human Rights Defenders. Jiang has reportedly not been heard from since, the CSM reported. Since then, two other human rights lawyers, Tang Jitian and Teng Biao, have disappeared into China's labyrinthine security system.
Jiang's wife, Jin Bianling, said that she had tried for years to persuade her husband to switch to a safer profession and now she fears the worst, according to USA Today.
"He might be sentenced on some charge," said Jin of her 39-year-old husband. "But I am most worried they will torture him. He has high-blood pressure, but the police refuse to deliver his medicine. I worry about his personal safety."
Meanwhile, dozens of foreign journalists who tried to cover demonstrations Sunday in central Beijing and downtown Shanghai have been summoned this week to interviews with the police, the Foreign Correspondents Club of China said Thursday in a warning to members.
The interviews have followed “a common theme” the FCCC said, according to the CSM. Reporters have been told that they have “broken Chinese regulations, officials know about it, and the journalist will face consequences if he or she does it again. Those consequences include being arrested or detained until the visa or work permit is canceled.”
On Monday, the outgoing U.S. ambassador to China, Jon Huntsman Jr., said that American and other foreign journalists were "illegally detained or harassed" while covering protests in Beijing over the weekend.
And the European Union delegation to China issued a statement saying it was "troubled by accounts of foreign journalists being detained without explanation and being physically intimidated or assaulted."
Global Post
China sets up 'no reporting' zones to gag coverage of jasmine revolt
The Chinese government has established 'no reporting zones' in Shanghai and Beijing to prevent foreign journalists from covering potential protests inspired by Tunisia's 'Jasmine Revolution'.
A report in the 'New York Times' said today that Chinese police personnel dressed in plain clothes harassed and assaulted foreign journalists on Sunday.
"The police provided reasonable guidance, and the journalists should understand and cooperate," said Jiang Yu, spokesperson for the foreign ministry.
"If both sides take this attitude, we can minimise the occurrence of such incidents," he was quoted as saying by the report.
Following a call on the Internet to stage a Chinese 'Jasmine Revolution', the government responded by a large show of force even though no large-scale demonstrations surfaced. Last week, media reports said the words 'Jasmine Revolution', borrowed from the successful Tunisian revolt, were blocked on social networking websites and on Internet search engines.
NYT said officials have informed journalists that one of the capital's main shopping districts, Wangfujing, and People's Square in the heart of Shanghai are either off limits or require a special permit for taking photographs and conducting interviews.
The newspaper said that last Sunday when there was a call for rallies in more than 20 cities across the country, journalists trying to cover the rallies were assaulted.
A Bloomberg News videographer was seriously beaten up by plainclothes security agents, according to the Foreign Correspondents Club of China.
The association also said that employees from five news organisations reported that some material or images had been confiscated and that nine other journalists had been detained for as long as four hours, 'The Times' said.
The Chinese news media has reportedly been barred from even discussing the rallies.
Indian Express
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