Asia-Pacific News

Rights group condemns China's detention of activist due for release

Jul 28, 2008, 10:02 GMT

   Beijing - An international human rights group on Monday condemned China's detention of a housing activist who was due to be released over the weekend, saying it was the latest attempt by Beijing to assert control during the Olympics.

   Ye Guozhu, 53, was supposed to be released on Saturday after completing his four-year prison sentence for protesting against the Beijing government's forced eviction of his family in 2003 to make way for Olympic-related construction.

    Ye's family was informed by Beijing's Chaobai Prison on Thursday to not bother going to the prison to pick him up as he had been taken away by the Xuanwu branch of the Beijing Public Security Bureau.

    Ye's brother, Ye Guoqiang, said the police informed the family on Saturday that his brother is under criminal detention for suspicion of gathering a crowd to disturb public social order.

   'The arbitrary detention of Ye Guozhu after completion of his four years sentence demonstrates the extreme measures the Chinese authorities will resort to in order to maintain social control during the Olympics,' said Human Rights in China's executive director Sharon Hom.

   'This should be a wake-up call to the international community to address the human costs of the Olympics lock-down underway by the Chinese authorities,' Hom said.

   In the run-up to the August 8-24 Games, Beijing has jailed several dissidents or put them under house arrest or surveillance, while banning petitioners who want to seek redress for injustices from the capital.

   Ye Guoqiang told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that the family does not believe his brother is guilty of the latest charge, questioning how he could gather a crowd while in one of China's tightly controlled prisons.

   'We can't understand how they could keep him locked up after he has already suffered so much in these four years,' said Ye Guoqiang, who had previously said his brother was physically abused in detention.

   'We think this is very unfair and inhumane,' he said, adding that Ye's 84-year-old father was looking forward to seeing his son and the family does not know how to break the news to him.

   The Ye family are well-known critics of the massive redevelopment of Beijing which forced hundreds of thousands of residents to move out of often prime property in central parts of the city to make way for construction that often was not related to Olympic venues.

   Beijing's winning of the bid to host the Olympics sparked a construction boom in which city authorities took over property to sell to developers or develop on their own for a profit, compensating residents with below market and non-negotiable sums.

   Three generations of the Ye family were evicted from their Beijing home in May 2003, leaving several members homeless because the compensation they were offered was not enough to buy a new home.

   Ye Guozhu has been jailed since he and others sought permission in August 2004 for 10,000 people to demonstrate against the forced Olympic evictions.

   'They are holding him because of the Olympics, but we don't know whether they'll release him afterwards,' his brother said.

   Since Ye Guoqiang was released after serving two years in prison for also protesting against the evictions, he has been under 24-hour police surveillance.

   'We can put up with being under surveillance, but just let our family be reunited,' he said.



COMMENT

blog comments powered by Disqus

Latest Headlines in Asia-Pacific

Older Talkback

Follow Us

Follow M&C on Pinterest

Search

Custom Search

Also Check Out

Peter Andre ready to move on

Peter Andre ready to move on
Peter Andre is finally ready to move on from ex-wife Katie Price and wonders if he has already met the person he is 'supposed' to marry. ... more

Prince William's tribute to role model Queen

Prince Williams tribute to role model Queen
Britain's Prince William has paid tribute to his grandmother Queen Elizabeth for being an 'incredible role model'. ... more

Mariah Carey's sister wants reconciliation

Mariah Careys sister wants reconciliation
Mariah Carey's estranged sister Alison is desperate to mend her rift with the singer and meet the star's twins Moroccan and Monroe for the first time. ... more

Robin Gibb had kidney failure

Robin Gibb had kidney failure
Robin Gibb's son RJ says the Bee Gees singer's death was caused by kidney and liver failure, ... more

Matthew Morrison's sexy meals

Matthew Morrisons sexy meals
Matthew Morrison thinks cooking is 'sexy' and loves sharing candlelit dinners with his girlfriend Renee Puente. ... more

Apl.de.Ap praises 'beautiful' Cheryl

Apl.de.Ap praises beautiful Cheryl
Black Eyed Peas star Apl.de.Ap thinks Cheryl Cole is a 'beautiful' woman. ... more

Queen Elizabeth loves to laugh with her grandkids

Queen Elizabeth loves to laugh with her grandkids
Britain's Queen Elizabeth loves to share a laugh with her grandchildren and find out about their lives outside of their royal duties. ... more

David Hasselhoff to buy bar for Hayley

David Hasselhoff to buy bar for Hayley
David Hasselhoff wants to buy his Welsh girlfriend Hayley Roberts a bar which he will call the Hoff & Hounds. ... more

Gavin Rossdale refuses to speak to ex after DNA test

Gavin Rossdale refuses to speak to ex after DNA test
Gavin Rossdale has refused to speak to Pearl Lowe since she allowed their daughter Daisy to take a DNA test which revealed he is her father. ... more

Gary Barlow's odd queen meetings

Gary Barlows odd queen meetings
Gary Barlow does find meeting Britain's Queen Elizabeth is 'really odd' because it can be 'relaxing'. ... more