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Detained China artist unaware of New York success
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Feb 10, 2012

China jails prominent activist ahead of Xi's US visit
Beijing (AFP) Feb 10, 2012 - China jailed democracy activist Zhu Yufu for seven years on Friday for inciting subversion of state power, his wife said, ahead of a high-profile trip to the United States by Vice President Xi Jinping.

Zhu was convicted for collecting donations for relatives of dissidents in jail, publishing a poem online urging people to gather and call for greater freedoms and giving media interviews, rights groups say.

He is the fourth known activist to get an unusually lengthy jail sentence in the space of seven weeks, as China enters a sensitive time ahead of a once-in-a-decade leadership transition due to take place in the autumn.

His sentence also comes ahead of Xi's high-profile visit to the United States, which begins early next week.

"My husband was sentenced for seven years for inciting subversion," Zhu's wife Jiang Hangli told AFP. "I am very surprised about the length of this sentence, it's very unfair."

Calls to the Hangzhou Intermediate People's Court, where he was sentenced, went unanswered.

Zhu was detained last year as part of a widespread crackdown on dissent that took place in China after anonymous online calls for protests similar to those that swept the Arab world spooked authorities.

He has spent much of the past decade in prison. Between 1999 and 2006, he was jailed for founding a controversial, political magazine, and served another two years from 2007 after he confronted a policeman who questioned his son.

The poem that got him into trouble this time features the lines, "It's time, Chinese people! The square belongs to everyone. The feet are yours it's time to use your feet and take to the square to make a choice."

Subversion charges are often used to jail government critics. Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo was convicted on the same charge in 2009 and sentenced to 11 years in prison.

Late last year, Chinese courts handed unusually long jail sentences of nine and 10 years to longtime dissidents Chen Wei and Chen Xi, who faced separate subversion charges.

Then in January, Chinese democracy activist Li Tie was sentenced to 10 years in prison, also for subversion.


Dark, bare photos of modern Chinese society by Liu Xia, detained wife of China's best known dissident, went on show in New York without her knowledge after they were spirited out of her country.

The photos were brought out of China under the noses of the authorities by French academic, writer and economist Guy Sorman, a friend of the artist and her Nobel Peace prize-winning husband Liu Xiaobo.

Liu Xia, who is under house arrest in Beijing while her husband serves an 11-year jail term for propagating democracy, made it a condition of the deal that the exhibitions were kept a secret from her, Sorman said.

"She does not know. She does not want to know," Sorman told AFP ahead of the the opening on Thursday of the exhibition he curated.

"She gave me permission to show them. But she did not want to know where or when. As she is a woman who would never lie, if she is questioned by police she can say that she does not know, and she really doesn't know."

The 25 photos in "The Silent Strength of Liu Xia" will be displayed at Columbia University in New York until March 1 before going to Madrid and what could be a politically-charged exhibition in Hong Kong later in the year.

They were shown at Boulogne-Billancourt, just outside of Paris, last year.

Sorman has known the Liu family for 15 years but only convinced Liu Xia to display her work just before she was put under house arrest in 2010.

Convincing her was more difficult than getting the images -- in which dolls are used to show the suffering of the Chinese people -- out of the strictly policed country, Sorman said.

"It was a bit complicated, I am not going to say how. I would just say that it was not illegal," he said.

Though Liu Xia has been restricted to her home for more than a year, she has never been charged with any illegal act.

"When the exhibition was held in France, the Chinese ambassador protested -- half-heartedly because he knew he had no grounds to protest," Sorman said.

Sorman, who now communicates only with the artist's mother, said the photos were taken out of China individually.

"It took me several months to persuade a number of people. Each one carried one photo. If we had taken them out together it would probably have been difficult. The whole thing took a year," he said.

Liu Xia could never stage an exhibition in China because she is the wife of the country's best known dissident. Sorman insists, however, that she is not involved in political activities.

"Artists are always dissidents," said Sorman. "But Liu Xia is an artist and I am presenting her here as an artist."

The French academic stresses that the world is now discovering an "important" Chinese artist.

"This is no an anti-Chinese exhibition. On the contrary, this shows that there is a renaissance of Chinese culture, following modern forms of expression. This is not folk art."

The black and white images show dolls in different positions in the Liu family's apartment in Beijing -- one shows a pained Liu Xiaobo holding a doll on his shoulder. Another doll is tied up, and another is wrapped in plastic.

Many show tears. All present a grim outlook.

"They represent an aspect of Chinese society which we don't speak a lot about. The Chinese propaganda machine always shows a celebration of Chinese successes," Sorman said.

"With this exhibition, you can see there is also oppression, poverty, distress, darkness. It is impossible to express yourself."

"So there are two messages: one, that there is a cultural renaissance, but secondly, the suffocating society. A society which cannot breath."

Sorman said Hong Kong's PEN Club is scheduled to show the pictures in the Chinese territory at the end of April as part of a tribute to the Lius.

"This will be artistic because it will be in a museum. I insist on this. But there will clearly be a stronger political dimension in Hong Kong."

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Security forces shoot dead two Tibetans: report
Beijing (AFP) Feb 10, 2012 - Security forces shot dead two Tibetan brothers who were on the run after protesting against Chinese rule, US-based broadcaster Radio Free Asia (RFA) said, a day after a monk reportedly set himself alight.

The incidents are said to have taken place in two provinces bordering the Tibet autonomous region, as tension in Tibetan-inhabited areas intensifies over perceived religious, political and cultural repression.

China launched a clampdown after at least two other Tibetans were killed in a series of protests last month, in what Beijing says is a battle against forces trying to split Tibet from the rest of China.

According to RFA -- a US-funded group that broadcasts news in several languages including Tibetan -- Yeshe Rigsal, a monk, and his brother were shot dead Thursday in the southwestern province of Sichuan.

The duo had taken part in a protest in the predominantly Tibetan Luhuo county on January 23 that turned violent when police shot dead at least one person. Two other areas of western Sichuan were then also hit by unrest.

News of the latest shooting is very difficult to confirm after police locked down western Sichuan, barring foreign reporters from going and cutting most means of communication.

Calls made to Luhuo police and to a local monastery were met with a rapid beeping tone, suggesting phones had been disabled. A man at the government office said he was unaware of the incident.

RFA, citing a monk in India who has contacts in the region, said the two brothers had been on the run for more than two weeks and were hiding in the hills in a nomad region when they were found.

"Chinese security forces encircled the place where he (Yeshe Rigsal) was staying and shot him and his brother," a monk at Drepung monastery in India was quoted as saying, citing sources in the region.

The reported incident came a day after a monk in his thirties in Qinghai -- another province with large populations of ethnic Tibetans -- set himself alight, rights group Free Tibet and RFA said.

Calls to the government and police in Chenduo county, where the self-immolation reportedly took place, went unanswered.

This brings to at least 18 the number of people who have set themselves on fire in the past year in Tibetan-inhabited areas in protest at Chinese rule.

RFA and rights groups say another three Tibetans self-immolated a week ago in a remote village of Sichuan. However, local authorities quoted in the official Global Times newspaper have denied this.

China has blamed much of the unrest on the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader. Chen Quanguo -- head of the Tibet autonomous region -- said Thursday the fight against the Nobel Peace Prize laureate would be tough.

"Our struggle against the Dalai clique is long, complicated and at times even acute," he was quoted as saying by the state-run Tibet Daily.



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New Delhi (AFP) Feb 10, 2012
The European Union looks set to push India at a summit Friday to use its commercial and diplomatic influence to try to bring Iran back to the negotiating table over its disputed nuclear programme. India has a good relationship with Iran, which is the South Asian nation's second-largest oil supplier after Saudi Arabia, providing 12 percent of India's crude needs at an annual cost of around $1 ... read more


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