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China lodges US protest after religious freedom criticised
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 4, 2015


Beijing official who called Patten 'sinner' dies at 87
Beijing (AFP) May 4, 2015 - China's former top representative in Hong Kong -- who once branded the colony's last British governor Chris Patten a "sinner for a thousand years" -- has died aged 87, the government said Monday.

Lu Ping, who oversaw the territory's return to Chinese rule, passed away in a Beijing hospital on Sunday, the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office (HKMAO) said in a statement.

Lu was appointed in 1985 as deputy secretary general of the Basic Law Drafting Committee, which drew up Hong Kong's post-handover constitution.

He was promoted to head the HKMAO in 1990 and retired in 1997 after the handover that year.

Lu was known for his hardline stance and denounced Patten at the height of a row over democratic reforms in Hong Kong, as the governor sought to widen the territory's electoral franchise despite virulent Chinese opposition.

In 2009 he said in an interview that Hong Kong should stop relying on favours from Beijing, warning that the city risked falling behind its neighbours Guangzhou and Shenzhen and China's financial hub Shanghai, according to Monday's South China Morning Post.

"To be honest, Hong Kong has already been marginalised," the newspaper quoted Lu as saying at the time.

Hong Kong saw more than two months of mass protests last year after China ruled that candidates in the city's 2017 poll for chief executive must first be approved by a pro-Beijing committee.

Beijing Monday lodged a protest against the United States after a government advisory body highlighted "severe violations of religious freedom" in China.

The Chinese foreign ministry expressed anger after the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, an independent federal government body, raised concerns over Beijing's religious policies.

"We have launched representations with the US and urged the US to stop interfering in China's domestic affairs by making use of the relevant issue," Beijing's foreign ministry spokesman Hua Chunying told reporters Monday.

The report urged the State Department to continue to maintain China's classification as a "country of particular concern" (CPC), a ranking which includes Myanmar and North Korea.

"The Chinese government continues to perpetrate particularly severe violations of religious freedom," it said.

The report highlighted the plight of Tibetan Buddhists and Uighur Muslims saying "conditions are worse now than at any time in the past decade".

China has been designated as a CPC since 1999, said the report, which was released last Thursday.

Hua retorted that China "respects and protects" freedom of religious belief.

"The so-called report... is full of political prejudice which brings unfounded accusations against China," he said at the regular briefing in Beijing.


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