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Clinton presses China on Tibet, blind lawyer
by Staff Writers
Honolulu, Hawaii (AFP) Nov 10, 2011

China calls Clinton's rights call 'interference'
Beijing (AFP) Nov 11, 2011 - Beijing on Friday accused Hillary Clinton of interfering in its affairs after the US secretary of state expressed concern over China's human rights record.

Clinton voiced alarm Thursday over Beijing's treatment of ethnic Tibetans and of blind lawyer turned human rights activist Chen Guangcheng, who is being held under house arrest.

"We oppose foreign interference into China's internal affairs and judicial sovereignty," foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told journalists at a briefing Friday where he was asked to respond to Clinton's remarks.

"The Chinese government protects the legitimate rights and interests of the Chinese citizens."

Chen, a self-trained lawyer who has been blind since childhood, spent four years in prison after documenting late-term abortions and forced sterilisations under Beijing's one-child policy.

He was released last year, but rights campaigners say he and his wife were severely beaten earlier this year in apparent retaliation for the release of a video smuggled out of their home in which Chen railed about his house arrest.

Clinton, in Honolulu for an Asia-Pacific summit, said the United States welcomed a "thriving China" but wanted to ensure that the fast-growing region developed standards on openness and basic freedoms.

"When we see reports of lawyers, artists and others who are detained or 'disappeared,' the United States speaks up both publicly and privately," Clinton said.

She said the United States was "alarmed" by reports of monks and nuns in ethnically Tibetan parts of China setting themselves alight to protest against what they say is religious repression.


US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton voiced alarm over Beijing's treatment of Tibetans and a blind rights activist as tensions between the superpowers threatened to intrude on Pacific Rim talks.

In Honolulu for an Asia-Pacific summit, Clinton said Thursday that the United States welcomed a "thriving China" but wanted to ensure that the fast-growing region develops standards on openness and basic freedoms.

"When we see reports of lawyers, artists and others who are detained or 'disappeared,' the United States speaks up both publicly and privately," Clinton said in a speech at the East-West Center think-tank shortly before a meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi.

China had already struck a discordant note ahead of the summit, saying earlier this week that US goals for the meeting in Hawaii -- which include getting the ball rolling on a regional free-trade pact -- were "too ambitious."

As Chinese President Hu Jintao arrived in Honolulu for the summit, Clinton said the US was "alarmed by recent incidents in Tibet of young people lighting themselves on fire in desperate acts of protest, as well as the continued house arrest of the Chinese lawyer Chen Guangcheng."

"We continue to call on China to embrace a different path."

Clinton is the highest-level US official to raise concern publicly about Tibet and Chen amid growing alarm in recent months.

Ethnic Tibetan areas of China have seen a wave of self-immolations by Buddhist monks and nuns in protest at what they see as Beijing's stifling rule. Rights groups say that at least five monks and two nuns have died.

Chen, a self-trained lawyer who has been blind since childhood, spent four years in prison after documenting late-term abortions and forced sterilizations under Beijing's one-child policy.

He was released last year, but rights campaigners say he and his wife were severely beaten earlier this year in apparent retaliation for the release of a video smuggled out of their home in which Chen railed about his house arrest.

Campaigners say paid thugs have been attacking anyone who tries to reach Chen in his village in eastern China.

A senior US official said that Clinton also brought up the cases directly with Yang, but also sought cooperation on a range of issues including Iran amid new charges the Islamic regime is pursuing nuclear weapons.

Clinton said "it was critical for China to communicate both publicly but also privately with Iran that they were on a course that was dangerous," the official, who attended the talks, said on customary condition of anonymity.

Clinton also raised concerns about China's economic policies, including its alleged preference for state-run firms in procurement and the value of its yuan currency, which critics say is kept artificially low to boost exports.

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who is also in Hawaii, said Asian economies, and "China, in particular," must free up their currencies.

He also said Asian economies must do more to stimulate domestic demand growth to help protect the global economic recovery from being imperiled by the European debt crisis.

Clinton, returning to one of the key themes of her tenure, said in her speech that the United States must help build the emerging new order in Asia as the region becomes "the world's strategic and economic center of gravity."

Saying that the post-World War II institutions between the United States and Europe had paid "remarkable dividends," Clinton said the time had come for "a more dynamic and durable trans-Pacific system."

Such an order "will promote security, prosperity, and universal values; resolve differences among nations; foster trust and accountability; and encourage effective cooperation on the scale that today's challenges demand," Clinton said.

On the eve of the summit, China's assistant foreign minister Wu Hailong shot down US goals such as lowering tariffs on environmental products, saying that developing economies had expressed "their difficulties and concerns."

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Chinese artist Ai Weiwei vows to fight tax bill
Beijing (AFP) Nov 11, 2011 - Chinese artist Ai Weiwei said Friday he will challenge a huge tax bill the government has ordered him to pay, and will use money collected from supporters to lodge an appeal.

Ai, who disappeared into police custody for 81 days earlier this year and was ordered to pay 15 million yuan ($2.4 million) in back taxes after his release, needs to pay the bill by Tuesday.

But the artist, best known for his role in designing Beijing's "Bird's Nest" Olympic stadium, said he will contest the order and will use funds donated by supporters as a guarantee to make an appeal -- a step required by Chinese law.

"We never said we will pay the tax bill," Ai told AFP on Friday.

Ai said he had planned to use his mother's home as collateral for the appeal, but that will "take much longer" than anticipated to organise so he had decided to use money from his supporters.

The 54-year-old said previously that the tax was being charged to him as "the actual controller" of the Beijing FAKE Cultural Development Ltd, a company where he works but which is owned by his wife.

Ai has denied any wrongdoing and insists the government is trying to silence him and his vocal human rights activism.

Pu Zhiqiang, a lawyer acting for Ai, told AFP on Thursday that a guarantee of eight million yuan needed to be paid in order "to pursue the request of administrative revision".

The drive to donate to Ai has gathered momentum since beginning last Friday, with supporters coming from as far afield as Hainan island in the south, 3,000 kilometres (1,860 miles) away, to give money.

Supporters have been sending Ai money through Internet and bank transfers, while some have even resorted to throwing cash over the walls into his courtyard home, including banknotes folded into paper planes.

Total donations had reached 6.7 million yuan, Liu Yanping, who works with Ai, said on her Twitter account on Thursday.

Ai, whose artworks have sold worldwide -- some reportedly for hundreds of thousands of dollars -- has acknowledged previously that he does not need the financial support.

"What I need is the ethical support of everybody. I don't need the money," he said.

He has vowed to pay back the money to his donors, some of whom are prominent activists.

Ai's activism has incensed the government in the past. He has organised independent investigations into the collapse of schools in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake and into a 2010 fire at a Shanghai high-rise that killed dozens.



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SINO DAILY
Tibet protester sets himself alight in Nepal: police
Kathmandu, Nepal (AFP) Nov 10, 2011
A Tibetan exile chanting anti-China slogans briefly set himself on fire in Nepal on Thursday before his companions put out the flames, police said. Since March there has been a series of self-immolations by Buddhist monks and nuns in southwest China, but police in Kathmandu said Thursday's staged protest was not a suicide bid. The protester wrapped himself in a Tibetan flag and lit himse ... read more


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