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SINO DAILY
Petitioners seek rights as China parliament meets
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 11, 2013


Nepal police arrest Tibetans on anniversary of uprising
Kathmandu (AFP) March 10, 2013 - Nepalese police arrested 18 people in Kathmandu on suspicion of "anti-China activities" on Sunday, the anniversary of the 1959 rebellion against China's rule in Tibet.

"Some of the people we arrested were Tibetan but we have not interrogated all of them yet," police spokesman Uttam Subedi told AFP, saying all but three had been released on the same day.

Nepal, home to around 20,000 Tibetans, is under intense pressure from Beijing over the exiles, and has repeatedly said it will not tolerate what it calls "anti-China activities".

On February 13 a Tibetan monk doused himself in petrol in a Kathmandu restaurant and set himself on fire, becoming the 100th self-immolation bid in a wave of protests against Chinese rule since 2009.

The gruesome burnings, most of which have occurred in Tibetan-inhabited areas of China, are seen as a sign of desperation in the community over perceived religious and political persecution in Chinese-ruled Tibet.

In the lead-up to Sunday's 54th anniversary of the Tibet uprising, the Nepal government re-exerted its security efforts.

Home ministry spokesman Shanker Koirala told local journalists last week that the government was making "necessary security arrangements in areas deemed sensitive, to foil any untoward incidents".

In a statement released on Sunday, Prime Minister of the India-based Tibetan Government in Exile, Lobsang Sangay, condemned the lack of political freedom inside Tibet.

He said when people speak out they "risk prolonged imprisonment, torture, public humiliation and disappearance at the hands of security forces".

"The prohibition of peaceful protest and harsh punishments compel Tibetans to resort to self-immolation", he said.

Tibetan activists in Kathmandu said they had been sent a letter by the chief of Kathmandu's district administration asking them to cancel public observance of the March 10 anniversary.

"We received a letter asking us not to observe the anniversary. So we decided not to organise it this year," said a Tibetan exile who identified himself as Sonam.

A Tibetan activist in Kathmandu who spoke on the condition of anonymity said: "We see how intense the pressure is from the government and we don't want to just hand ourselves to the police for no reason."

He said high bail costs were an added disincentive in situations where arrest was imminent.

The district administration chief would neither confirm nor deny the letter, but told AFP he gave the Tibetans a verbal warning last week against organising a protest "because activities against China violate Nepal's law".

Activists are concerned about the curtailment of Tibetan expression in Nepal.

"The community in Nepal needs space in which to peacefully express their anguish and their solidarity, particularly at a moment as significant as the March 10 anniversary," said Kate Saunders of the US-based International Campaign for Tibet.

"Tensions will only increase if this is not possible," she said.

In Taiwan on Sunday hundreds of slogan-chanting Tibetan activists and their Taiwanese sympathisers marched peacefully through the capital in protest at Chinese rule of Tibet.

Since 2009, 107 Tibetans have set themselves on fire to protest against China's rule and at least 90 have died.

A few miles from China's National People's Congress in Beijing, citizens who have travelled from across the country to tell the government about their problems face tight controls on this age-old right.

China's centuries-old petition system, developed under imperial rule, is meant to offer people with grievances against local officials the chance of redress from the central government.

But security has been stepped up for the annual legislative meeting, underscoring the way the scheme is undermined with authorities at lower levels deploying a vast network of "interceptors" to stop complaints being lodged.

The Chinese Human Rights Defenders, an activist network, said that "countless" petitioners had been searched, assaulted and detained, with many forcibly returned to their home towns, including "hundreds" sent back to Shanghai.

The heavy-handed tactics not only ignore the individuals' problems but also inflame their anger, driving them back to Beijing again and again and, critics warn, undermining the government's legitimacy.

"In the beginning my issue was that my company owed me 12 years of unpaid salary and old-age insurance contributions," said a 38-year-old former receptionist surnamed Liu, adding that she was badly beaten and hospitalised after she first came to Beijing in December, and was now on her third trip.

"This time I came because of my unpaid salary and old-age insurance, and my being beaten, humiliated and illegally detained," she said, speaking angrily before breaking down in tears.

The petition office -- every government department has one -- rejected her last application, saying she could only submit one every two months.

During the day she hid from officials dispatched by her home province of Jiangsu to send people like her back south, she said, and at night took shelter in a car park.

Other petitioners said they kept coming back despite having to quit their jobs, sleep in basements, see their families harassed, end up in detention and fail to settle their cases -- some for more than a decade.

Several said they had their homes torn down for little or no compensation, freeing up land that local authorities could sell to developers for high prices.

Some estimates say 20 million petitions are filed each year at various levels of government, though that includes repeat registrations, said Hu Xingdou, an economist at Beijing Institute of Technology.

Each one counts as a mark against a local government's performance record, and interceptors try to intervene at every step, watching repeat complainers in their home towns and searching trains bound for Beijing.

Personnel are stationed in the capital to send them back -- often after they have been rounded up into "black jails" where rights groups have reported beatings, food deprivation and other abuses.

Many are then sent to China's "re-education through labour" camps, which have been the object of growing calls for abolition, although expectations of change at the rubber-stamp National People's Congress (NPC) have faded in recent weeks, and the topic was not mentioned in judicial reports on Sunday.

For the two-week meeting now under way, police have blanketed an area near a petition office in the south of the city where applicants congregate.

Uniformed officers patrol the sidewalks, while volunteers with red armbands camp out on wooden stools and packs of men loiter watchfully.

"During special occasions like the NPC gathering, the interceptors outnumber the petitioners," said Hu.

The vast majority of petitioners are apprehended and bundled home, where some are sentenced to re-education through labour, Hu said, only deepening their resolve to return to the capital.

"These people have nowhere else to turn," he added. "The less they understand about (the central government), the more they put their trust in it."

A 65-year-old woman surnamed Yang said she had fought her house-demolition case since 2007.

"Whenever I start thinking about it and getting really upset, then I just come to Beijing," she said. "I can't even remember how many times I have gone" to black jail.

This time she had to don a face mask and dress up as a man to sneak past officials in Inner Mongolia, and her minders had threatened her son with losing his job.

In Beijing she said she paid 20 yuan ($3) a night for a space in six-square-metre basement room shared with three other petitioners, and police sometimes came after dark to take people away.

China's chief justice called for "pushing forward reform of lawsuits and petitions" at the NPC on Sunday, according to a copy of the speech, but did not elaborate.

Yu Jianrong, of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, wrote a rare public criticism of the interceptor system in December, saying it antagonised citizens and was "draining national legitimacy".

"As local governments take more severe measures to deal with petitioners, people's complaints grow more intense, creating a vicious cycle," he wrote.

"In this way the petitioning system has gone from useless to harmful, from a valve for reducing pressure to an instrument for increasing it."

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