Chinese police have sentenced at least 10 foreigners to 10
days of detention for protesting during the Olympic Games, an
activist group and officials said.
The most recent detainees included four protesters who were
demonstrating against Chinese rule in Tibet, said the New
York-based Students for a Free Tibet. The protesters - a
German, two Americans and a British citizen - were seized
Thursday while unfurling a Tibetan flag near the "Bird's
Nest" National Stadium.
Britain's Foreign Office confirmed the detention of the
British protester and issued a statement saying, "We continue
to underline to the Chinese government the need to respect
its commitment to freedom of expression." The statement also
urged British citizens to respect China's laws.
China said it would allow protests during the Olympic Games
only in three designated areas. Protesters also were also
required to apply for permission to protest, but no
application to demonstrate has been approved.
The Public Security Bureau did not immediately respond to
requests Saturday for comment about the detained foreigners'
cases.
The bureau issued a statement Thursday that said a separate
group of six foreigners who were arrested Tuesday were
ordered to serve 10 days of detention. Police did not
identify the detainees, but Students for a Free Tibet said
they were bloggers, artists and activists from the United
States.
Separately, the Chinese Human Rights Defenders group said
AIDs activist Wang Xiaoqiao, who has been detained for nine
months, has been convicted and sentenced to one year in
prison in the central province of Henan. The organisation
accused the government of waiting until the Olympics, when
the world was distracted by the games, to sentence Wang.
Wang was convicted of extortion Aug. 12 in Xincai county in a
case that involved a kiln that she claimed polluted her
family's farm land, the overseas-based group said. Wang was
detained shortly after she reached a settlement with the kiln
owner, it said.
The rights group said Wang was actually being punished for
petitioning officials for compensation for AIDs patients.
Wang's husband contracted the disease from a tainted blood
transfusion, the group said.
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