Seek news on
InfoAnda
powered by
Google
Custom Search

Last text search :
2016 wso 2.5 rw-r
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r

wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php


Friday, 20 November 2009 - AP NewsBreak: China holds, mistreats US geologist
  • Pakistanis angry over detentions in Times Sq. case
    Monday, May 24, 2010
    ISLAMABAD – Relatives of three men detained by Pakistan for alleged links to the suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing say the men are innocent.
    They
  • Taiwan denies boycotting Australian film festival
    Thursday, August 6, 2009

    AFP - Thursday, August 6TAIPEI (AFP) - - Taiwan's Beijing-friendly government on Wednesday denied boycotting an Australian film festival amid a row over the e
  • Merkel's support dips, regional ally resigns International
    Thursday, September 3, 2009

    By Sarah Marsh and Noah Barkin

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a double blow on Thursday as a senior party ally in east German
  • Minister seeks closure of anti-Berlusconi websites
    Wednesday, December 16, 2009
    ROME (AFP) - – The Italian government moved Tuesday to close down Internet sites encouraging further violence against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who
  • Asian markets mixed after Wall Street rally
    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business Writer AP - Wednesday, March 18SHANGHAI - Asia's stock market rally seemed to be running out of steam Wednesday, despite an
  • AMD launches new chips, challenges Intel | | 15 June 2011
  • Torrential rains kill 55 in southern India | 2 October 2009
  • Marcel Granollers ends title drought, wins Swiss Open; Dolgopolov titles in Croatia | 1 August 2011
  • Malick win and Von Trier ban share Cannes limelight | | 23 May 2011


    Forum Views () Forum Replies ()

    Read more with google mobile : AP NewsBreak: China holds, mistreats US geologist

    Yahoo! My Yahoo! Mail More Yahoo! Services Account Options New User? Sign Up Sign In Help Yahoo! Search web search Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Australia China India Indonesia Japan Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam AP NewsBreak: China holds, mistreats US geologist By CHARLES HUTZLER,Associated Press Writer - Friday, November 20 Send IM Story Print BEIJING – Sometime into his long detention by China's feared state security agents, American geologist Xue Feng had something to show U.S. consular officials on their monthly visit. He rolled up his sleeve, revealing the burns where his interrogators pressed lit cigarettes into his arm. Xue also had something to say: He wanted his previously unpublicized detention made public in hopes that the outcry would win his release. But Xue did not get his wish. His wife balked, as did the U.S.-based consultancy that employed him until months before he was detained, both saying that going public might hurt rather than help his case. The U.S. Embassy, caught between his desire to go public and his wife's wish for privacy, worked behind-the-scenes for his release. So two years after disappearing into custody, the University of Chicago-trained Xue (pronounced shway) remains held at an unknown location in Beijing, charged with stealing state secrets over the purchase of a commercial database on the oil industry. His case has been batted inconclusively between prosecutors and the courts, which twice asked for more evidence, according to a summary of the case prepared by Xue's wife and seen by The Associated Press. On Tuesday, President Barack Obama raised Xue's case at his Beijing summit with Chinese President Hu Jintao, said a White House official on the trip, in the latest and highest-level intervention. More than an instance of abusive, intransigent Chinese justice, Xue's case raises disturbing questions about the quiet lobbying foreign governments, companies and the families of detainees often use, believing it more effective with an authoritarian Chinese leadership. "Under difficult and dangerous circumstances, Dr. Xue made it clear that he wanted the American people to learn of his ordeal. I have little doubt that had his wishes been respected, his case would have already been resolved," said John Kamm, a human rights campaigner with a two-decade track record of getting prisoners released and whom the State Department turned to this month for help. Beijing's State Security Bureau and the Procuratorate, or prosecutor's office, declined comment. A spokesman for the city's No. 1 Intermediate Court, a Mr. Niu, said Xue's trial "is still in mid-process," where, according to the case summary, it has been since July. Xue's wife, Nan Kang, who was born in China like her husband and who lives with their children outside Houston, Texas, has hired a lawyer. She said she wanted to keep her husband's detention quiet for fear that going public would have repercussions for their parents in China and disturb their two children, especially their young son. Kang declined to comment further publicly. In the case summary she wrote: "My husband denies the charge against him, and he believes that he was helping China attract inward investment and to improve the Chinese economy." The U.S. Embassy in Beijing said that it has monitored Xue's case since soon after his arrest, visiting him over 20 times, delivering messages from his family and pressing for his release. It declined to release further details and would only say that Xue asked for his detention to be made public "some time ago." U.S. governments have for years weighed whether jailed dissidents and American prisoners are better served by public pressure, closed-door diplomacy or a combination of the two. The Obama administration has tried to keep any likely disputes over human rights, a perennial irritant in relations, from damaging a broader agenda crowded with the economic crisis, climate change, nuclear proliferation and other global issues. The AP learned of Xue's case last week. The U.S. Embassy initially requested that publication be withheld, saying it may harm attempts under way to gain his release. But in recent days, the embassy has said it detects no progress on the case. Xue's wife has asked the case not be made public out of concern for her family. Given Xue's wishes to go public and the lack of progress, the AP decided to publish. "I have been writing letters to members of Congress, the Senate, the Bush administration, the Obama administration, at least two ambassadors in Beijing _ Huntsman and Randt _ trying hard over time to raise his case and make sure everyone was aware of it," said David Rowley, a geo-sciences professor at the University of Chicago who was Xue's doctorate thesis adviser. "I have tried to be an advocate, but in the wishes of Dr. Xue's wife, I have tried to keep this out of the public eye and tried to deal with this privately." In pursuing Xue, Chinese agencies ignored their own laws. Authorities did not respond when the U.S. Embassy asked his whereabouts shortly after he disappeared on Nov. 20, 2007, and only three weeks later did consular officials get to see him _ far beyond the periods for notification and visits required by China's regulations and its consular agreement with the U.S., said Kamm and legal experts. Xue's treatment contrasts with that of a similar case, involving a China-born, naturalized Australian executive. The detention in July of Stern Hu, an executive with the global mining giant Rio Tinto who was charged with stealing state secrets _ information on iron ore negotiating strategies _ brought an angry public reaction from the Australian government. The charges were reduced to bribery and infringing trade secrets, and Australian officials say Hu has not been mistreated. "Rio Tinto has been cast as a one off: Businesses don't need to worry," said Jerome Cohen, an expert on China's legal system at New York University School of Law who has been consulted about Xue. But "businesses are trying to get information all the time. Obviously they are being watched." Like Hu, Xue was a highly accomplished professional who returned to China after success abroad. Born near the central city of Xi'an, Xue went to Chicago to get his Ph.D., bringing along his wife. He worked in the geophysical sciences laboratory for most of the 1990s and was seen as driven and meticulous. "He was a very good student," said Rowley, the thesis adviser. "He worked very hard, was a very dedicated individual and quite careful in his analyses." Xue earned his degree, studying high-pressure rock formations in northern China's Dabie Mountains. He picked up a green-card residency permit and eventually U.S. citizenship. In March 2001, the prestigious energy consulting firm IHS Energy _ now IHS Inc. based in Colorado _ hired Xue to be its Northeast Asia manager. In China, Xue cultivated contacts in a rapidly growing petroleum industry, gathering in-depth, up-to-date information that IHS could provide to clients, mostly foreign energy companies eager to join the boom. At one point, he helped arrange the purchase of a detailed database about the oil industry. Rowley said the database was developed by another company and was intended for one of China's state-run offshore oil companies. Cohen, the lawyer, said Xue arranged the sale and a contract was signed between the seller, who was a person Xue knew, and the buyer, IHS. "On the surface, it looked like a legitimate sale of business information," said Cohen. Chinese officials have wide powers to classify materials as state secrets, sometimes reclassifying information already in the public domain. Having basic maps still sometimes gets foreigners in trouble. And the government regards its petroleum industry as strategic. Since Xue's disappearance, he has been held at an undisclosed location and brought to a courthouse for his consular visits. At some point, his jailers beat him, struck him on the head with an ashtray as well as applying the lit cigarettes to his arm. Nearly six months into his detention, the U.S. Embassy received the formal reason given for his arrest. "He is suspected of the crime of gathering intelligence for abroad," read an April 2008 notice from the Foreign Ministry. IHS denies any connection to Xue's alleged crime, saying that he left the company in January, 10 months before his November disappearance; his wife said it was July. "We have no notification from the Chinese government or any Chinese authorities that IHS is involved," said company spokesman Ed Mattix. IHS too, Mattix said, was working behind the scenes to free Xue but believes that publicity would hurt the cause. While efforts on Xue's behalf plodded on, his case was twice heard in a Beijing court in July and a third time this month. No U.S. Embassy officials attended, saying they were told state secrets charges precluded their attendance. Recommend Send IM Story Print Related Articles Clinton: US will hold Karzai to promises of reform AP - 2 hours 34 minutes ago Afghan president sworn in to second 5-year term AP - 2 hours 39 minutes ago Resettlement quickened for Sri Lanka war displaced AP - Friday, November 20 China ramps up espionage against US: study AFP - Friday, November 20 China tightens supervision of online games AFP - Friday, November 20 News Search Top Stories Embryonic stem cell therapy closer to human trials WHO plays down 'swine flu vaccination deaths' UK public sector borrowing hits record £11.4 bln Alcohol helps cut heart disease risk for men: study JP Morgan to take over Cazenove: report More Top Stories » ADVERTISEMENT Most Popular Most Viewed Chocolate war looms as Hershey, Ferrero mull Cadbury bid Experts warn antibiotic-proof bacteria threaten global health Model Helena Christensen examines climate change in Peru 'Too big to fail' must be tackled swiftly: central banker Alcohol helps cut heart disease risk for men: study More Most Viewed » More Most Recommended » Elsewhere on Yahoo! Financial news on Yahoo! Finance Stars and latest movies Best travel destinations More on Yahoo! News Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Subscribe to our news feeds Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS » More news feeds | What are news feeds? Also on Yahoo Answers Groups Mail Messenger Mobile Travel Finance Movies Sports Games » All Yahoo! Services Site Highlights Singapore Full Coverage Most Popular Asia Entertainment Photos Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved. Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Community | Intellectual Property Rights Policy | Help

    Other News on Friday, 20 November 2009
    Major powers to meet after Iran snubs nuclear deal
    EU leaders likely to name Belgian premier president
    Belgian Van Rompuy, UK's Ashton win top EU jobs | International |
    Semi-conductor giant Infineon upgrades outlook
    WHO plays down 'swine flu vaccination deaths'
    U.S. warns Iran of consequences over standoff
    Model Moss rapped for 'skinny feels good' motto
    US computer glitch causes major flight delays
    Ukraine warns European gas supplies under threat
    Iraq struggles over election law dispute
    French riots after Algeria-Egypt match
    Major powers to hold Iran nuclear talks on Nov 20
    French publishers slam new Google book proposals
    Germany to reassess Afghan troop levels next year | International |
    Suicide attack kills 10 in Afghanistan
    Afghanistan is world's worst place to be born: UN | International |
    Wikipedia, iPhone among decade's top 10 Internet moments
    British PM backs Ashton for EU foreign affairs job | International |
    Tsvangirai to discuss Zimbabwe crisis with Gaddafi | International |
    Somali pirates free UAE-owned cargo ship: trader | International |
    Resettlement quickened for Sri Lanka war displaced
    Wikipedia, iPhone among decade's top 10 Internet moments | Technology |
    China ramps up espionage against US: study
    Off-duty Las Vegas police officer slain at home
    Google shows off Chrome operating system | Technology |
    Taiwan director plans Chen Shui-bian assassination movie
    Microsoft says Windows 7 sales strong | Technology |
    Gov't: Dismiss some counts in slaughterhouse case
    China tightens supervision of online games
    Autopsies: Drowned students had no drugs in system
    AOL to cut one-third of workforce | Technology |
    On last day in Asia, Obama sets date for N.Korea talks
    Feinstein seeks national energy standards for TVs
    AP NewsBreak: China holds, mistreats US geologist
    Weak jobless claims, future economic activity data
    US advisory panel warns of rampant Chinese spying
    Clerics cringe as Indonesians flock to doomsday film
    US survey shows southern counties most obese
    Tokyo crowned new gourmet capital by Michelin
    Geithner: some bailout funds to help lower deficit
    Major militant attacks in Pakistan since October
    NJ airport guard in Obama threat case is sentenced
    Grinch! North Pole irked at end to Santa replies
    FAA glitch causes widespread US air travel delays
    World recover 'modest', debt must stop: OECD
    1.5M per day getting swine flu vaccine in China
    Jason Reitman documents promotion of his new film
    Turkmenistan seen as top gas supplier for Nabucco
    Japan Airlines to take time mulling allegiances
    Pakistan's forex reserves dip to $14.12 bln
    Pakistani stocks end higher; rupee flat
    Jakarta halts deforestation in Sumatra's Kampar Peninsula
    Susan Boyle album sets pre-order record on Amazon | Entertainment |
    Indonesia sending 1,125 peacekeepers to Lebanon
    Chief: Parker-Broderick surrogate's door wide open
    Indian billionaires bounce back: Forbes
    A Minute With: Adam Lambert For Your Entertainment | Entertainment |
    A Minute With: Adam Lambert "For Your Entertainment"
    Glam challenge: 96 competitors in Paris stiletto race
    Kris Allen fine seeing Adam Lambert in the spotlight | Entertainment |
    Exhibit of China's terracotta warriors in US capital
    Golden cross in Vatican's collection gets new look
    Werner Herzog to head Berlin Film Festival jury
    Model Kate Moss criticized for "skinny" remark
    "New Moon" aims for big bite from box offices
    Norah Jones experiments with guitars and grooves
    Canada rules out possible Afghan torture probe
    Putin derides Georgian leader Saakashvili
    EU names Belgian PM Van Rompuy as first president | International |
    US-TECH Summary
    Russia, Ukraine reach gas compromise deal: Putin
    'Too early' for Afghan handover deadline: Gates
    Chinese cyber-spying grows against U.S: report
    Karzai sworn in as Afghan leader; vows to fight graft | International |
    Iraq election impasse continues, veto contested
    Death toll from Afghan suicide blast rises to 13 | International |
    UN tribunal picks London lawyer for Karadzic
    Copenhagen summit will be 'success': UN climate chief
    Google PC will start in seven seconds or less
    Eight dead in suspected U.S. missile strike in Pakistan | International |
    Belgian PM chosen as first EU president
    World powers weigh new sanctions for Iran
    Smartphone growth to continue strong in 2010
    Scientists uncover corn's full genetic code
    Honduras's de facto leader may step aside for a week | International |
    Iraq sentences militia leader to death
    Embryonic stem cell therapy closer to human trials
    Dell shares down as net profit dips 54 percent
    AP lays off 90 to reach payroll reduction target
    Three killed in latest bomb blast in Pakistan city | International |
    "What's happening?" Twitter wants to know
    China activists say detained after seeking to meet Obama | International |
    Venezuela blows up two foot bridges to Colombia | International |
    Microsoft says Windows 7 sales strong
    US senator urges TVs that use less power
    Anglican head challenges Vatican over women clergy | International |
    Aussie pilot who landed in shark waters hailed a hero
    Google says PC will start in seven seconds or less | Technology |
    Second Bangladeshi twin opens eyes after separation op
    Smartphone growth to continue strong in 2010 | Technology |
    Australia 'disappointed' at Japan whaling mission
    Chinese cyber-spying grows against U.S: report | Technology |
    Chinese defence chief to visit N.Korea: media
    Man faces murder charge in NC girl's disappearance
    AOL shows worst not over for media job cuts | Technology |
    Rock star welcome at home for boxing king Pacquiao
    China orders more accurate swine flu tallies
    Alleged burglar warms up bottle for crying baby
    Australia boost football World Cup bid team: report
    China vows to punish H1N1 death cover-ups
    University of Calif. approves big fee hikes
    NJ dad to testify before human rights panel
    Icebergs moving towards New Zealand
    Pacquiao in no rush for Mayweather clash
    Italy trial over murdered British student closing
    Plea deal reached in Pa. steel town arson case
    Texas inmate executed after gov. rejects clemency
    Man who left wallet in bank robbery pleads guilty
    Couple charged in Phoenix airport luggage thefts
    Taiwan sells 273-day T-bills at 0.259 pct yield
    Deflation major issue for Japan: finance minister
    Japan maintains super-low interest rates
    John Woo exporting Hollywood values to China
    S.Korea to prepare guidelines on bond naked short selling
    Seoul shares decline 0.2 pct; KEB advances
    NZ credit card billings up slightly in October-RBNZ
    US lawmakers threaten China sanctions over currency
    S.Korea bonds fall as foreign investors turn sellers
    Oprah Winfrey to end talk show in September 2011 | Entertainment |
    Seoul shares open lower on U.S. fall, econ worry
    John Kerry's daughter arrested in Hollywood | Entertainment |
    Project Runway season finale airs after legal dispute | Entertainment |
    S.Korea to raise 2010 growth target to 4-5 pct -paper
    US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
    "Project Runway" season finale airs after legal dispute
    Ethiopian Jews in Israel still await Promised Land
    'Passport please': new fences for a border town
    John Woo exporting Hollywood values to China
    'Un-Indian' Bollywood promo sparks protests
    Miss Calif. pageant gives ad time to gay group
    AP NewsAlert
    Final season of `Lost' to begin Feb. 2
    Two Calgary Kids To Explore 'Unique' Homework Plan After Striking Deal With Parents
    Dining Establishment On Parliament Hill Adds Seal Meat To Menu
    Filipina Congresswoman Sworn In Two Years After Elections
    Santa May Not Answer Letters This Year
    Wife Consistently Fails to Kill Husband...Three Times
    Israeli, Palestinian Olive Crops Beset By Theft And Violence
    Saudi Clerics Told to Keep Sermons Short
    Filipino Residents Cook At Dump Oozing With Methane
    Ozark Cop Tases Unruly 10-Year-Old
    Police: Eviction Notice Leads Davie Couple to Arson
    Giant atom-smasher poised for restart: CERN
    U.S. missile strike kills 8 in Pakistan | International |
    Motorbike bomber kills 12 in Afghan town
    ElBaradei urges Iran to agree fuel deal by year end | International |
    Militants kill four Pakistani soldiers: officials
    Gameloft says it, others reining in Android plans
    Abbas confirms Palestinian vote to be postponed | International |
    Motorbike bomber kills six in Afghan town: police
    Sony to launch online entertainment service in 2010
    eBay completes Skype sale
    U.S. seeks release of geologist in China secrets case | International |
    Belgians proud but concerned over Van Rompuy exit | International |
    Britain hit by floods after record rainfall | International |
    U.S. soldier admits may have driven car in Japan crash | International |
    Transsexual in Italian political scandal murdered | International |
    Sony to launch online entertainment service in 2010
    Christian leaders issue 'call of conscience'
    End of an era: Oprah ending show after 25 years
    Gameloft says it, others reining in Android plans | Technology |
    AP IMPACT: Some lawmakers send few to academies
    Top SKorean model found hanged in Paris apartment
    US House districts with fewest academy nominations
    Top SKorean model found hung in Paris apartment
    Rebel blast derails train in India, killing 2
    Tiny Iowa town has the chargers, awaiting drivers
    Sony to launch online entertainment service in 2010 | Technology |
    Cambodia cracks down on siren use to halt traffic
    Biologists save fish after landslide
    Cost of child vaccines fall, more kids saved
    Analysis: Outlook for tough Iran sanctions is dim
    India's attack on Maoists troubles European aid body
    US envoy criticizes coverage of Obama China visit
    White House at odds with bishops over abortion
    Gunman kills four in Pacific island rampage
    Jayson Williams plea hearing delayed indefinitely
    Indian Maoists derail train, kill two: police
    FACTBOX-Capital control measures in Asia
    Sony hopes online service will build brand loyalty
    China's CNPC agrees to expand Sudan refinery
    S.Korea says Oct crude imports up 6.3 pct y/y
    Japan warns that deflation can drag on recovery
    India's Suzlon sells stake in Belgian firm Hansen
    Susan Boyle aims to turn celebrity into album sales | Entertainment |
    Thai exports decline eases in October
    New Moon plays it by the book | Entertainment |
    Liberace, Cruise, Palin among Winfrey's highlights
    Sun shines on golf's growth in China's Hainan
    "New Moon" plays it by the book
    US talk queen Oprah to end show in 2011
    Top S . Korean model found dead at Paris apartment
    Bardot urges end to animal sacrifice in Nepal
    PUBLISHERS WEEKLY BEST-SELLERS
    Heidi Klum wows crowd at Victoria's Secret show
    Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
    Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
    Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
    AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
    The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
    AMD to Start Production of piledriver
    Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
    Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
    Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
    ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
    Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
    What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
    AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
    Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
    Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
    Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights

    [InfoAnda] [Home] [This News]



    USD EUR - 1 year graph

    BlogMeter 1.01