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Report: Chinese police detain political critic
AP - 1 hour 10 minutes ago
BEIJING - Police have taken away Liu Xiaobo, an outspoken writer and political critic who was jailed for his role in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, as well as another 1989 veteran, a Hong Kong-based rights group said Tuesday.
Police detained Liu Xiaobo and Zhang Zuhua at about 9 p.m. local time Monday, the Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy said in a statement.
The reason for their detention is not known, it said, but it came before Wednesday's 60th anniversary of the U.N. General Assembly's adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Liu's cell phone was turned off Tuesday, and his home number constantly engaged. The police did not comment when contacted by phone and fax. Zhang could not be reached.
Liu, 53, is a former Beijing Normal University professor who spent 20 months in jail for joining the 1989 student-led protests, which ended when the government called in the military killing hundreds, perhaps thousands.
He is still unable to publish inside China, and has been frequently called in by police for discussions on topics ranging from unrest in Tibet to the government response to the earthquake in the southwestern province of Sichuan in May.
Zhang was a member of the Chinese Communist Party Youth League at the time of the protests, but was later expelled for supporting the students. He is described as a constitutional scholar by PEN, the international organization that monitors human rights abuses against writers.
The arrests might have been to do with the fact that the two planned to hold a symposium Wednesday about human rights commemorating the anniversary of the U.N. human rights declaration, the Hong Kong group said.
Wang Chen, the director of the State Council Information Office, was quoted in a lengthy interview by official Xinhua News Agency Tuesday about the upcoming anniversary, as saying China has made great progress in human rights in the last 30 years of reform, but still has many difficulties and problems. These include social inequality, political structural problems, as well as lack of awareness by government.
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