CHINA DETAINS ACTIVIST ONCE HAILED ENVIRONMENTAL HERO
04.25.07 - Leído 91 veces. Enviar esta notaChinese police have detained an environmental activist who was once praised for his efforts to save the country’s third-largest freshwater lake, his wife said on Monday, in the latest government crackdown on dissent
BEIJING, China; April 25, 2007.- Wu Lihong was detained on April 13 by police in Yixing, in the prosperous eastern province of Jiangsu, accused of extortion and blackmail, Xu Jiehua told Reuters.
Wu, 39, a salesman-turned-activist, had reported worsening pollution at the Tai lake from chemical factories to local environmental departments and the media.
His efforts upset local authorities who benefited from the high profits and taxes paid by the offending factories, Xu said.
“More than 10 plainclothes police officers broke through our door at night and took him away,” Xu said by telephone.
“Not until one the next morning did these people tell me that they were police and told me that my husband had been detained,” she said. “The accusations are totally groundless. All my husband did was try to save the environment and make more people aware of the situation at the lake.”
The Tai Lake, with an area of 2,420 square km (934 square miles) and a coastline of 400 km (250 miles), straddles the border of Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces and is home to more than 60 kinds of fish and other aquatic products.
In 2005, Wu was a candidate in a national campaign to name 10 people who “moved China” in their services to society.
Local police were not immediately available for comment.
Detention and harassment of activists is not uncommon in China.
In 2006, a court in Zhejiang sentenced an environmental activist to a year and a half in prison for “illegally obtaining state secrets”.
Gao Yaojie, a 79-year-old AIDS activist, accused the local government in the central province of Henan on Monday of putting her under secret surveillance after returning from the United States where she received a human rights award.
“I would rather die so I can save the government the money they are spending on spying on me,” Gao told Reuters.
Confirmation or comment from the local government was not immediately available.
Gao received the Vital Voices Global Women’s Leadership Award for Human Rights in March for helping bring to light official complicity in the spread of AIDS in Henan where thousands of poor farmers were infected in blood-selling schemes in the 1990s.
(Reuters)
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