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SINO DAILY
China dissident Hu Jia kept at home on rights day
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 10, 2012


Xi's Shenzhen visit a sign of reform: Chinese media
Beijing (AFP) Dec 10, 2012 - China's new Communist Party chief Xi Jinping has signalled his commitment to push for economic reforms by visiting the city of Shenzhen, the historic hub of modernisation, state media said Monday.

Xi's trip, his first official one as ruling party leader, echoed a visit by then-leader Deng Xiaoping to the southern boomtown in 1992 to revive reforms.

Deng had launched China's economic modernisation more than three decades ago under the slogan "Reform and Opening".

According to analysts the pace of restructuring has slowed in the last decade under outgoing leader Hu Jintao, but Xi's choice of destination sent a clear signal.

"The party Central Committee's decision to undertake Reform and Opening was correct," Xi said, according to the Nanjing Daily.

"We will continue down this path, unswervingly continue down the path of enriching the country and the people, and will break new ground."

Authorities stressed their commitment to reform during the once-a-decade party leadership handover last month that put Xi in the top spot.

They face growing calls to realign the economy to ensure long-term growth, by reducing reliance on investment and exports and boosting domestic consumption.

Growth slowed to a three-year low of 7.4 percent in the third quarter of this year, hit by the global economic slowdown. Leaders have warned that the past years of dramatic double-digit growth are unlikely to return.

"It is high time the Party stepped up reform and opening up," the Global Times quoted Huang Weiping, director of the Contemporary Chinese Politics Research Institute at Shenzhen University, as saying.

"And Xi chose to visit Shenzhen now because he is aware that China has just experienced a major crisis, and crisis always drives further reforms."

Xi is due to take over as national president in March.

Shenzhen served as an early "special economic zone" in the 1980s, a laboratory of sorts as the communist country began to seek foreign investment.

The experiment transformed it from a small village bordering Hong Kong to a bustling modern city and helped initiate years of roaring growth for the country.

During his trip late last week Xi visited a fishing village and an industrial park which is home to the IT giant Tencent Technology, the China Daily reported. He also laid flowers at a statue of Deng in a park.

Chinese police barred prominent dissident Hu Jia from leaving home Monday after he proposed marking UN Human Rights Day near the home of a jailed Nobel laureate's wife, who is herself under house arrest.

Authorities have detained Liu Xia at home without charge since her husband Liu Xiaobo -- the co-author of a human rights petition -- won the 2010 peace prize. He was convicted in 2009 of inciting subversion and sentenced to 11 years in jail.

December 10 marks the day the Charter 08 petition was signed and the day Liu should have received his Nobel award.

Hu had posted a note on Twitter on Friday suggesting that a park near Liu Xia's home would "be a good place to hold a human rights press conference" to mark the date.

But on Monday he told AFP: "The police are keeping me in my home until Tuesday to prevent me from meeting with people like you so that I will not be photographed or filmed for Human Rights Day."

Hu served three years in jail starting in 2008 after years of campaigning for civil rights, the environment and AIDS patients, and has remained under surveillance since being released.

Liu is one of three people to have won the Nobel award while jailed by their government, and his imprisonment elicited international condemnation.

China strongly condemned his Nobel prize as unwanted foreign interference in its internal affairs, and refused to allow him to attend the ceremony in Oslo -- where he was represented instead by an empty chair.

The European Union is due to be presented with the 2012 peace prize later Monday, and in a statement to mark Human Rights Day, EU Special Representative for Human Rights Stavros Lambrinidis called Liu's sentence a "clear violation of his right to freedom of expression".

His wife has been held under house arrest since the award was announced. The government has refused to specify the charges against her or explain why she has been detained.

US-based advocacy group the Southern Mongolian Human Rights Information Center on Monday published letters it said were written by family members of Hada, an ethnic Mongol dissident who has completed a 15-year prison term but not been released.

In December 2010 Hada, who like many Mongolians goes by a single name, finished his sentence for espionage and separatism after he advocated greater political rights for China's six million Mongols.

"Detaining Hada after the completion of his full prison term is an illegal act," Hada's wife Xinna wrote to the head of the local police force, adding that neither she nor her son had been allowed to visit him.

"Life has been extremely difficult for us both... over these years. One can walk out of the debris of history, but one cannot come out of the dark shadow of persecution," the letter said.

China has repeatedly dismissed criticisms of its human rights record, with a government spokesman saying earlier this year that China is committed to "promoting Chinese citizens' rights in accordance with the law".

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