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China executes Tiananmen Square attack leaders
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Aug 24, 2014


China detains film festival officials
Beijing (AFP) Aug 24, 2014 - Chinese police briefly detained two organisers of an independent film festival which was shut down on its opening day, an associate said Sunday, amid a clampdown on free expression.

Festival officials Li Xianting and Wang Hongwei were taken away Saturday by police who closed down the 11th Beijing Independent Film Festival, said Wang Shu, who works with the Li Xianting Film Fund behind the event.

"They came back last night, but I haven't seen them yet and don't have details on the situation" Wang Shu told AFP.

She added it was "inconvenient" to divulge too many details to media.

Li, a film critic, is the founder of the Li Xianting Film Fund, while Wang Hongwei is the festival's artistic director.

Police had prevented film industry workers and the audience from attending the festival, Wang Shu said on Saturday, saying it was "forced to close".

The festival has regularly run afoul of the authorities. Its opening day last year was disrupted although organisers continued the event in defiance.

Heavy security also turned out in 2012, when state media reported that the event was interrupted by a power cut.

Sources told AFP that authorities had put heavy pressure on organisers to cancel this year's festival in the days leading up to it.

AFP was also told that the films to be screened at the festival were not "sensitive" in terms of being anti-government.

Local police told AFP Saturday that they were not aware of the festival.

Chinese authorities keep a tight grip on information, with the media controlled by the government and online social networks subject to heavy censorship.

Hundreds of Internet bloggers and journalists have since last year been rounded up in a government-backed campaign against "Internet rumours".

The clampdown appears to be part of a concerted effort by the ruling Communist Party, which maintains an iron grip on power, to rein in criticism.

China this year has jailed around 10 members of the New Citizens Movement, a loose network whose members held peaceful protests in Beijing and other cities last year calling for officials to disclose their assets.

A founder of the movement, legal scholar Xu Zhiyong, was jailed for four years in January.

Under President Xi Jinping, who assumed party leadership in 2012, it has repeatedly vowed to combat rampant graft in the face of public anger over the issue.

But the party has cracked down on activists pursuing the same goals, seeing independently-organised groups as a challenge to its grip on power.

The arts have been no exception.

Guo Jian, a Chinese-Australian artist and former Tiananmen Square protester, was detained in June after making an artwork about the 1989 crackdown ahead of its 25th anniversary and was ordered deported from China.

Tiananmen is a particular sore spot for authorities who do their utmost to wipe even the slightest reference to the crackdown from books, television and the Internet.

China has executed eight people for "terrorist attacks," including three it described as "masterminding" a suicide car crash in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in 2013, state media announced.

The official Xinhua news agency said early Sunday that the eight were involved in several cases connected to the northwestern region of Xinjiang, where Beijing says separatist militants are behind a string of attacks that have rocked China in recent months.

Three of the condemned, named by Xinhua as Huseyin Guxur, Yusup Wherniyas and Yusup Ehmet, had been "deprived of political rights for life" at the time of being sentenced to death for their role in the assault in Tiananmen Square in October.

"They masterminded the terrorist attack" at Tiananmen Square, Xinhua said.

Two tourists were killed in the attack, in which a car rammed into bystanders on the iconic square in the heart of Beijing before bursting into flames.

Three attackers also died in the incident Beijing blamed on Xinjiang separatists.

Xinhua said five others were executed, including Rozi Eziz, who was convicted of an attack on police in Aksu in 2013.

Abdusalam Elim was executed on charges of "organizing and leading a terrorist organization," Memet Tohtiyusup had "watched audio-visual materials on religious extremism" and "killed an innocent civilian" in 2013, and Abdumomin Imin was described as a "terrorist ringleader" who led Bilal Berdi in attacks on police in 2011 and 2013.

Xinhua, which cited the Xinjiang region publicity department in its report, did not say when the executions were carried out.

Dilxat Raxit, a spokesman for the World Uyghur Congress exile group, in an email blasted the legal process surrounding the executions, calling it a "typical (case) of justice serving politics".

- Crackdown on dissent -

The sentences underscore the tough approach Beijing is taking to increasingly brazen and violent incidents.

The Tiananmen attack was one of several that have rocked China since last year, and which Beijing has blamed on Xinjiang separatists.

The far-western region is the resource-rich homeland of the Uighurs and other groups, and periodically sees ethnic tensions and discontent with the government burst into violence.

In March, a horrific knife assault at a railway station in the city of Kunming in China's southern Yunnan province left 29 dead and 143 wounded.

Two months later, 39 people were killed, along with four attackers, and more than 90 wounded when assailants threw explosives and ploughed two off-road vehicles through a crowd at a market in Xinjiang's capital Urumqi.

Chinese courts, which are controlled by the ruling Communist Party and have a near-perfect conviction rate, frequently impose death sentences for terror offences.

The executions and sentences are part of a crackdown that comes after Beijing vowed a year-long campaign against terrorism in the wake of the Urumqi market attack.

In June, 13 people were executed for Xinjiang linked terrorist attacks.

Beijing does not say how many people it executes each year. But independent estimates put the total at around 3,000 in 2012, a figure higher than all other countries combined.

Exile groups say cultural oppression and intrusive security measures imposed by the Chinese government are the main causes of tension in Xinjiang, along with immigration by China's Han ethnic majority, which they say has led to decades of discrimination and economic inequality.

Beijing, however, stresses ethnic harmony in the region and says the government has helped improve living standards and developed its economy.

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