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Foreign activists held in China | |
(about 6 hours later) | |
Six foreign activists have been detained for holding a protest on the Great Wall of China. | |
The activists called for an independent Tibet, and claimed the International Olympic Committee was not holding China accountable for human rights abuses. | |
The protest comes as China gets ready to mark a year before the Beijing Olympic Games begin, on 8 August 2008. | |
The games countdown has also brought protests from other groups, including Amnesty and Reporters without Borders. | |
Highlighting abuses | |
The activists - from Canada, the US and Britain - unveiled a banner reading "One World, One Dream, Free Tibet 2008", on the side of the Great Wall. | |
"One World, One Dream" is the motto for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. | |
Activists say China is using the Olympics to try to legitimise its claims on Tibet, which it says it has ruled for centuries - a fact many Tibetans dispute. | |
The protesters were on the Wall for about two hours before being detained, according to the group they were with, Students for a Free Tibet. | |
China is gearing up to celebrate one year to go before the OlympicsThey were not the only protesters using the Olympic countdown to highlight Chinese human rights violations. | |
Amnesty International has warned that the image of the games will be tarnished unless China acts urgently to stop abuses. | |
In a report, the group accused China's authorities of detaining activists and journalists without trial, in a "clean up" of the capital. | |
"Official statements suggest that the Olympics are being used to justify such repression in the name of 'harmony' or 'social stability' rather than acting as a catalyst for reform," said Amnesty's report. | |
The organisation said China had taken some positive steps in recent months by reforming the death penalty and relaxing restrictions on foreign journalists. | The organisation said China had taken some positive steps in recent months by reforming the death penalty and relaxing restrictions on foreign journalists. |
But Irene Khan, the organisation's secretary general, said they had also "tightened up the ability of Chinese journalists to work". | But Irene Khan, the organisation's secretary general, said they had also "tightened up the ability of Chinese journalists to work". |
"We've also seen increasing arrests of human rights activists, an increasing use of 're-education' through forced labour, and what they call enforced drug rehabilitation," she said. | |
The Amnesty report follows a visit to Beijing by the Paris-based organisation Reporters Without Borders, which called for the release of more than 80 jailed journalists and dissidents in China. | The Amnesty report follows a visit to Beijing by the Paris-based organisation Reporters Without Borders, which called for the release of more than 80 jailed journalists and dissidents in China. |
Members of the organisation demonstrated near the Olympic headquarters, wearing black T-shirts showing handcuffs in place of the Olympic Rings. | |
"We didn't come to call for a boycott," said Vincent Brossel, a spokesman for the group. "We are calling for concrete achievements, the release of political prisoners, opening of Web access and an end to radio jamming." | |
Meanwhile organisers of the Beijing Olympics have repeatedly expressed a desire to keep the games non-political. | |
Speaking before the Amnesty report had been issued, Jiang Xiaoyu of the Beijing organising committee said: "We welcome even more constructive criticism on faults and problems." | |
But he said politicising the event did not "accord with the Olympic spirit". |