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Chinese Man Beaten After Criticising Regime On German TV

The Three Gorges dam (pictured), which was officially completed in May, has led to the relocation of more than a million people. Photo courtesy of AFP.
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) Jun 13, 2006
A Chinese man was severely beaten after criticising, in an interview with German television, the way Chinese authorities dealt with people displaced by the Three Gorges dam, the television station said on Tuesday. German foreign ministry spokesman Martin Jaeger said Berlin was concerned about the report and had asked the German embassy in Beijing to demand an explanation from the Chinese authorities.

Fu Xian Cai, who lives in China's central Hubei province, was interviewed by ARD journalists on May 19 about the difficulties locals faced because of the construction of the dam.

He described his struggle to obtain compensation promised to those who had to leave their homes to make way for the dam, said Jobst Plog, the head of NDR broadcaster which oversees the ARD office in Beijing.

Fu told reporters: "I have gone to Beijing 15 times to complain to the government, and I have complained to the local and regional authorities 50 times. They have never helped me. On the contrary, I have been threatened and beaten."

Plog said the ARD bureau learnt last week that after the interview Fu had been so severely beaten by a group of unknown people that his spine snapped and he is now paralysed.

In an open letter to the Chinese ambassador in Berlin, Plog asked him to help put a stop to such incidents.

"I ask you to use your influence to ensure that the Chinese people no longer have to fear for their lives or their health simply because they dare to express their opinions on television," he wrote.

The Three Gorges dam, which was officially completed in May, has led to the relocation of more than a million people.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Environment Across China Getting Worse
Beijing (AFP) Jun 07, 2006
China's environmental woes are steadily growing and costing the economy around 200 billion dollars each year, the government said Monday. "The trend of increasing environmental degradation has not been effectively controlled," the State Environmental Protection Administration said in its first China Ecological Protection report.







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