Chinese authorities have detained Yang Maodong, known by his pen name Guo Feixiong (郭飛雄), a leading member of the country’s loose New Citizens campaign that promotes democratic rights, his friend and an international human rights advocacy group said on Saturday.
It is the second such detention of a leader of the group after Xu Zhiyong (許志永) was detained several weeks ago in Beijing.
Journalist Xiao Shu (笑蜀) — the pen name of Chen Min (陳敏), said that a sister of Yang was notified by the Tianhe branch of the Guangzhou police in southern China that Yang was detained on Aug. 8 on the criminal charge of disrupting public order.
The Chinese Human Rights Defenders also reported Yang’s detention on Saturday. A woman at a local police office referred questions to a detention center, but the detention center refused to comment.
“Guo is the leading figure in southern China for the New Citizens movement, and Xu is the movement’s leading figure in northern China,” Xiao Shu said. “The way the authorities handle Guo’s case is exactly how they have been handling Xu.”
Xu is considered a moderate, but outspoken voice in China’s beleaguered rights movement, campaigning for issues that include equal rights to education, and for officials to declare their assets.
While behind bars, Xu last week urged citizens to unite in pursuing democratic freedoms in a taped video that was posted online.
Yang, 47, is a legal activist and dissident writer. He had served a five-year jail sentence between 2006 and 2011, and the writer’s advocacy group, International PEN, has said Yang was targeted for his book that allegedly exposed official corruption.
Since his release, Yang continued to work on rights issues, his wife Zhang Qing (張青) said.
‘GREAT OPPRTUNITY’: The Paraguayan president made the remarks following Donald Trump’s tapping of several figures with deep Latin America expertise for his Cabinet Paraguay President Santiago Pena called US president-elect Donald Trump’s incoming foreign policy team a “dream come true” as his nation stands to become more relevant in the next US administration. “It’s a great opportunity for us to advance very, very fast in the bilateral agenda on trade, security, rule of law and make Paraguay a much closer ally” to the US, Pena said in an interview in Washington ahead of Trump’s inauguration today. “One of the biggest challenges for Paraguay was that image of an island surrounded by land, a country that was isolated and not many people know about it,”
DIALOGUE: US president-elect Donald Trump on his Truth Social platform confirmed that he had spoken with Xi, saying ‘the call was a very good one’ for the US and China US president-elect Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) discussed Taiwan, trade, fentanyl and TikTok in a phone call on Friday, just days before Trump heads back to the White House with vows to impose tariffs and other measures on the US’ biggest rival. Despite that, Xi congratulated Trump on his second term and pushed for improved ties, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. The call came the same day that the US Supreme Court backed a law banning TikTok unless it is sold by its China-based parent company. “We both attach great importance to interaction, hope for
‘FIGHT TO THE END’: Attacking a court is ‘unprecedented’ in South Korea and those involved would likely face jail time, a South Korean political pundit said Supporters of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol yesterday stormed a Seoul court after a judge extended the impeached leader’s detention over his ill-fated attempt to impose martial law. Tens of thousands of people had gathered outside the Seoul Western District Court on Saturday in a show of support for Yoon, who became South Korea’s first sitting head of state to be arrested in a dawn raid last week. After the court extended his detention on Saturday, the president’s supporters smashed windows and doors as they rushed inside the building. Hundreds of police officers charged into the court, arresting dozens and denouncing an
RELEASE: The move follows Washington’s removal of Havana from its list of terrorism sponsors. Most of the inmates were arrested for taking part in anti-government protests Cuba has freed 127 prisoners, including opposition leader Jose Daniel Ferrer, in a landmark deal with departing US President Joe Biden that has led to emotional reunions across the communist island. Ferrer, 54, is the most high-profile of the prisoners that Cuba began freeing on Wednesday after Biden agreed to remove the country from Washington’s list of terrorism sponsors — part of an eleventh-hour bid to cement his legacy before handing power on Monday to US president-elect Donald Trump. “Thank God we have him home,” Nelva Ortega said of her husband, Ferrer, who has been in and out of prison for the