Chinese activist feared detained for Olympics, group says

China PoliceBeijing - Prominent rights activist Zeng Jinyan is out of contact and is feared to have been detained by police before the opening of the Beijing Olympics, a rights group said on Saturday.

All attempts to contact Zeng had failed and she was thought to have "disappeared" from her Beijing home on August 7, the Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD) reported.

She has lived under "residential surveillance", or virtual house arrest, for many months and was already prevented by state security police from meeting foreign journalists or speaking to them by telephone.

"The control is tightening," Zeng said in a last brief e-mail message to dpa on July 10.

Zeng's husband, prominent dissident Hu Jia, was sentenced to three years and four months in prison in April after a court convicted him of subversion.

The US-based Dui Hua Foundation said Hu's arrest "cannot escape being connected to the Olympics."

Both Hu and Zeng have spoken out on human rights issues in China and voiced support the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan Buddhist leader.

"As the Olympics open in Beijing, it is believed that Zeng was taken away to ensure that no journalists will have access to her and that she will be unable to speak out about Hu Jia during the Games," CHRD said in a statement.

The statement urged US President George W Bush, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge, who all attended the Olympic opening ceremony on Friday, to ask Chinese President Hu Jintao to free Zeng from any illegal detention or house arrest.

Bush and other US officials have previously raised the case of Hu Jia with Chinese leaders. (dpa)

Regions: