Tuesday, August 24, 2010

【China AIDS:5678】 曼谷邮报关于田喜的消息

 

China AIDS campaigner detained

  • Published: 21/08/2010 at 11:56 PM
  • Online news: Breakingnews

A 23-year-old Chinese man who contracted the AIDS virus as a boy through a blood transfusion and who has since campaigned for the rights of AIDS sufferers has been detained, activists said Saturday.

Two workers walk in front of a large red ribbon displayed for International World AIDS Day in Beijing in 2009. A 23-year-old Chinese man who contracted the AIDS virus as a boy through a blood transfusion and who has since campaigned for the rights of AIDS sufferers has been detained, activists said Saturday.

Tian Xi, who told fellow activists that his repeated protests had angered authorities, was detained on Tuesday at a hospital in Henan province's Xincai county before being taken to an unknown location, the campaigners said.

Tian was lobbying for compensation for thousands of Chinese like himself who have contracted HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, via tainted blood supplies.

He learned recently that local officials had urged police to detain him to curtail his work, according to the Chinese group Aizhixing and Meg Davis begin_of_the_skype_highlighting     end_of_the_skype_highlighting, the New York-based head of Asia Catalyst, a group which helps to train activists.

"Tian Xi is a sweet guy who has suffered a great deal and who cares deeply about the suffering of others. He is in poor health and we're very concerned about his condition in detention," Davis told AFP.

Police in Gulu, the town where Tian was living, declined to comment, while calls to officials in Xincai county went unanswered.

Tian has in the past worked for Aizhixing, which was instrumental in uncovering a blood-selling scandal in Henan in the 1990s that led to the infection of up to 150,000 people with HIV.

The group -- whose leader Wan Yanhai fled to the United States with his family earlier this year because he said he feared for his safety -- said it was "stunned" by Tian's detention.

"Thousands of people have been infected with HIV through blood sales and blood transfusions, and Tian Xi's case is an emblem of this ongoing disaster," said Davis, who last had contact with Tian on August 13.

China says that at least 740,000 people are living with HIV, but campaigners say the actual figure could be far higher.

The head of UNAIDS, Michel Sidibe, warned last year that 50 million people in the country were at risk of contracting the AIDS virus, mainly through unprotected sex or the sharing of needles.

Faced with this problem, the government has started talking more openly about HIV prevention and control in China, where people with AIDS still encounter huge discrimination in employment, education and healthcare.

But the hassling of some independent campaigners and organisations has nevertheless continued.

Like Wan, high-profile AIDS activist Gao Yaojie left China for the United States last year due to ongoing pressure. AIDS campaigner Hu Jia was sentenced to more than three years in prison in 2008 on subversion charges.

In July, Tian was held for several hours in a so-called "black jail", or illegal detention centre, in Beijing while on a petitioning trip, Aizhixing said.

Davis said of her last exchange with Tian: "I asked him if there was anything we could do to help, and he replied, 'I don't think I can escape my fate'."

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