Police video of Chinese lawyer's arrest raises questions

AFP  |  Beijing 

Chinese authorities appear to be mounting a against a detained human rights by releasing a seemingly edited police video which shows him and then swinging at an officer, campaigners say. was seized Friday by roughly a dozen police, including a SWAT team, as he left his apartment to walk his child to school, sources said. Yu, best known for suing the government over the city's once chronic pollution, has been a persistent voice for reform despite an increasingly severe crackdown on activism under The video, taken by a police body cam and published Tuesday by outlet The Paper, showed police surrounding the 50-year-old on a street before dawn and telling him he was to be detained for "provoking trouble". Yu's 13-year-old son -- who had run back home to tell his mother what happened, according to Huang Hanzhong -- did not appear in the video. In the footage Yu repeatedly tells officers "I will not obey," then throws a right hook at an before being subdued, though it is unclear if he landed the punch. The video appears to be edited: time stamps jump back and forth at several points. "An unedited video is not available so it's hard to say what happened, but it looked like it was taken during Yu's arrest," Huang told AFP. The video appears to show that police did not present Yu with a written summons notice, Huang said, a possible violation of Chinese law. Police appeared to be trying to provoke him by deploying three cars and a dozen officers, he said. They have not allowed Yu to meet his or family since his arrest. Shortly before his detention, Yu had circulated an open letter calling for five reforms to China's constitution, including multi-candidate He was charged with disrupting a public service, according to a detention order seen by AFP. Huang said the charge referred to Yu's altercation with the police, a crime that carries a maximum three-year jail sentence. It does not explain why the police were at Yu's apartment in the first place, however. The video was "obviously heavily edited" to suggest Yu had spontaneously engaged in unprovoked violence towards police, according to William Nee, at Amnesty International. "It is consistent with the government's attempt to smear the image of human rights defenders more broadly," he said. often shows televised "confessions" from suspects in detention or on bail, a tactic that lawyers say violates their right to a fair trial. "I've not seen (another) video of a or any human rights activist getting arrested.

I think the authorities are smearing him," said

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First Published: Wed, January 24 2018. 14:20 IST