China Denies U.S. Request to See Imprisoned Panchem Lama


BEIJING, Jan. 14, 1999 -- (Reuters) China on Wednesday turned down a U.S. request for access to a boy spiritual leader designated by the Dalai Lama and said it regretted remarks on human rights by U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright (pictured).

A Chinese official added that if the United States pressed for a resolution critical of China in the U.N. Human Rights Commission this year, it could damage bilateral relations and jeopardize a human rights dialogue that resumed this week.

The United States, commenting on the outcome of the same dialogue, said it told China that a crackdown on pro-democracy activists threatened good relations in other areas.

The United States, changing tack from last year, may also seek the resolution on China when the U.N. commission meets in Geneva in March, said Assistant Secretary of State Harold Koh, who led the U.S. side in the talks.

The dialogue will resume in Beijing late this year and Koh said he had asked to see the Tibetan boy named as the reincarnation of the previous Panchen Lama. The boy, who disappeared with his family in 1995, is now 9 years old.

Wang Guangya, the assistant foreign minister who led the Chinese side in the talks, told a news conference that the boy and his family did not want visits and that precautions were necessary for the sake of their safety.

"The so-called designated Panchen Lama and his family are in good condition. Therefore, I think, at the request of the family members, they do not need to be disturbed," he said.

"The events surrounding the designation are politically sensitive. The safety of the family and the young boy is of concern so we have to respect the views of the family members. Precautions are always necessary," he added.

The Chinese authorities have designated their own Panchen Lama but few Tibetans recognize the child as legitimate.

Koh, giving his own account of the two days of talks in Washington, described them as frank and candid.

"We laid out a unified position on how the recent steps have imposed obstacles to our bilateral relationship," he told a briefing. "Human rights is not a marginal concern of ours in the bilateral relationship. It's central to the relationship."

"We forcefully raised our concerns about the current human rights situation in China, including the recent disturbing and counterproductive...sentencing of democracy activists for the peaceful expression of their political beliefs," he said.

"I don't think that it had been made so vividly clear to them how much the different pieces of the American government, as well as public opinion here, is joined in a belief that the recent actions are wrong and ought to be reversed," he added.

Asked what he told China about the Geneva meeting, Koh said: "We said we were considering a range of responses and that one of them, currently under discussion, is Geneva."

The United States decided not to seek a resolution on China last year in exchange for a Chinese commitment to sign the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Human rights organizations and members of Congress, angry at the arrest of Chinese who tried to set up an alternative political party, are pressing the Clinton administration to take a more assertive attitude at this year's meeting.

But Wang said such a resolution was bound to fall short of passing. "Anyone who wants to resume the Geneva scenario would not only damage bilateral relations but also the possibility of the continuation of the dialogue," he added.

On Albright's remarks, spoken in her toast at a reception on Tuesday evening commemorating 20 years of diplomatic relations with China, he said: "It's a regrettable event."

Albright told her hosts that peaceful political expression was not a crime or a threat. "We are profoundly distressed by the unjustified prison sentences recently imposed upon a number of Chinese who tried to exercise that right," she added.

Veteran activist Xu Wenli was sentenced to 13 years in prison on Dec. 21 on subversion charges for trying to set up the Chinese Democratic Party. Party activist Wang Youcai received an 11-year term the same day.

The next day, Qin Yongmin was jailed for 12 years for his role in forming the party. At least a dozen other party activists have been interrogated and could face arrest.

"They are criminals," said Liu Xiaoming, the deputy Chinese ambassador. "They have violated the criminal code of China."

"They have received financial assistance from abroad and their programs are aimed at subverting state law," added Wang.

Wang said the Chinese side asked the Americans about aspects of the U.S. judicial system, such as race, police violence, prison conditions and the rights of children.

"No country can claim its human rights record is 100 percent perfect so all have to make efforts to improve their record," he added.

Koh said the Chinese also brought up the death penalty in the United States and the racial composition of the prison population, which is disproportionately African American.

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