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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

China targets groups that help fight AIDS

Tim Johnson McClatchy

BEIJING – Wary of exposing China’s flaws to the news media’s glare before next year’s Olympic Games, authorities are cracking down on groups that help AIDS patients and orphans, shuttering their offices and banning meetings and other gatherings.

In one case, an activist in Henan province, where the nation’s AIDS crisis hit early, said police ordered him out of his office on Thursday and suggested that he flee the area for his own safety. Six other volunteers in the group were detained.

“They said our organization was illegal and our activities were illegal,” said Zhu Zhaowu of the China Orchid AIDS Project’s office in Kaifeng in central Henan province.

Police in the same city barred a conference for AIDS activists that had been scheduled for Aug. 19-20 by another nonprofit group known as Grassroots.

Police pulled the plug earlier this month on two other AIDS conferences in the southern city of Guangzhou – one that was to bring legal scholars from three continents and another at Sun Yatsen University.

The repression perplexes foreign experts seeking to help China grapple with the rising challenges of combating HIV infection.

“Nothing about it makes any sense,” said Meg Davis, director of Asia Catalyst, a New York-based group and co-sponsor of the canceled Guangzhou legal conference.

Some domestic activists said China’s leaders are clamping down because they worry that international media attention in the run-up to next summer’s Olympic Games will focus on aspects of China that leaders find embarrassing.

“They hope that there will be no unharmonious voices during the Olympics period,” said Hu Jia, an activist and co-founder of a nonprofit Beijing AIDS group.

China appears to have averted the large-scale AIDS epidemic that has hit Thailand and parts of sub-Saharan Africa. Official statistics say the nation of 1.3 billion people has 650,000 people infected with the virus.

The virus has primarily hit drug users, sex workers, ethnic minorities and migrant workers. Henan province in central China became a hot spot in the 1990s when brokers known as “blood heads” paid farmers for blood and plasma, which they sold to unsanitary, often state-run, clinics and hospitals.

A July 24 report on AIDS in China from the Center for Strategic and International Studies suggested “that the disease may be moving toward a more generalized epidemic in China,” despite official reports that it’s under control.