Prometheus
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Itanagar: Guan Liang, the Chinese national arrested for travelling without valid documents in Arunachal Pradesh's Lohit district, has expressed his intention to seek asylum in India.
During a brief interaction with local newsmen at Tezu police station, 28-year-old Liang said he was a dissident and wanted to seek asylum in India.
"I came to India because everybody knows that India is a democratic country and respects rights. I want to work for political freedom of China," he said.
Lohit district police superintendent Manik Gogoi, however, said on phone that Liang was yet to make a formal request for asylum.
The Chinese national said he was a follower of Lin Zhao, who was killed in 1960 for protesting the 'silent killings' carried out by the Shanghai government and for violation of human rights in the country.
Speaking in fluent English with an American accent, Liang said he had sent an e-mail to the UN Human Rights Commission about human rights violation in China, while working at a French restaurant in Beijing which led the Chinese police to hound him.
After fleeing from his hometown in Henan district on February 16, Liang said he travelled through several towns of south-west China and crossed into Kibithu town in Arunachal Pradesh's Anjaw district in April.
Before his arrest at Digaru in Lohit district on May 18, he did much of his travelling on foot with people feeding him when he was hungry, the Chinese national claimed.
Liang has been booked under Section 14 of the Foreigner's Act for entering India without valid documents. Arrested Chinese national says he wants asylum in India
During a brief interaction with local newsmen at Tezu police station, 28-year-old Liang said he was a dissident and wanted to seek asylum in India.
"I came to India because everybody knows that India is a democratic country and respects rights. I want to work for political freedom of China," he said.
Lohit district police superintendent Manik Gogoi, however, said on phone that Liang was yet to make a formal request for asylum.
The Chinese national said he was a follower of Lin Zhao, who was killed in 1960 for protesting the 'silent killings' carried out by the Shanghai government and for violation of human rights in the country.
Speaking in fluent English with an American accent, Liang said he had sent an e-mail to the UN Human Rights Commission about human rights violation in China, while working at a French restaurant in Beijing which led the Chinese police to hound him.
After fleeing from his hometown in Henan district on February 16, Liang said he travelled through several towns of south-west China and crossed into Kibithu town in Arunachal Pradesh's Anjaw district in April.
Before his arrest at Digaru in Lohit district on May 18, he did much of his travelling on foot with people feeding him when he was hungry, the Chinese national claimed.
Liang has been booked under Section 14 of the Foreigner's Act for entering India without valid documents. Arrested Chinese national says he wants asylum in India