On May 13, 2007, Beijing rights defender Zhou Li offered a free rights defense consultation to local residents on matters related to forced relocation due to building demolition projects. The consultations took place in Beijing at an open space near the residence of Liu Fengchi, an evicted household. According to an eyewitness, roughly 1,000 people went there for the service, including human right defenders such as Ye Guoqiang, Liu Anjun, and Ma Jiemin. Zhou’s two-hour consultations were incredibly popular with local residents, from whom she gained great praise. However, at 5:30 p.m. that day, after arriving home, Zhou was arrested and sent to Beijing’s Tiyuguan Road Police Station.
In addition to the Sound of Hope Radio Network’s on-line broadcast, foreign media including Associated Press and Phoenix Satellite Television also sent reporters to cover the incident.
Zhou Li mentioned that at about 3 p.m., upon her arrival at the open space in front of Liu Fengchi’s residence, police forcibly confiscated her banner, loudspeaker and the materials to be given away. The police also warned Zhou Li that what she was doing was subject to charge of illegal assembly. Ms. Zhou replied to them that it was entirely legal for her to promote protection of legal rights.
As more people gathered, more people became infuriated by the police’s action against the gathering. Zhou Li said, “Because too many people were there, the police didn’t dare to take action to disperse the crowd. Over 30 policemen could do nothing but idle under the shade of trees.”
A Beijing resident surnamed Qu told our reporter that since common people knew little of the law, they were very pleased to take the opportunity to learn something through the counseling. Many were surprised to find out that a lot of the Chinese communist regime’s enforcement was actually illegal, including forcibly taking away people’s information materials and destroying people’s banners.
