Beijing activist Xu Zhiyong, arrested yesterday, is one of the founders of a loose network of campaigners known as the New Citizens Movement, who, among other things, have called for people to get together on the last Saturday of each month for dinner to discuss China's constitution and other legal issues.
Xu had been detained last month by Beijing police in the latest blow by Chinese authorities against a beleaguered activist community that has seen a widespread crackdown against peaceful assembly.
Police have accused Xu of "gathering a crowd to disrupt order in a public place," a vaguely defined charge that rights groups say has increasingly been used against activists.
The New Citizens participants have lobbied for the rights of rural migrant children to attend city schools and for officials to declare their assets, down-to-earth issues that resonate with the Chinese public and make China's leaders worry about protests that could gain momentum and challenge Communist Party rule.
"Even though our principles and requests are moderate and lawful, the authorities see it as a challenge to the entire social order," Xu's friend and fellow legal activist Teng Biao said in a recent interview in Beijing. "In their view, they cannot tolerate this kind of activity that takes to the streets."
Teng said that dinner gatherings have been held in as many as 31 cities, though attendance varies from a couple of dozen people to around 100.
