Beijing/New Delhi/London, July 15 (IANS) An Indian is among the 20 members of a tourist group whose excursion in China “went horribly wrong” when they were detained allegedly for having terror links and held incommunicado for almost two days, said a South African charity.
‘Gift of the Givers Foundation’ said in a Facebook post that the group was on a tour to explore ancient China as part of “a planned 47-day journey for 10 South Africans, nine Britons and one Indian national”.
The Indian as well as the other group members were not identified in the post.
The charity said the trip “went horribly wrong on Friday, July 10, when they were arrested at Erdos airport, Inner Mongolia, at 9.40 a.m. local time”.
It said no reasons were given for the detention.
India is working to provide consular access to its national arrested in China.
“We are seeking more details of the incident and are working on providing consular access to the Indian national,” an official source said in New Delhi.
The Indian has been charged under Article 120 of the Criminal Law of China, which relates to participating in terror activities.
He has been detained at the Ordos Dongsheng District Detention Centre, the sources added.
The Indian, whose name and which state he belongs to has not been disclosed by officials, was initially detained from July 11-14, which has been extended till July 18, the sources added.
Once the Indian embassy gets consular access, an official from the mission will go and meet him, the official added.
The South African charity said that “cellphones were confiscated, there was no access to the embassies of origin nor to their families. They were detained without charge with no access to any communication nor to legal representation”.
“It was only on Sunday, 48 hours later, when the tour operator realised that something was amiss and made the trip to Erdos, that the first information on the detained citizens came to light,” the Facebook post said.
It went on to say that the Chinese, “now trying to find reasons for the detention suggested that some members were linked to a terror group, to a banned organisation, to watching propaganda videos in their hotel room”.
A joint team from the South African embassy and the British embassy has met Chinese foreign ministry officials in this regard.
The Chinese have now agreed to release 11 out of the 20 detainees but “they will remain in detention without being charged until flights can be found for them out of China”.
“The other nine are being held without charge at a detention centre on the accusation that they were watching propaganda videos. They are five South Africans, three Britons and one Indian national,” the charity said.
The British Foreign Office said that 11 Britons, including two with dual British-South African nationality, have been arrested in northern China.
The Guardian daily said it remains unclear why the travellers have been detained, as diplomats sought more information from Chinese authorities.
South Africa’s Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) said a group of South Africans was arrested in China, reported iol.co.za.
“The South African government was notified on Sunday about the arrest and the embassy in Beijing thereafter,” DIRCO’s spokesperson Nelson Kgwete was quoted as saying.