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Civil rights pioneer refuses to give up after authorities threaten to close office

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Most of the computers, documents and other equipment had been confiscated. Even so, civil rights activist Xu Zhiyong sat serenely in his office, talking softly.

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Downstairs, guards and plain-clothes policemen stopped petitioners who came to show support and prevented reporters from entering the office building.

On July 15, the Open Constitution Initiative, a volunteer legal service of which Dr Xu is the legal representative and co-founder, was ordered to pay 1.4 million yuan (HK$1.6 million) in unpaid taxes and fines.

Two days later, the Beijing Civil Affairs Bureau and police raided the office and took away documents, furniture, and all the computers and electronic equipment. Later, the civil affairs authorities said they would shut down the organisation.

But Dr Xu said the raid had no legal foundation and vowed the group's legal service and volunteer campaigns would not stop.

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'I regard it as a slap in the face of all of civil society in China,' said Dr Xu, a law lecturer at Beijing Postal University and a prominent campaigner of many public rights cases.

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