Australia

China intimidated by new age political activist Drew Pavlou

China is a mighty country with robust economy and the largest population. It is the second largest economy of the world after the USA. Some experts term China as the next super power. But recently, China got intimidated by a new age Australian political activist and former university senator from the University of Queensland  Drew Pavlou. Pavlou is also known for organizing protests in support of the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests and against Chinese government policies on Uyghurs and Tibetans.

On 21st July 2022, Pavlou was arrested in London for an alleged bomb threat against the Chinese Embassy; an allegation he denied. He was mistreated and denied consular services by the Metropolitan Police.

Drew Pavlou’s tweet stating his ordeal with the London Police

This is Drew Pavlou today I will blow up the Embassy for Uyghurs

Regards Drew (Fake Email produced)

The above fake email was produced by the Chinese Embassy as the evidence.

British police held him for 23 hours. He was isolated and could not tell anybody where he was. On top of this, he was denied access to a lawyer for more than 10 hours. They claimed that his lawyers were unavailable. However, Pavlou claimed that “his lawyers called the police dozens of times”.

Pavlou claimed that during his detainment, he was treated poorly and was handcuffed in a “stressed position” by the arresting officers. Pavlou also alleged that no one was aware of his whereabouts and was not being allowed to call anyone until 1 a.m. when all his contacts were asleep. 

On top of this, Pavlou was propelled to sign a document, giving up his right to legal representation and give interview at 4 a.m. However these allegations were denied by the Metropolitan Poilce.

The department abides to “strict codes of practice under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act” for detainees

Alan Crockford, spokesman for the Metropolitan Police

Some of the human rights activists and politicians also claimed of receiving emails from accounts that were pretending to be Pavlou. This included Australian Senator James Paterson, London-based campaigner Luke de Pulford, UK-based rights lawyer Caoilfhionn Gallagher and Monash University’s lecturer Kevin Carrico.


It was not the first instance when he was denied the right to protest. Earlier, based on his admission, he was “treated like a terrorist” while being ejected from the men’s Wimbledon final for staging a protest against the Chinese Communist Party. He just wore the T-shirt asking about the whereabouts of the Chinese Tennis player Peng Shuai.

Drew Pavlou at Wimbeldon
Drew Pavlou thrown out by the security
Drew being threatened just for holding a sign board

Despite all these hindrances in his crusade, he has stood up for the causes he cares for as the Freedom of Tibet, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. Recently he interrupted the Chinese ambassador to Australia’s speech while holding a sign that reads “Free Tibet. Free East Turkestan. Free Hong Kong”. This relentless crusade has intimidated mighty China.


Editor

Recent Posts

Bosnian Genocide survivors reflect on the parallels with Uyghurs’ suffering

Survivors of the Bosnian Genocide 30 years ago told Radio Free Asia that they see…

12 hours ago

Ukraine military drops leaflets urging North Korean troops to surrender

The Ukrainian military is dropping Korean-language leaflets urging North Korean troops fighting on Russia’s side…

1 day ago

Media Watch: Rumors hit chipmaker Nvidia amid US-China row

The escalating chip row between the United States and China has taken a sharp turn…

2 days ago

Junta forces are mobilizing in central Myanmar amid Shan state ceasefire, rebel say

Myanmar’s junta has been mobilized forces for offensives in the Mandalay, Sagaing and Magway regions…

2 days ago

Myanmar appoints new defense minister as army struggles

Read RFA coverage of this topic in Burmese.Myanmar’s junta appointed a new minister of defense,…

3 days ago

Ukraine drones kill 50 North Koreans in battle in Kursk region

Read a version of this story in KoreanAround 50 North Korean soldiers were killed in…

3 days ago

This website uses cookies.