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Police in Beijing and other cities are aware of the jails but ignore them because they keep potentially troublesome petitioners away from cities, Human Rights Watch said. In some cases, police also have "directly assisted black jail operators," it said. "It's completely illegal, but the national authorities have done nothing to stop it so far," said Andrew Nathan, an expert on Chinese human rights issues who was not involved with the report. "At the same time, though, this informal system cuts against the ability of the central authorities to learn about what's going wrong at the local level," said Nathan, a political science professor at Columbia University in New York. "In the long run, it would be smarter for Beijing to let the petitioners exercise what are after all their legal rights." ___ On the Net: Human Rights Watch report:
http://www.hrw.org/en/node/86423
[Associated
Press;
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