South Africa's deputy president
Cyril Ramaphosa speaking during Madaraka Day celebrations at Nyayo Stadium in
June 2015 in Nairobi, Kenya
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A group of 20 travelers from Britain, South Africa and India
were detained in northern China, a relative said Wednesday. A South African aid group said some of them are accused of
watching videos deemed to be terrorist propaganda.
The Foreign Ministry said 20 foreign
nationals were suspected of committing crimes in Ordos in China's Inner
Mongolia region. It said nine were criminally detained on Saturday, which means
they can be held for up to 37 days by police while investigations continue, and
11 were ordered deported.
Associated Press report continues:
The British embassy in Beijing
confirmed that nine Britons and two dual British-South African nationals had
been detained, and said six of them had been deported. It said it was
"seeking further clarification" from authorities about those still
being held.
The group was initially detained Friday
at the airport in Ordos and was being held without charge, said Shameel Joosub,
a relative of three of the detained people and CEO of South African
telecommunications company Vodacom.
"My family and I are deeply
concerned for the safety and well-being of my brother, aunt and uncle,"
Joosub said in a statement emailed to The Associated Press.
Imtiaz Sooliman, a South African
disaster response specialist, said in a statement on the Facebook page of his
agency, Gift of the Givers, that the detainees were part of a group of 20
people — 10 South Africans, nine Britons and one Indian — who were on a 47-day
tour of ancient Chinese sites.
Sooliman said nine members of the
group were accused of watching terror propaganda in their hotel rooms and that
they would continue to be detained.
Sooliman said in a phone interview
that a relative of some of the detained had contacted him to look into the case
and that he was in close contact with South African authorities. He said the
group had been heading from Ordos to the central Chinese city of Xi'an when
they were detained at the airport.
The news of the detentions came as
South African Vice President Cyril Ramaphosa was in Beijing on a trip to China
that lasts until Friday. He met with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Tuesday.
Asked to confirm whether South
Africans, Britons and an Indian citizen had been detained Friday at Ordos
airport, a press officer at the Ordos police bureau said the case was under
investigation and refused to give details.
The South African Embassy in Beijing
referred requests for comment to authorities in South Africa, who were not
immediately available. The Indian Embassy did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
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