China Deports American After Protest

BEIJING (AP) - China has deported an American college student detained for demonstrating in Beijing's Tiananmen Square against the government's ban on the Falun Gong spiritual sect, the U.S. Embassy said Tuesday.

China's Foreign Ministry confirmed to the embassy that an American was questioned and expelled on Sunday, the day of the protest, an embassy spokesman said on condition of anonymity.

The spokesman did not identify the American, citing privacy rules. However, the demonstrator identified himself to The Associated Press on Sunday as Andrew Muir Ellsmore, and Falun Gong supporters in the United States released the same name.

Ellsmore, 21, a junior majoring in geology at Humboldt State University in Arcata, Calif., was taken off the square in a police van after shouting "Falun Dafa is good" in broken Chinese and unfurling a banner emblazoned with the same slogan.

In a statement released by Falun Gong just after the protest, Ellsmore said the act was intended to "help people who have no voice and are in desperate need of justice."

Ellsmore's was the latest in a string of protests by foreign Falun Gong practitioners in China. All have been detained and quickly deported.

Some sect members have complained of abuse at the hands of police, although China claims all were treated humanely. Ellsmore was not visibly mistreated during his arrest or in the immediate hours afterward.

Falun Gong gained millions of followers in China and abroad during the 1990s, with its mixture of eastern philosophy, meditation and light exercise techniques.

Fearful of independent groups that could challenge the Communist Party's political monopoly, China banned the sect in 1999 as an "evil cult" and has sought to eradicate it with a relentless campaign of propaganda, arrests, and detentions.

Falun Gong claims almost 400 followers have died under suspicious circumstances in police custody. China denies abusing them, saying they have died from suicide, hunger strikes or by refusing medication.