Is China afraid of a beauty queen?
That's what Canada's Miss World contestant is asking
after she said she'd been barred from entering the country to take part in the
beauty pageant because of her outspoken views on human rights in China.
Anastasia Lin, who was born in China and moved to
Canada as a teen, told CNN that she had been unable to board her Thursday
connecting flight in Hong Kong to the city of Sanya, Hainan, where the Miss
World contest is already underway.
A Chinese official named Chen told her by telephone
that she would not be granted a landing visa on arrival, she said.
Outspoken critic
Lin said that she had been publicly critical of
China's religious policies and is a believer in Falun Gong, a spiritual group
that is banned in China and which Beijing describes as a cult.
"I think people should know about it. My story
is just the tip of (the) iceberg," she told CNN.
She said her father, who still lives in China, had
faced harassment from security officials and had discouraged her from taking
part in the Miss World contest.
"He's scared to get on the phone with me,"
she said. "He's so frightened."
The London-based organizers of Miss World didn't
immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs.
Lin said she had earlier tried to apply for a visa
to attend the pageant but, unlike other contestants, was not issued an
invitation letter by officials in the host city.
However, she said she decided to make the trip as,
unlike elsewhere in China, citizens from 21 countries, including Canada, are eligible to get a tourist visa on arrival and stay for
up to 15 days in Hainan, an island province best known for its beach resorts.
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