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San Francisco Chronicle: Washington report blasts China on rights Zachary Coile, Chronicle Washington Bureau Friday, October 4, 2002
Washington -- Just weeks before President Bush is set to meet Chinese
President Jiang Zemin at his Texas ranch, a commission of U.S. lawmakers and
administration officials has issued a scathing report accusing the Chinese
government of "persistent violations" of the human rights of its
people.
The 78-page report, released Wednesday, criticizes Chinese officials for
blocking religious expression, jailing political opponents and workers' rights
advocates, and setting tight controls on press freedom and the access of Chinese
citizens to the Internet.
[...]
The report is the first annual review of China's human rights record by the
Congressional-Executive Commission on China, a panel of nine senators, nine
House members and five administration officials. Congress created the commission
in 2000 after China was granted permanent normal trade relations, ending the
contentious annual debate by lawmakers over whether to renew China's
most-favored-nation trading status.
The report urged the White House and Congress to work with Chinese
authorities to bolster the country's legal system -- an approach that drew
praise from California Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a commission member.
[...]
But Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., one of five commission members who refused to
sign the report, argued that the United States should take a harder line against
the Chinese government.
"The root problem in China is not just a faulty legal system, but a
corrupt, totalitarian, oppressive, communist ruling regime," Wolf said.
Among the commission's findings:
-- While China officially recognizes five religions -- Buddhism, Taoism,
Islam, Catholicism and Protestantism -- government officials have cracked down
on religious practitioners at churches not sanctioned by the state. By labeling
outside groups such as the Falun Gong as "cults" officials have
arrested thousands of practitioners and sentenced some religious leaders to
death.
-- Chinese authorities have repeatedly broken up demonstrations by workers
asking for better conditions, outlawed labor unions and imprisoned those who
have tried to organize workers.
-- The government bars criticism of the Communist Party and has demoted or
fired journalists who report on sensitive topics. Authorities regularly block
access to international news Web sites, and Chinese law imposes fines and jail
time for anyone who posts information on the Internet that, in the government's
view, "harms social stability."
-- Chinese police and prosecutors regularly use torture to extract
confessions from suspects, though the practice is officially banned. Authorities
often detain criminal suspects and political dissidents for long periods without
a trial and deny them access to a lawyer.
Bush plans to meet Oct. 25 with the Chinese president at Bush's ranch in
Crawford, Texas. White House officials said the main topics of discussion are
the war on terrorism and nonproliferation, but the president also is likely to
bring up the human rights issue.
Human rights advocates generally praised the report's findings, but
criticized the commission for not pushing U.S. officials more forcefully to
demand the release of imprisoned Chinese dissidents.
John Kamm, chairman of the San Francisco-based Dui Hua Foundation, who has
spent years trying to free jailed Chinese political detainees, said: "After
years of doing this work, I have come to the conclusion that the most important
thing we can do to support systemic change and reform in China is to help get
people out of prison who themselves, as Chinese, are trying to bring about
reform and change. It's that basic."
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/chronicle/a/2002/10/04/MN92086.DTL
Posting date: 10/6/2002
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