AFP: China's Human Rights Record Remained Poor in 2001 [Excerpt]
By Peter Walker
Tuesday, 05-Mar-2002 BEIJING, March 5 (AFP) - China continued to commit "numerous and
serious
abuses" of human rights last year, a US State Department report
charged,
detailing problems including arbitrary arrest, torture and the
repression of
religion and of minorities in Tibet and Xinjiang. China's human rights record throughout 2001 "remained poor", the State
Department concluded in a scathing 70,000-word catalogue of abuses [...] The report, issued in Washington as part of an annual survey of global
human
rights, said the curtailment of human rights in China remained endemic
and
was part of the fabric of the Communist Party's monopoly rule. "Authorities still were quick to suppress any person or group, whether
religious, political, or social, that they perceived to be a threat to
government power, or to national stability, and citizens who sought to
express openly dissenting political and religious views continued to
live in
an environment filled with repression," the report charged. It also decried abuses such as "extrajudicial killings, torture and
mistreatment of prisoners, forced confessions, arbitrary arrest and
detention, lengthy incommunicado detention, and denial of due process". Religious freedom in China -- the subject of passionate appeals by US
President George W. Bush during his trip to Beijing last month -- also
remained severely curtailed. "Overall, government respect for religious freedom remained poor and
crackdowns against unregistered groups... continued," the report said. Unofficial religious groups were not tolerated and "church leaders or
adherents were harassed, and, at times, fined, detained, beaten, and
tortured", it added. The [...] Falungong spiritual group, outlawed as a [Chinese government's slanderous term omitted] in
mid-1999, continued to be brutally repressed, the State Department
said,
noting that "scores" of adherents died in police custody during 2001. The report cited "reliable" reports saying local officials from a city
in
the eastern province of Shandong, "were responsible for beating to
death
Falungong adherents at the rate of about one per month". [...] http://www.ptd.net/webnews/wed/ao/Qus-rights-china.ReNC_CM5.html
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net
