Germany: Press Release from Attorney Wolfgang Kaleck Concerning the Filing of the Criminal Lawsuit Against Jiang Zemin
This lawsuit has been filed against Jiang Zemin, the former
President of China and other functionaries of the PRC, accusing them of
genocide, crimes against humanity, torture, murder and the severe bodily harm of
Falun Gong practitioners in the period between 1999 and 2003. As Johannes Rau
commented in Nanjing: Human rights have a universal meaning. In September 2003,
the German Federal President went on to say in a statement about human rights
that was given in front of approximately one thousand students and professors at
the University of Nanjing: If it concerns a person's fundamental rights to life,
freedom, and the protection from torture, arbitrary imprisonment and
discrimination, the prerequisites for being able to walk upright basically
cannot be compromised. The submission of the lawsuit that has been prepared for
November 2003 in Germany stands on this intellectual background. This lawsuit
focuses entirely on the crimes of Jiang Zemin and his followers, who do not
represent the Chinese people or the Chinese state.
Punishment for Human Rights Transgressions in China:
On November 21st 2003, a criminal lawsuit was filed in
Germany's highest court in Karlsruhe against the former president of China,
Jiang Zemin, and other functionaries of the PRC. Plaintiffs are forty Germans,
Chinese, Irish, Canadians, Australians and U.S. citizens. The suit accuses the
defendants of crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, murder, torture and
serious bodily harm, amongst others against Falun Gong practitioners, in the
period between 1999 and 2003. Sixteen defendants have been named outright.
Others, who are unnamed have also been included in this 86-page indictment as
parties directly or indirectly involved with these accusations and who have
participated or caused to participate in the torture and abuse of Falun Gong
practitioners. This criminal complaint graphically outlines fifteen of these
cases in detail. These have occurred in police custody and in forced labour
camps.
The suit has been delivered to the Federal Court in Karlsruhe,
accompanied by two volumes of documentation, including additional testimony from
well-respected human rights organisations, such as Amnesty International,
and Human Rights Watch together with documentation of the deaths of 818
Falun Gong practitioners to date.
It would be desirable to work in clear legal terms about the
torture and death cases in China itself. But, in spite of the German-Chinese
legal dialogue, China still is far removed from implementing a rule of law.
Witnesses to these crimes and family members of the victims
are being threatened and frequently become persecution victims themselves.
Judicial exposure to those criminal acts that were committed at the hands of
these state functionaries in China is not possible. Even the efforts of human
rights organisations in China have been forbidden. International legal tribunals
have no jurisdiction for criminal acts perpetrated there.
That is the reason that the victims are filing suits in
European countries, such as in Belgium, France and Spain as well as in other,
non-European countries. Since at least June 30th 2002, Germany has such a valid
law on the books. It is the Voelkerstrafrechtsgesetzbuch, pertaining to
victims of human rights abuses, making favourable redress for those affected.
This law, unfortunately, has not yet been tested. The application will bear out
if the language of this law will withstand the deeds in question i.e. if actual
punishment can be meted out.
The Federal Court in Karlsruhe is the highest instance in
cases of genocide and crimes against humanity in Germany. The plaintiffs hope
that this higher court will not accept the status quo regarding human rights
abuses in China and that the court will commence enquiries against Jiang Zemin
and other accused parties.
The German court system does not permit legal processes in
the absence of the accused, and it is questionable if any of the accused will be
present on German soil anytime soon. But, considering a previous lawsuit brought
before the International Criminal Court in The Hague, the German criminal
justice system has an obligation to clear up as soon as possible these
accusations before the court.
As soon as possible, the defendants that have been named in
the lawsuit against which reasonable assumption of guilt exists, must as soon as
possible be served with an international arrest warrant. This has already
happened in instances of criminal activity by the Argentine military, a suit
that had been filed with the Federal Criminal prosecutor in Nuernberg-Fuerth.
That makes the accused acutely aware of their future travel plans.
German enquiries into these accusation will encourage
judicial enquiries in other nations into conducting their own investigations, to
collect these findings and perhaps, at some future time, to begin criminal
proceedings locally in China against those guilty of human rights crimes.
Signed Wolfgang Kaleck
Source URL:
http://www.clearharmony.net/articles/200311/16389.html
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