The Rule by Law in China Today -- Statement Presented to the Congressional-Executive Committee on China
Setember 08, 2003
By Terri Marsh
Human Rights Attorney
The Rule by Law in China Today
According to Jeremy Cohen in his "The Plight of Criminal Defense Lawyers
", presented to this commission on July 26, 2002, China's entire criminal
process is in need of radical reform. In his view, a "radical, long-run
political restructuring would be necessary to bring the PRC's criminal process
into compliance with [even] minimal international standards." A cursory
look at the problems Professor Cohen identifies reveals at least two types. On
the one hand, the practice of criminal law in China itself violates the body of
Chinese law, which includes but is not limited to the Constitution, the Penal
Law, Prison Law, and Police Law. For example, although both the Constitution and
Police law prohibit interrogation to produce (enforced and hence false)
confessions, police interrogation and torture is a fairly common practice in
China, as illustrated in many of the Country Human Rights Reports published by
our Department of State. Specific instances described include torture by
electric shock and the shackling of hands and feet; confinement of practitioners
in mental hospitals; use of excessive force in detaining peaceful protesters;
the death of more than 200 practitioners while in police custody with many of
their bodies bearing signs of severe beatings and torture.; and the cremation of
bodies before relatives examine them. See, U.S. Dep't of State, Country Reports
on Human Rights Practices -- China (2000) Available at http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2000/eap/684.htm
[1]?
On the other hand, in addition to Chinese violations of their own legal
codes, the second type of problem identified by Professor Cohen has to do with
the promulgation of rules, in the form of administrative orders, articles of
legislation, notices promulgated by all sorts of entities and bodies, including
even the courts. These create exceptions to the already drafted rules of law
which put some disfavored group or class at a disadvantage in securing the
rights the state acknowledges they have. In Jerome Cohen's piece, of course the
disadvantaged are all of those accused of crimes, especially those accused of
political crimes, and all of those trained to defend those accused of crimes --
the criminal defense bar. In spite of the so called right to counsel afforded to
all citizens, the People's Republic of China promulgated an exception for Falun
Gong. As indicated in an announcement promulgated by the Judicial Bureau of
Beijing, (see appendix), this notice as a practical matter denies all Falun Gong
practitioners their constitutional right to legal counsel. Similarly, long after
Falun Gong practitioners had been unlawfully arrested in China, the "anti
cult" law was passed retroactively by the People's Congress to eradicate
the practice by the label of evil cult. To up the anty even further, a third
rule was promulgated in the form of a notice by the Supreme Court. It states
that all persons who practice Falun Gong practice an evil cult. By such a
notice, the Supreme Court has undermined not only the independence of the
judicial branch of government, it has also undermined its modus operandi and
raison d'etre - to hear cases and render rulings. Before trial, with or without
a trial, if you practice Falun Gong in China, you are guilty as charged. With or
without an attorney, the deck is stacked.
The two above referenced types of problem identified by Professor Cohen are
referenced in Ronald Dworkin's A Matter of Principle (1985 Harvard
University Press). Chapter two, "Political Judges and the Rule of
Law," is especially relevant since it distinguishes between two definitions
of the "rule of law."
There is the rule-book conception, which insists that the "power of the
state not be exercised against individual citizens except in accordance with
rules explicitly set out in a public rule book available to all The government
as well as ordinary citizens must play by these public rules until they are
changed, in accordance with further rules about how they are to be changed,
which are also set out in the rule book." Id at 11. Those who
subscribe to this view tend to care less about substantive justice -- are the
rules fair, do they protect individual rights, is it feasible to believe that
such rules will in deed is enforced. As narrow a conception as this is, there is
not question that China has indeed violated the rule-book definition of the rule
of law, not only during the Cultural Revolution, the tragedy at Tiananmen, but
also, and most notably now during the latest persecution of Falun Gong. Those
just stated above as well as those stated below are examples of this
formulation.
There is a second formulation, which permits us to further evaluate state law
to see if it is consistent with even minimal international standards of law and,
thereby permits us to distinguish between a rule of law, and the rules
promulgated by, for example, the Nazis in WWII. This latter formulation
additionally illustrates how in fact what is packaged in China as a rule of law,
is in fact and indeed a rule by law.
In this second more expanded formulation of a rule of law, Dworkin observes
that Citizens have moral rights and duties with respect to one another and
political rights against the state as a whole. This formulation insists,
"That these moral and political rights be recognized in positive law, so
that they may be enforced upon the demand of individual citizens through courts
and other judicial institutions." Id, p. 12. This second conception
requires more -- including a judicial branch which operates independent of
legislative and executive branches; an array of due process rights such as
oversight of the judicial process itself, right to a fair trial, right to cross
examine one's accusers etc. And of course a right for all to secure the rights
the state acknowledges they have. In this formulation, the promulgation of
new rules to deprive Falun Gong practitioners of their constitutional and legal
rights itself signals that we are dealing with something other than the rule of
law in China today
As a China expert noted recently, what appears as a rule of law in China is
in fact a rule by law. Unlike the former, the latter is characterized by
the state's use of the law itself to disfavor groups, to single out groups for
unfair punishment, or, as in China and Nazi Germany, to oppress, torture,
exterminate or eradicate groups or classes of persons in ways that shock the
conscience and cause one to wonder anew -- how can we be so noble and so base,
and all be of the same human stock?
Actually it's important to note that a rule by law is nothing new in China.
It was used to create and implement the Cultural Revolution. It was used to
stifle the student democracy movement stated at Tiananmen. It is used to squash
labor movements, any and all criticism of the government. Most notably and most
recently it is used to deprive all persons who subscribe to the principles of
Falun Gong of the right to think for themselves, the right to a moral
conscience, the right to religious freedom, to freedom of speech, to assemble
freely and peacefully, to appeal illegal laws of their legislature and farcical
rulings of their courts. It is used and continues to be used to torture persons
who refuse to relinquish any of the aforementioned rights not for one day, or
two days, but endlessly for years on torture devices, which can only bring tears
to the eyes of those who truly contemplate what they are.
But in its latest guise, it is especially troubling and pernicious. In the
very beginning of the persecution of Falun Gong, it appears visibly and clearly
when 1) By order of former President Jiang, the police arrest Falun Gong
practitioners without legal ground, 2) The former president himself defines the
crimes retroactively, by trying to persuade the French newspaper Figaro, that
Falun Gong, a peaceful meditative form of cultivation, is instead an evil cult,
3) By executive order, the legislative branch passes the infamous anti cult
law to legitimate the illegal arrests by outlawing whatever range of meanings
are referenced by the overbroad and unconstitutionally vague phrase "evil
cult," and 4) When the Supreme Court instead of ruling on cases, expounds
on the nature of Falun Gong by issuing a notice declaring, at the behest of
former President Jiang, that indeed Falun Gong is an evil cult, and therefore
even before or without a trial, all who espouse its principles are guilty of
criminal acts. Not very different from the Nazis forcing Jews to wear the yellow
triangle to identify themselves as enemies of the state, and hence not deserving
of the rights afforded its genuine members.
Its beginning is replicated in its implementation. In early June of 1999,
former President Jiang gave a speech to the Politburo of the Central Committee
of the Chinese Communist Party wherein he creates the Office 6/10, a Gestapo
organization mandated to usurp proper functions of all three branches of
government, of important sectors of civil society, as well as private sector
businesses and associations. Officials of this office are stationed in the
appeals office where they are known to beat up FLG practitioners who attempt to
file an appeal in accord with rights afforded to all citizens by the
constitution. Officials of this office are stationed in schools, police
stations, hospitals, mental hospitals, detention centers, labor camps,
re-education centers. They issue the orders to doctors to force feed Falun Gong
practitioners who refuse to admit that their spiritual beliefs are corrupt. They
order the prisons' guards to place Falun Gong practitioners in cells with the
most violent criminals where they are beaten if not to death then to near death
regularly. They are stationed above the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and instruct
ambassador staff, and those working abroad how most effectively to expand the
persecution to those who practice Falun Gong here in the United States. Most
pertinent herein, they too promulgate rules and the rules they promulgate are
not only inconsistent with standards of common sense, decency, and morality, but
they are also rules established and promulgated to systematically, efficiently
and effectively persecute Falun Gong practitioners and eradicate the practice
utterly from the mainland of China, once and for all.
Finally, there are the sham show trials. According to an eyewitness of one
such trial, after the government's only witness admitted he'd never met or heard
of the defendant before the onset of his trial, the Judge without any evidence
whatsoever still found him guilty as charged.
According to Mike Jendrzejczyk, Washington Director of Human Rights Watch's
Asia Division, "cloaking this campaign in rhetoric about the 'rule of law'
doesn't give any greater legitimacy to China's crackdown on Falun gong... The
official ban... should be lifted; the government's pronouncement that it is a
true cult and that it must be suppressed must be rescinded. All Falun Gong
members in detention, formally charged, or sentenced to labor camps for peaceful
activities should be released immediately." Id.
I would supplement those remarks by suggesting that we do all we can to
promote the rule of law in China. That this Commission continues to do it can.
Because a rule by law is dangerous not only for the harm it wreaks internally,
but because as long as the rule by law is the norm, such atrocities as the
Cultural Revolution, the tragedy at Tiananmen, and most unfortunately and
notably the genocide it now perpetrates against Falun Gong will continue under
the cloak of a rule of law.
[1] .Since 1999, the United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom has Designated China as a country of particular
concern. See, e.g., Report Of The United States Commission On
International Religious Freedom, 25 (May 2002)
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