2004 U.S. Congressional-Executive Commission on China Annual Report Cites Intensified Repression of Freedom of Belief
(Clearwisdom.net) On October 5, 2004, Chairman Jim Leach (R-IA) and
Co-Chairman Chuck Hagel (R-NE) and other members of the Congressional-Executive
Commission on China (CECC) presented the CECC Annual Report for 2004 in the
Rayburn House Office Building, Washington DC. The CECC was created by Congress
in October 2000 with the legislative mandate to monitor human rights and the
development of the rule of law in China, and to submit an annual report to the
President and the Congress. It consists of nine Senators, nine members of the
House of Representatives, and five senior Administration officials appointed by
the President.
The report stated that the Commission finds severe and continuing problems on
many of the issues critical to ensuring that its citizens enjoy internationally
recognized human rights.
During the press conference coinciding with the report's launch, commission
chairman Jim Leach expressed particular concern over Beijing's "crackdown" on
the free practice of religion in the mainland. According to the bi-partisan CECC,
the Chinese government's repression of free religious belief and practice has
grown more severe over the past year.
The report notes that the Chinese government continues to detain and imprison
Chinese citizens for peacefully exercising their rights to freedom of
expression, association, and belief. Coerced confessions, lack of access to
defense counsel, law enforcement manipulation of procedural protections,
pervasive presumption of guilt by law enforcement officials, judges, and the
public, and extra-judicial pressures on courts continue to undermine the
fairness of the criminal process in China.
According to the report, the Party intensified its crackdown against free
religious belief and practice during 2003 and expanded the campaign during 2004.
The Commission has welcomed China's progress toward developing a system based on
the rule of law, but in the case of religion, the Chinese government uses law as
a weapon against believers. Hundreds of unregistered believers, and members of
spiritual groups such as Falun Gong, have endured severe government repression
in the past year.
The report states, "The freedom to believe and to practice one's religious
faith is a universal and essential right. The Chinese leadership must open
itself to dialogue on establishing true freedom of religion for all its
citizens." The CECC also urges the President and the Congress to foster and
support such a dialogue by urging Chinese leaders at all levels to meet with
religious figures from around the world to discuss the positive impact on
national development of free religious belief and religious tolerance, and to
urge the release of religious prisoners.
The Commission also suggests that the President and the Congress continue to
urge China's leaders to eliminate all laws and regulations that allow the
arbitrary labeling of unregistered religious and spiritual groups as cults, and
to eliminate all restrictions and controls on the freedom to produce, read, and
distribute the religious or spiritual texts of one's choosing.
Source: http://www.cecc.gov/pages/annualRpt/annualRpt04/index.php
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net
