FDI: Despite Cosmetic Reforms, U.S. Department of State Says Human Rights in China Backsliding
Report Details Continued Severe Persecution of Falun Gong "Although
legal reforms continued, there was backsliding on key human rights issues during
the year," says the report.
One
of these key issues is Falun Gong. As in previous years, the severe persecution
of the practice is a central concern throughout much of the report, with
extensive citing of torture, arbitrary detention, and unlawful killing, as well
as denial of freedom of religion, speech, assembly, and association.
The
report further details widespread abuse of Catholics, Tibetans, Uighurs,
journalists, democracy advocates, as well as AIDS/HIV and Internet freedom
activists in China. The Department of State (DOS) released these findings on
February 25 as part of its summary on the global human rights condition. Its
section on China emphasizes the façade of the Chinese legal system.
A
Politically Controlled Legal System
"The
Constitution provides for an independent judiciary," says the report. "However,
in practice, the Government and the CCP, at both the central and local levels,
frequently interfered in the judicial process and directed verdicts in many
high-profile cases."
The
case of Dr. Charles Lee (news),
a U.S. Citizen still imprisoned in China after undergoing a show trial,
corroborates the DOS's assertion about the politicization of China's legal
system. The DOS report points out that in sensitive cases like Lee's, which
normally last only a few hours, courts pass guilty verdicts directly after
proceedings.
Moreover,
police blocked defendants' right to seek counsel and, like Lee, defendants found
it hard to find a lawyer. Only one in seven defendants had one, and the
attorneys who attempted to fully defend their clients faced abuse by police and
prosecutors. Witnesses were involved in less than 5 percent of trials, "the
conviction rate in criminal cases remained at approximately 90 percent, and
trials generally were little more than sentencing hearings."
"Police
and prosecutors subjected many prisoners to torture and severe psychological
pressure to confess," says the report. These "confessions" were then used as
evidence.
Crocodile
Tears for Torture, SARS
Chinese
law forbids the practice of torture, and in recent months the Chinese Government
declared that it is undergoing a campaign to stop the use of torture in its
facilities. At the same time, however, Chinese authorities continue denying that
any Falun Gong practitioners are being tortured, even as daily reports from
China (website)
detail continued torture and killings of Falun Gong practitioners throughout the
country.
Torture
by Chinese police and security personnel is continuing, says the DOS Bureau of
Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, which issued the report. "Several hundred
Falun Gong adherents reportedly have died in detention due to torture, abuse,
and neglect since the crackdown on Falun Gong began in 1999."
Senior
Chinese officials, according to the report, acknowledged that torture was a
serious problem but were unable to take measures to stop it.
"Those
Chinese officials' comments are, at best, misleading" says Falun Dafa
Information Spokesman Erping Zhang. "The widespread torture and killing of Falun
Gong practitioners isn't the product of poorly educated policemen or corrupt
officials in a few cities. It's a state policy ordered by former Chinese leader
Jiang Zemin and a small circle of his supporters."
Similarly,
the DOS report questions whether the Chinese Government learned a lesson from
SARS or merely continued to put on a show. While some praised the Chinese
Government for admitting its mistake covering up SARS and finding several people
to hold responsible, the DOS report points out that, even long after
apologizing, the government continued to place sanctions on publications that
reported freely on SARS.
Moreover,
the Chinese Government used the opportunity SARS created to arrest hundreds of
Falun Gong practitioners and to embark on a new media campaign against Falun
Gong.
Paper
Freedoms
On
paper, China's Constitution guarantees its citizens freedom of belief, assembly,
press and speech. Yet, the DOS report concludes that "the Government tightly
restricted these rights in practice."
While
being detained in China, U.S. Citizen Albert Roman was more bluntly told by a
Chinese policeman: "We don't follow the constitution."
Officially,
the Chinese Government denies detaining political prisoners. But according to a
human rights organization cited by the DOS there were more political prisoners
in China in 2003 than at any time during the previous decade.
In
spite of its claims for improvements in its human rights record, as expressed in
a press conference protesting the DOS's submission, the Chinese Government
continues to forbid both domestic and foreign NGOs from monitoring its human
rights conditions first-hand. It did promise to allow the U.N. Special
Rapporteur for Torture to visit China. But the visit never materialized since
the Chinese Government refused to allow the international representative to
visit any facilities without prior notice.
Information
Control
The
Chinese Government has also moved to restrict Internet usage with what is
believed to be the largest Internet police force in the world. The Government
has also announced plans to control instant text messaging systems.
Information
from international media has also been blocked from entering the People's
Republic. According to the report, radio signals broadcasting Voice of America,
Radio Free Asia, and BBC continue to be jammed by the Chinese Government.
The
Committee to Protect Journalists declared China the "world's leading jailer of
journalists," and the DOS stated that reporters inside China are severely
restricted in their coverage of Falun Gong or other sensitive topics. Meanwhile,
"The Government continued an intense propaganda campaign against the Falun Gong."
###
NEWS
- Mar. 05, 2004 Background
Falun
Gong, also known as Falun Dafa (about),
is a practice of meditation and exercises with teachings based on the universal
principle of "Truthfulness-Compassion-Tolerance." Practiced in over 50
countries world-wide, Falun Gong has roots in traditional Chinese culture.
With government estimates of as many as 100
million practicing Falun Gong, China's Communist leader Jiang Zemin outlawed
the peaceful practice in July 1999 (report).
Since that time, Jiang's regime has intensified its propaganda campaign to turn
public opinion against the practice while imprisoning, torturing and even
murdering those who practice it. The Falun Dafa Information Center has verified
details of 901 deaths (reports
/ sources)
since the persecution of Falun Gong in China began in 1999. In October 2001,
however, Government officials inside China reported that the actual death toll
was well over 1,600. Expert sources now estimate that figure to be much higher. Hundreds
of thousands have been detained, with more than 100,000
being sentenced to forced labor camps, typically without trial. FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT THE FALUN DAFA
INFORMATION CENTER
WASHINGTON,
DC (FDI) -- The 2003 Department of State Annual Human Rights Report issued last
week, points to China's degenerating rights practices, some cosmetic
beautification not withstanding. (China
section)

The U.S. State Department
says China's human rights is backsliding as severe
persecution of Falun Gong continues.
Falun Dafa Information Center, www.faluninfo.net
Contacts: Gail Rachlin (+1 917-501-4441), Levi Browde (+1 914-720-0963), Erping
Zhang (+1 646-533-6147), or Feng Yuan (+1 917-941-1097).
Fax: 646-792-3916 Email:
,
Website: http://www.faluninfo.net/
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