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China's Supreme People's Procuratorate Claims to Battle Crimes Against Humanity; Will It Bring Jiang Zemin to Justice for Committing the Largest, Most Severe Crime Against Humanity in China?
By Minghui.org reporter Ouyang Fei
(Clearwisdom.net) China's Supreme People's Procuratorate announced on May
11, 2004 its decision to thoroughly investigate human rights violations for a
year and bring those government officials to justice who abused their official
power to commit crimes against humanity.
The Supreme People's Procuratorate's decision to "thoroughly investigate"
Chinese government officials' crimes against humanity is one indicator of the
human rights abuses happening in China. If the Supreme People's Procuratorate
has truly resolved to combat this problem and actually tries to bring those
government officials to justice, it would be progress for the Chinese justice
system.
However, one cannot help but wonder whether the Supreme People's
Procuratorate will really try to improve the human rights situation, given the
social and political environment that fostered such an announcement.
I. A Staged Act for the "White Paper on China's Human Rights in 2004?"
As soon as the "White Paper on China's Human Rights in 2003" was published,
it was met with a multitude of criticism from other countries because the
majority of the improvements listed in the white paper, such as SARS, the
average life span, GDP growth, and the increase of education opportunities, are
not related to human rights that the rest of the world identify with and refer
to. It is more like an end-of-year report from the Chinese government than a
white paper on human rights.
China's Supreme People's Procuratorate has now announced its campaign on
prosecuting Chinese government officials for violating human rights. It is
predictable that it will prosecute some of the "typical" cases of human rights
violation and include these cases in the 2004 White Paper on China's Human
Rights as an important part. Naturally, one would expect China to cite these
cases to defend its human rights violations in the next assembly of the United
Nations' Human Rights Commission.
If the announcement from China's Supreme People's Procuratorate is an
indication that international criticism has succeeded in pressuring China to
improve its human rights, it would be a true blessing. However, if it turns out
to be just a cosmetic job to beef up the contents of China's White Paper on
Human Rights in 2004, the beauty of China's human rights will be only skin deep.
II. It Might Be a Tactic to Shift Public Attention to Some Other Typical
Human Rights Violations
China has emphasized the death of Mr. Sun Zhigang (1) in its 2003 White Paper
on Human Rights. Shortly after the incident, in order to pacify the public's
anger evoked by Sun's death, China abolished the "Regulation on Repatriating
People Who Wander or Beg in Cities to Their Hometowns" (2) that had been in
force for many years. In the white paper, China painted the abolishment of such
regulations as a major improvement in its human rights conditions. However,
people have ignored the fact that at least 3 Falun Gong practitioners had been
tortured to death in the same police department where Sun Zhigang was later
beaten to death. Jiang's regime has never thought of prosecuting those murderers
who tortured Falun Gong practitioners to death.
The persecution against 100 million Falun Gong practitioners is the Jiang
regime's largest and most severe human rights violation by far since 1999.
According to incomplete statistics, as of May 31, 2004, more than 973
practitioners have been verified as being tortured to death in China. In
addition, there are at least 6,000 Falun Gong practitioners who have been
illegally sentenced to prison. Over 100,000 practitioners have been sentenced to
forced labor camps. Thousands of practitioners have been forcefully sent
to psychiatric hospitals to be tortured with injections that are damaging to the
central nervous system. Large groups of Falun Gong practitioners have been sent
to local brainwashing classes, where they have been subjected to both physical
and mental torture. Many more practitioners have been severely beaten and had
large sums of money extorted from them by so-called "law-enforcement officials."
When large numbers of Falun Gong practitioners are beaten to death, injured, and
their families are broken up, when they have to leave home and go from place to
place because of the persecution, millions of Falun Gong practitioners'
families, relatives, friends and colleagues are also implicated and brainwashed
to varying degrees. In addition, Jiang's regime has spread slanderous lies
against Falun Gong via China's state-run media to instigate the Chinese people's
hatred towards Falun Gong practitioners for the purpose of justifying and
sustaining the persecution. Students who practice Falun Gong are also subject to
severe discrimination from faculty and peers.
For five consecutive years since July 20, 1999, the biggest international
pressure that the Chinese Communist government has been put under was caused by
its severe human rights violations against Falun Gong practitioners. The
international community has been condemning the Chinese government for its
systematic persecution and torture of Falun Gong practitioners each year. During
the annual assembly of the United Nations' Human Rights Commission in Geneva,
Switzerland, each year since 1999, Falun Gong practitioners have gone to Geneva
to protest the Chinese government's persecution and have always been the largest
yet peaceful protest group in Geneva.
If the Chinese government were really trying to relieve itself from
international condemnation of its human rights violations, the best way would be
to just end its senseless, meaningless and immoral persecution against the
law-abiding and innocent Falun Gong practitioners, which Jiang Zemin has poured
a massive amount of national resources into suppressing.
However, Jiang's regime has chosen to exhaust all available means to sustain
and cover up its persecution of Falun Gong. One of its frequently used tactics
is to make minor improvements on another type of human rights violation to shift
the world's attention away from Falun Gong.
If China's Supreme People's Procuratorate should spend a year to make
cosmetic human rights improvements for the purpose of diverting the world's
attention from China's most severe human rights violation -- the persecution
against Falun Gong practitioners -- the "thorough investigation" to combat human
rights violations would actually become a scheme to abet China's human rights
violations.
III. Shouldn't Jiang Zemin's Persecution of Falun Gong Practitioners Be a
Typical Case That Ought to Be "Thoroughly Investigated?"
China's Supreme People's Procuratorate claimed in its announcement on May 11,
2004 that it would first pick a group of typical cases of human rights
violations to get the investigation efforts rolling. It claimed that it would
prosecute the suspects directly or indirectly, and that it will also dispatch
working teams to various places in the country to monitor the prosecution of
such cases.
The persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in China is undoubtedly one of
the most typical cases of human rights violations in China. It is also a case of
human rights violations in China that the world is most concerned about. Whether
China's Supreme People's Procuratorate is sincerely combating human rights
violations in China or doing no more than a cosmetic improvement, shall depend
on whether it selects some of the human rights violations against Falun Gong for
its campaign.
China's Supreme People's Procuratorate should have no difficulty at all
finding cases of human rights violations against Falun Gong practitioners. There
have been a huge number of such cases reported on Clearwisdom.net. Let's look at
a recently reported case. Ms. Huang Zhao, a young woman born in 1972 in Wuhan
City, Hubei Province, practiced Falun Gong. On April 1, 2004, the local police
snatched Ms. Huang and her husband (also a Falun Gong practitioner) from their
home without a warrant and took them to the police station. In less than 24
hours, Ms. Huang fell into coma while in police custody. On April 16, 2004, Ms.
Huang passed away. [See "Ms.
Huang Zhao Is Killed by Police and '610 Office' Personnel (photo)" for
details.]
China's Supreme People's Procuratorate claimed that it would thoroughly
investigate all cases of police illegally detaining civilians, illegally
searching or ransacking civilians' homes, interrogating suspects with torture
and violence, forcing suspects to confess with torture and violence, abusing
people in detention, arbitrarily extending suspects' terms of detention, etc.
Based on the Supreme People's Procuratorate's statement, shouldn't Ms. Huang
Zhao's death be a part of its thorough investigation?
The Supreme People's Procuratorate also claimed that it was determined to
bring all human rights offenders to justice regardless of their organization,
department, rank, position, or relationships. Amnesty International has
condemned Jiang Zemin as a "human rights scoundrel" for three years in a row.
Shouldn't Jiang Zemin be the first target of a "thorough investigation" of
China's Supreme People's Procuratorate? The Supreme People's Procuratorate has
made a lot of promises, but can it follow through?
If not, this campaign is no more than a theatrical performance designed to
fool the rest of the world.
IV. Who Organized the Investigation Campaign?
The Public Security Ministry and the Supreme People's Procuratorate are the
main organizers of the campaign to combat human rights violations, but they have
been following and assisting Jiang Zemin in persecuting Falun Gong
practitioners. The Minister of Public Security, Mr. Zhou Yongkang, has even been
sued for his crime of torture against Falun Gong practitioners in the United
States' Federal Court when he visited the United States in 2001. (3)
How can these human rights scoundrels possibly be trying to solve the human
rights violations that they have created?
There is an interesting paradox prevailing in China's political arena. The
deeply corrupt government officials usually emphasize the importance of
integrity in their speeches during the day, yet they take bribes and spend
taxpayers' money for personal pleasure at night. Please feel free to check out
the history of those high-ranking officials who were later arrested for
corruption, including Mr. Li Jiating (the Governor of Yunnan Province), Mr. Liu
Fangren (the General Secretary of Guizhou Provincial Committee), Mr. Cheng
Weigao (the General Secretary of Hebei Provincial Committee), Mr. Tian Fengshan
(Minister of Land Resources), or Mr. Wang Huaizhong (Deputy Governor of Anhui
Province). These so-called "public servants" are known to promote integrity and
condemn corruption in their speeches and reports while taking bribes at the same
time.
The above paradox has a counterpart on the issue of human rights violations.
Those human rights scoundrels keep claiming to prosecute cases of human rights
violations while continuing to commit crimes against humanity. How long will
these human rights scoundrels keep up this theatrical campaign to combat human
rights violations? Is there any actual meaning to this charade?
Naturally, one is always encouraged to maintain hope. Regardless of the
organizers' actual motivation, the campaign to combat human rights violations
might turn out to be an opportunity to improve China's human rights after all.
All individuals and groups in China whose human rights have been compromised,
including Falun Gong practitioners, should take the opportunity to speak out for
their human rights. Whether the Public Security Minister and the Supreme
People's Procuratorate are running a cosmetic campaign or truly trying to
improve China's human rights, things might turn out differently than what we
expect if all segments of society worldwide support the campaign and if we grasp
the opportunity to safeguard human rights and oppose the persecution of Falun
Gong practitioners.
Notes:
(1) Background Information on Sun Zhigang's Death:
Sun Zhigang was twenty-seven years old. He graduated from Wuhan College of
Science and Technology only two years ago and had just found a job after
spending twenty days in Guangzhou. On March 17, 2003, at around 10:00 p.m.,
while on his way to an Internet café, Mr. Sun was arrested and taken to the
police station on Huangcun Street, Dongpu District, Guangzhou, simply because he
didn't have his temporary residence registration card with him. Later, he was
transferred to the Guangzhou Detention and Deportation Center. When his
colleagues demanded his release on probation, for some unknown reason, the
police told them that Sun was not allowed to be taken home even though he now
had his ID card. When his friends called again on March 19, they were told Sun
was sent to a hospital for detainees. The next thing we knew of was the report
of Sun Zhigang's death on March 20, 2003. The police initially claimed that Sun
Zhigang died from a stroke and a heart attack, which is what was written in the
medical record.
Sun's father questioned this explanation and asked for an autopsy at
Zhongshan University Medical School at his own expense. The forensic examination
revealed that the police had lied. The report described that Sun had been
severely beaten within 72 hours of his death and had died of traumatic shock
from massive soft tissue damage. All the lawyers Sun's family met with didn't
dare to accept the case because they believed that since it was a lawsuit
against a government entity, it would be impossible to win even though they
might have all the evidence on their side.
A reporter heard about the story and made a low profile investigation of the
incident. The report was posted and transmitted on the Internet and aroused
nationwide anger. Then, more and more similar stories were revealed on the
Internet. People started to realize that Sun's death was just the tip of the
iceberg.
The publicity in the media finally led to intervention from the Chinese
Central Government. On June 5, 2003, three courts began trials of similar
criminal cases. Eighteen people have been convicted so far.
[The above information is taken from the June 25, 2003 issue of China
Scope.]
(2) In China, everyone needs to have a permanent residence card in order to
permanently (and legally) reside and work in a certain place. If a person wants
to temporarily live or work in a different place than the place where he
registers his permanent residency, then he needs to get a temporary residence
card and carry it with him at all times. If he is found to not have such card or
forget to bring this card with him, authorities of that place can arrest him and
send him back to his hometown according to the "Regulation on Repatriating
People Who Wander or Beg in Cities to Their Hometowns."
(3) See number 5 item of
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