2005 Annual Report of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom States Chinese Government Continues to Be Responsible for Pervasive and Severe Violations of Religious Freedom and Related Human Rights (Excerpt)
The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom was created
by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 (IRFA) to monitor violations
of the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion or belief abroad,
as defined in IRFA and set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and related international instruments, and to give independent policy
recommendations to the President, Secretary of State, and Congress. Although the work of the Commission is conducted year round, the Commission
compiles an annual report of its policy recommendations in May to the President,
the Secretary of State, and Congress. This report covers the period May 2004
through April 2005. Countries of Particular Concern: Commission Recommendations In compliance with IRFA, the Commission has assessed the
facts and circumstances, including those in the State Department's 2004 Annual
Report on International Religious Freedom, regarding violations of religious
freedom around the world. As a result of this review process, and in furtherance
of the Commission's statutory responsibility, the Commission wrote to Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice in April 2005 recommending that she designate as CPCs
11 countries, including People's Republic of China. In China, the government continues to be responsible
for pervasive and severe violations of religious freedom and related human
rights. Every religious community in China is subject to restrictions,
discrimination, and state control. The most serious religious freedom abuses are
experienced by Roman Catholics, house church and unregistered Protestants, and
spiritual groups such as the Falun Gong, abuses involving imprisonment, torture,
and other forms of ill treatment. Though the Chinese government issued a new
Ordinance on Religion in March 2005, its provisions in fact restrict rather than
protect religious freedom, offering Party leaders more extensive control over
all religious groups and their activities. Country Reports: China The Chinese government continues to engage in systematic and egregious
violations of religious freedom. The State Department has stated publicly that
conditions for human rights, including religious freedom, deteriorated in 2004.
Chinese government officials control, monitor, and restrain the activities of
all religious communities, including Uighur Muslims, Tibetan Buddhists,
various spiritual movements such as the Falun Gong, "underground"
Catholics, and "house church" Protestants, maintaining final
authority over leadership decisions and doctrinal positions. Prominent religious
leaders and laypersons alike continue to be confined, tortured, imprisoned and
subjected to other forms of ill treatment on account of their religion or
belief. Since 1999, the Commission has recommended that China be designated as a
"country of particular concern," or CPC. The State Department has
followed the Commission's recommendations and named China a CPC. In November 2004, the Chinese government announced a new set of regulations
on religious affairs. Though Chinese leaders have heralded the regulations as
"a significant step forward in the protection of religious freedom,"
the bulk of the regulations codify provisions once scattered throughout several
sets of laws, ordinances, and regulations. The regulations do include several
new provisions, however, including conditions under which religious
organizations can provide social services in local communities, accept donations
from overseas religious groups, and host inter-provincial religious meetings.
The regulations also do not specify that official recognition is limited to the
five "official religions" (Protestantism, Catholicism, Islam,
Buddhism, and Taoism) as was the case under previous policy. Legal and human rights experts agree that the new regulations were not issued
to protect the rights and security of religious believers, but to regularize
management practices, thus offering Party leaders more extensive control over
all religious activity and groups. Moreover, the regulations threaten criminal
punishments and civil fines for groups engaging in religious activities without
having registered with the official "patriotic" religious
organizations. In May 2004, a joint document issued by the Department of Propaganda offered
instructions on "integrating Marxist atheism propaganda and education"
into the national education system, civil society and economic sectors, the
media, and academia. Observers have suggested that this document, along with
several directives to discourage "superstitious activity," represent a
pointed effort on the part of the Chinese government to stem the burgeoning
spread of religious belief among the Chinese people. Beginning with the banning of Falun Gong in 1999, the Chinese government has
continued to carry out a campaign against what it calls [slanderous word
omitted]. Thousands of Falun Gong practitioners have been sent to labor camps
without trial or sent to mental health institutions for re-education due to
their affiliation with a [slanderous word omitted]. Falun Gong practitioners
claim that between 1,000 to 2,000 practitioners have been killed as a result of
police brutality. Given the lack of judicial transparency, the number and
treatment of Falun Gong practitioners in confinement is difficult to confirm.
Nevertheless, there is substantial evidence from foreign diplomats,
international human rights groups, and human rights activists in Hong Kong that
the crackdowns on the Falun Gong are widespread and violent. In addition, the
Chinese government has reportedly continued to pressure foreign businesses in
China to sign statements denouncing the Falun Gong and to discriminate against
its followers in hiring. Local officials in foreign countries have also stated
that they were warned by Chinese diplomatic personnel about the loss of
potential business contacts if they continued to advocate on behalf of Falun
Gong. In March 2005, the State Department announced that it would not introduce a
resolution at the UN Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR), citing
"significant steps" taken by the Chinese government to address
"structural issues concerning human rights." Among the steps mentioned
by the State Department was a public announcement by the Chinese government that
"religious education of minors is consistent with Chinese law and
policy" and new regulations that exempt small family or home worship
activities from governmental registration. These are concerns that this
Commission has repeatedly raised in the past; yet, it is too soon to determine
whether there will be any substantive impact from these steps. The Commission
will continue to monitor the actions of the Chinese government and report on
whether the cited "significant steps" lead to any measurable progress
in the protection of the freedom of thought, conscience, and religion or belief. In addition to the steps mentioned above, the State Department also cited as
evidence of progress invitations from the Chinese government to the UN Special
Rapporteurs on Torture and on Freedom of Religion or Belief, the U.S. Commission
on International Religious Freedom, and the High Commissioner for Human Rights
to visit China in 2005. Similar promises were mentioned the last time the United
States decided to forgo a resolution on China at the 2003 session of the UNCHR.
Later that year, however, promised visits by this Commission and various UN
thematic mechanisms were cancelled or postponed by the Chinese government. http://www.uscirf.gov/countries/publications/currentreport/2005annualRpt.pdf#page=1
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