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Seattle Times: Groups urge tough questions for Hu September 3, 2005 Hundreds of Falun Gong practitioners perform a slow-motion meditation in a
park in Taipei. Hundreds of Falun Gong followers in Taiwan and Hong Kong held
peaceful protests Sunday as they marked the [sixth] anniversary of Beijing's ban
on the movement. Leading human-rights groups have called on President Bush to press China's
visiting president next week over what they say are widespread abuses of
political prisoners, including Tibetans, Muslim Uighurs and members of the Falun
Gong movement. "Failing to mention [rights] in a very strong way will give the wrong
information to President Hu Jintao that the United States is not concerned about
the way Chinese government is treating its own people," Amnesty
International official T. Kumar told a news conference in Washington, D.C. In a letter echoing Amnesty's concern that the U.S. had lowered the priority
of rights in dealings with China, Human Rights Watch urged Bush to press Hu on
issues including freedom of religion, freedom expression and rule of law. "While there has been progress in many areas of Chinese life, the
human-rights situation in China remains dire," the group wrote. Sources familiar with U.S. planning for Hu's visit say Bush is personally
concerned about human rights and especially freedom of worship and will raise
those issues with Hu in an agenda largely devoted to North Korea and trade
issues. Hu arrives in Seattle on Monday for a two-day visit before leaving for
Washington, D.C. Among those planning demonstrations in Seattle are local
followers of Falun Gong and those supporting independence for Taiwan and Tibet. Though China's economic boom has lifted millions out of poverty, attracted
billions in foreign investment and furnished the masses with cellphones,
computers and even cars, the explosive growth hasn't brought about major
political change. People deemed a threat to China's one-party state still are
routinely jailed. A key advocate in the United States for such prisoners has been John Kamm,
head of the nonprofit Dui Hua Foundation in San Francisco. An intermediary
between Washington and Beijing on human-rights matters, Kamm has, over the past
15 years, helped persuade China's communist leaders to show clemency toward
hundreds of prisoners of conscience. Last year, he was awarded a $500,000 MacArthur "genius" grant for
his work. "If we've achieved nothing else, I think we've impressed on the Chinese
government that people around the world care about individuals," said Kamm,
54. The Chinese Justice Ministry, which oversees China's prisons, declined to say
how many people are serving terms for political offenses. But Kamm estimates
there are between 15,000 and 25,000 political or religious prisoners in China,
about half jailed for their links to Falun Gong. "The pace of political change has not kept up with the pace of economic
change," Kamm said. "China's economic development, in my opinion, has
not translated into improvements in civil and political rights." Kamm and his small band of researchers scour China's newspapers and Internet
sites in search of names of citizens jailed for political or religious reasons.
Then he presents those prisoner lists to Chinese officials asking for
information, better treatment or reduced sentences. "If you ask about a prisoner, they become an important prisoner in the
Chinese system," said Kamm. "If you know that simply asking about a
prisoner helps them, why not ask about as many as possible?" Sharon Hom, who heads the New York-based advocacy group Human Rights in
China, said Kamm's direct lobbying helps individuals but doesn't address the
deeper problem. "The relationship, backdoor approach does not contribute to the kind of
systemic reform and building of rule of law that's ultimately needed for real
institutional protections for human rights," Hom said. Kamm counters that his advocacy for individuals helps promote transparency,
accountability and humane treatment in Chinese prisons. He points out that
earlier this year, China for the first time voluntarily released a list with
names of 56 political prisoners. Independent human-rights groups say that practitioners of Falun Gong in China
have been sent to labor camps, subjected to physical and psychological torture
and killed since the Chinese government cracked down on the movement. While the situation in China attracted much attention in 1999 and 2000, it
has largely fallen off the radar screen as the Chinese government has repressed
the movement there, human-rights officials say. The newspaper said that has led
to demonstrations in New York, which play out in parks and on street corners
from City Hall to the Museum of Natural History. Material from Reuters, The Associated Press and The New York Times was
included in this report.
Posting date: 9/4/2005
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