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Amnesty International Report Criticizes the State of China's Human Rights
(Clearwisdom.net) Amnesty International released its 2007 report on
The State of Human Rights in the World on Wednesday. The report pointed out that
there has been no improvement in the CCP regime's persecution of Falun Gong and
the people of Tibet and that the state of human rights in the country is still
poor. The organization calls on the international community to exert pressure on
the CCP. The deputy director of Amnesty International in the Asia Pacific Region
pointed out that Internet usage in 2006 in China increased tremendously, but the
CCP's persecution of human rights' defenders also increased, which was reflected
in the increased numbers of arrests of reporters, writers, and Internet users. The report states: "The government continued to crack down on religious
observance outside officially sanctioned channels. Thousands of members of
underground protestant "house churches" and unofficial Catholic
churches were detained, many of whom were ill-treated or tortured in detention.
Members of the Falun Gong spiritual movement were detained and assigned to
administrative detention for their beliefs, and continued to be at high risk of
torture or ill-treatment. "Bu Dongwei, a Falun Gong practitioner, was assigned to two and a half
years' of forced labor in June for 'activities relating to a banned
organization' after police discovered Falun Gong literature at his home. He had
been working for a US aid organization when he was detained." The report continues: "The death penalty continued to be used
extensively to punish around 68 crimes, including economic and non-violent
crimes. Based on public reports, AI estimated that at least 1,010 people were
executed and 2,790 sentenced to death during 2006, although the true figures
were believed to be much higher. "Torture and ill-treatment remained widespread. Common methods included
kicking, beating, electric shocks, suspension by the arms, shackling in painful
positions, cigarette burns, and sleep and food deprivation. In November a senior
official admitted that at least 30 wrongful convictions handed down each year
resulted from the use of torture, with the true number likely being higher.
There was no progress in efforts to reform the 'Re-education through Labor'
system of administrative detention without charge or trial. Hundreds of
thousands of people were believed to be held in forced labor facilities across
China and were at risk of torture and ill-treatment." Excerpt from http://thereport.amnesty.org/eng/Regions/Asia-Pacific/China
Posting date: 5/26/2007
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