|
Amnesty International Releases Documents Calling for the Rescue of Falun Gong Practitioner Bu Dongwei
(Clearwisdom.net) Amnesty International released a document on April 30, 2007 titled "People's Republic of China, The Olympics countdown -- repression of activists overshadows death penalty and media reforms". The report pointed out that the Chinese government uses detention and labor camp sat will to eliminate dissidents, including Falun Gong practitioners. The report updated the case of Bu Dongwei.
"Amnesty International remains deeply concerned that such 'strike hard' policies continue to be used to constrain the legitimate activities of a range of peaceful activists in China, including journalists, lawyers and human rights defenders. This report updates concerns in these areas, illustrated by the experiences of several individuals who have been detained or imprisoned in violation of their fundamental human rights. The failure of the Chinese authorities to address the legal and institutional weaknesses that allow such violations to flourish continues to hamper efforts to strengthen rule of law in China -- a cornerstone for 'harmony' or 'stability' - and casts a deep shadow over other legal reforms which have been introduced over recent months. "Case update - Bu Dongwei: Falun Gong practitioner Bu Dongwei is now known to be held at Tuanhe RTL facility in Beijing, where he is reportedly forced to do packing work. His family only received official confirmation of his whereabouts at the end of August 2006, three months after he was first detained. The authorities have reportedly claimed that he decided not to appeal against his two-and-a-half year term, but his family dispute this. Officials from Tuanhe RTL facility have reportedly asked Bu Dongwei's family to contribute money towards his living expenses -- around 400 yuan per month (approx. US$52). "In a recent case, Gao Zhisheng, a defense lawyer and rights activist, was convicted of 'inciting subversion' in December 2006 in connection with his activism, including his organization of a hunger-strike protest in Beijing in February 2006 to draw attention to the plight of several other activists who had been subjected to human rights violations. The authorities had already suspended the operations of his law firm and revoked his law license in late 2005 after he published an open letter calling for religious freedom and an end to the 'barbaric' persecution of the Falun Gong spiritual movement. Unusually, the court ruled that his three-year prison sentence should be suspended for five years, meaning that he would not be imprisoned unless he commits criminal offenses during the five year period. |