AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL USA
PRESS RELEASE
Sept. 28, 2009
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL SAYS HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVISTS NOT WELCOME AT CHINA’S 60TH ANNIVERSARY PARTY
(Washington) -- Chinese authorities have increased surveillance, harassment, and imprisonment of activists ahead of the country’s 60th anniversary on October 1, in order to prevent the raising of human rights concerns that challenge the projected image of social harmony, Amnesty International said today.
Amnesty International estimates that several hundred activists and dissidents are under various types of surveillance or house arrest, and that thousands of petitioners are being swept out of Beijing. The organization continues to receive reports that petitioners are being held in “black jails” and other informal detention facilities outside of the city.
"The Chinese government wants to celebrate the country's success while ensuring that no dissenting view or complaint is heard," said Roseann Rife, Amnesty International’s Asia Pacific deputy director. “As a result, what the Chinese government is highlighting is its own fear of giving the Chinese people a real voice to talk about the reality of their lives, good and bad.”
In the past few weeks, the authorities have increased their surveillance of petitioners, human rights activists, religious practitioners, and ethnic minorities to ensure that they do not raise human rights issues or complaints in any forums during the National Day celebrations.
On Friday, September 25, as reported by the Chinese media, the State Bureau for Letters and Visits and the Public Security Bureau – central government departments that manage petitioners – instructed local authorities to review their records and keep anyone who has filed a petition under local surveillance during the days leading up to the event.
Petitioners seek justice directly by presenting their cases to central authorities in Beijing, after failing to redress their grievances locally. Frequently, before major events or celebrations, Beijing authorities forcibly return petitioners to their hometowns, as they believe they could damage the country's international public image.
“We call on the authorities to immediately and unconditionally lift all restrictions on human rights activists and release all prisoners of conscience across the country,” said Rife.
Amnesty International has recently recorded the following incidents:
· Zeng Jinyan, wife of imprisoned human rights activists Hu Jia, was asked by authorities to leave Beijing on September 25 and not to return until after October 10. Jinyan has been under tight surveillance since her husband was imprisoned in April 2008, effectively halting much of the couple’s human rights work.
· On September 23, police informed the lawyer of detained human rights activist Liu Xiaobo that his client must remain in detention for further investigation on suspicion of "inciting subversion of state power.” Xiaobo was seized from his home in Beijing by the police on December 8, 2008, two days before he was due to launch Charter 08, a blueprint for legal and political reform in China.
· In mid-September, several Beijing activists were forced to leave the city. This included former political prisoner and China Democratic Party member Gao Hongming, housing rights activist Wang Ling, who was sent to Re-education Through Labor during the 2008 Olympics, and pro-democracy activist Qi Zhiyong, who was left disabled from a gunshot injury during the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown.
· Since September 22, Tian Qizhuang, a director of the Open Constitution Initiative (OCI), has not been seen by his family. On September 24, he called his son to explain that he is under police surveillance, and to ask him to prepare some clothes. OCI Founder Xu Zhiyong remains under surveillance and the organization’s finance secretary Zhuang Lu has had only limited contact with her immediate family since her release on August 23.
· Two dozen plain-clothed security forces have been stationed outside the home of Yuan Weijing, wife of imprisoned activist Chen Guangcheng. Her phone is also intermittently cut off. Together with Chen Guangcheng, Yuan Weijing defended the rights of people with disabilities and women affected by abuses of enforcement of family planning policies in Linyi city, Shandong province.
· In Zhejiang province, several members of the banned China Democratic Party, including Zhu Zhengming, Zhu Yufu, Mao Qingxiang, and Hu Xiaoling have had police stationed in front of their homes to prevent them leaving.
· Earlier in September, China Democratic Party member Xie Changfa was sentenced to 13 years in prison on “subversion” charges in Hunan province. This is one of the longest sentences given to human rights or political activists in recent years.
· In late August, four female petitioners from the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, Yang Xinmei, Li Suping, Wang Lina and Sun Li, were detained in Beijing. They were originally placed under 15 days’ administrative detention but have now been sent to 2 years of Re-education Through Labor to prevent them from further petitioning over the National Day holiday. The women had been petitioning about several issues, including land confiscation and miscarriage of justice.
Amnesty International is a Nobel Peace Prize-winning grassroots activist organization with more than 2.2 million supporters, activists and volunteers in more than 150 countries campaigning for human rights worldwide. The organization investigates and exposes abuses, educates and mobilizes the public, and works to protect people wherever justice, freedom, truth and dignity are denied.
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