Letter to President Hu Jintao: Stop Harassment of Advocates for Social Justice

China Aid Association
(Human Rights Watch, 10/3/2006)
Letter to President Hu Jintao, People’s Republic of China:
Source:
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2006/10/03/china14299.htm
September 29, 2006
President Hu Jintao
People’s Republic of China
Zhongnanhai, Xichengqu, Beijing
People’s Republic of China

Dear President Hu,
We, the undersigned human rights advocates, lawyers, and scholars, write to urge your commitment to ensuring the civil rights of advocates for social justice. We note with concern the sharp increase in official retaliation against such advocates and their families through persistent harassment, banishment, detention, arrest, and imprisonment. We note, too, the frequent use of state secrets charges to discourage social activism.
For the international community to take seriously China’s oft-stated commitment to a rule of law, and for China’s own citizens to trust the judicial system to redress legitimate grievances, it is urgent that China’s central leadership not look the other way when local courts and law enforcement officials ignore China’s laws and legal procedures with impunity. It is equally urgent that judicial authorities throughout China cease to use China’s state secrets laws to prevent defendants in politically sensitive cases from exercising their rights to fair and impartial hearings.
Several recent cases cast doubt on your government’s willingness to take those principled steps. Four such cases are of particular concern, those of rights defenders Gao Zhisheng, a lawyer, Chen Guangcheng, a legal activist, Zhao Yan, a journalist, and Hu Jia, a grassroots HIV/AIDS activist. Their apprehension, the charges against Messrs. Gao, Chen, and Zhao, Mr. Chen’s and Mr. Zhao’s subsequent trials and sentencing, and Mr. Hu’s forcible removal to a police station without a warrant are representative of China’s legal system at its worst. We urge the immediate releases of those still held, the dismissal of all charges, and the immediate restoration of Mr. Gao’s license to practice law.
Beijing public security officers seized Mr. Gao, a prominent human rights defense lawyer, on August 15, 2006, in Shandong province. On August 18, Xinhua reported that he was detained on suspicion of involvement in “criminal activities.” His whereabouts are unknown. Police officers illegally prevent access to his home, as they so often do to the families of lawyers who assist people in asserting their rights; his wife, daughter, and son may not leave; no one is allowed in.
All Mr. Gao’s activities were peaceful and legal. He defended journalist and former professor Zheng Yichun whose Internet writings questioned official policies, house church pastor Cai Zhuohua who freely distributed bibles, and fellow legal activist Yang Maodong, better known as Guo Feixiong. He also defended Beijing residents forcibly evicted from their homes, rural residents whose lands were seized, Falungong practitioners, and striking workers.

However, in November 2005, after Mr. Gao continued to protest against local officials’ abuse of power, sent an open letter to you and to Premier Wen Jiabao urging that the persecution of Falungong practitioners cease, and took on more politically sensitive cases, the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Justice suspended his law firm, the Shengzhi Law Office in Beijing, for one year. In December, his license to practice was revoked.
Mr. Gao made good his promise to “continue to work for the rights of ordinary citizens, as an ordinary person myself if they refuse to let me operate as a lawyer.”
On February 4, 2006, he and Mr. Hu initiated a symbolic hunger strike movement to draw attention to official mistreatment of human rights defenders.
Mr. Gao was particularly concerned, as we are, with retaliation against Chen Guangcheng, sentenced on August 24 by local Yinan county (Shandong province) officials to four years and three months in prison for allegedly organizing a mob to disturb traffic and willfully damaging public property. Mr. Chen, a blind legal activist, had investigated villagers’ claims that local officials used illegal practices to enforce population control laws. The National Population and Family Planning Commission (NPFPC), responding to his concerns, agreed that illegal family planning practices did exist. It is our belief that the charges were baseless and brought in response to his activism. It would have been extremely difficult, if not impossible, for Mr. Chen, who was forcibly detained at home and denied any means of communication, to organize a mob or damage public property. Furthermore, even if the charges were true, the sentence was disproportionate to the alleged offenses.
We are equally concerned about the physical attacks on Mr. Chen’s legal team. Prior to the trial, local officials and unknown assailants prevented the team from collecting evidence and interviewing witnesses. On the day of the trial, Mr. Chen was represented in court by two lawyers whom he had never met because his own lawyers were prevented from attending the trial. One of Mr. Chen’s lawyers, law professor Xu Zhiyong, was accused of petty theft and beaten, then held by the police until Mr. Chen’s trial was over.
Other activists, such as Hu Jia, were prevented from going to Shandong to demonstrate support for Mr. Chen, or apprehended when they arrived. In another instance, local Yinan county police detained writer Deng Yongliang when he arrived on August 18, then transferred him back to Xi’an. As of this writing, it is unclear whether he is still in detention. On August 19, security personnel told Zhao Xin, executive director of the Empowerment and Rights Institute, a Chinese human rights NGO, to leave Beijing and return to his home town in Yunnan province. Mr. Zhao had spoken out in defense of both Chen Guangcheng and Gao Zhisheng. Two Beijing law professors, Teng Biao of the Chinese University of Politics and Law and Xu Zhiyong from the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, were repeatedly warned by their universities to stay away from the case.
Zhao Yan, a former journalist for the official Zhongguo Gaige (China Reform) magazine, used the media to expose government mistreatment of farmers and publicly assisted many who tried to reclaim their land or realize just compensation. State Security Bureau agents kept Mr. Zhao under surveillance and harassed him. Under pressure, Mr. Zhao resigned from the magazine in April 2004; a month later he began work as a researcher for the New York Times. Six months later he was formally arrested for “leaking state secrets to a foreigner” after the New York Times correctly predicted that former president Jiang Zemin would resign from his last official post. The New York Times and Mr. Zhao consistently maintained that he was not the source of the information.
On June 1, 2005, when no evidence to sustain the state secrets charge had been found and Zhao’s time in detention had exceeded allowable limits, the government brought an unrelated fraud charge based on an alleged 2001 incident. According to the government, Mr. Zhao agreed, in exchange for approximately U.S.$2,500, to use his State Council connections to help a local official avoid serving an 18-month re-education through labor sentence. Mr. Zhao has denied he ever took money and has asked for a lie-detector test. On August 25, 2006, two months after his closed trial, the court dismissed the state secrets charge but convicted Mr. Zhao of fraud and sentenced him to a three-year term.
A charge of state secrets may be justified in the interest of public order or national security. In Mr. Zhao’s case, neither was compromised by the New York Times prediction. What was compromised was the ability of Mr. Zhao’s lawyers to act as defense counsel, in particular because the authorities limited the lawyers’ access to their client and to the prosecutor’s evidence and refused to hear the defense witnesses.
On September 7, 2006, some dozen plainclothes officers seized Mr. Hu Jia from his home in Beijing and insisted he accompany them to a local police station. They offered no identification nor did they produce a warrant. He was released after twelve hours, but was warned that he was suspected of “criminal activities.” The following day, September 8, police officers took him back to the station for another day of interrogation. Mr. Hu has been held in house arrest since mid-July for his on-going attempts to investigate and publicize the disappearances and detentions of other rights activists. At the time he was seized, he was trying to arrange legal help for Mr. Gao and to collect information on additional disappearances. In February 2006, Mr. Hu “disappeared” for over a month following his and Mr. Gao’s initiation of a rotating symbolic hunger strike. Mr. Hu’s early activism targeted environmental and HIV/AIDS-related abuses.
These incidents, taken together, suggest that those who try to make Chinese officials more accountable, whether through journalism, legal activism, or other peaceful and internationally recognized channels, will be prosecuted through a legal system that lacks impartiality and denies them basic guarantees of fairness. So long as the government may, with impunity, persecute and punish those whom they perceive as challenging its collective power, the international community and China’s friends and allies will remain deeply skeptical about China’s commitment to reform, to transparency, and to the rule of law.
We therefore urge again that Messrs. Chen, Gao, and Zhao be released immediately with all their rights fully restored, and that Mr. Hu no longer be confined to his home. We urge that the overhaul of state secret laws, in order to bring them into conformity with international standards, be made a priority. We urge that local officials be held accountable when they use the law to punish and harass would-be challengers. And we urge your public commitment to use your office to further these reforms sooner rather than later.
Sincerely,
R. David Arkush
Professor & Director of Graduate Studies
Department of History
The University of Iowa
Iowa, U.S.

Robert Arsenault
President
International League for Human Rights
New York, U.S.

Harry G. Barnes Jr.
Retired Diplomat
Vermont, U.S.

Richard Baum
Director of the UCLA Center for Chinese Studies
UCLA Political Science Department
Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Jean-Philippe Beja
Senior Research Fellow
CNRS, CERI-Sciences-po
Paris, France

Robert L. Bernstein
Retired Chairman and President
Random House
New York, U.S.

Thomas P. Bernstein
Professor of Political Science
Columbia University
New York, U.S.

Michel Bonnin
Professor
Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
Paris, France

Anita Chan
Visiting Fellow
Contemporary China Centre
Research School of Pacific & Asian Studies
Australian National University
Canberra, Australia

Gordon G. Chang
Author
New Jersey, U.S.

Peg Christoff, PhD.
China Debate Series Manager
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Washington, DC, U.S.

Jerome A. Cohen
Professor
New York University Law School
Adjunct Senior Fellow
Council on Foreign Relations
New York, U.S.

Joan Lebold Cohen
Art Critic
Associate
Fairbank Center for East Asian Studies
Harvard University
Cambridge, U.S.

Alison W. Conner
Director of International Programs
University of Hawaii School of Law
Honolulu, U.S.

George T. Crane
Professor of Political Science
Williams College
Massachusetts, U.S.

Meg Davis
Anthropologist
New York, U.S.

June Teufel Dreyer
Professor of Political Science
University of Miami
Florida, U.S.

Dr. Chongyi Feng
Associate Professor in China Studies
University of Technology
Sydney, Australia
Edward Friedman
University of Wisconsin
Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.

Felice D. Gaer
Director
Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights
New York, U.S.

Merle Goldman
Professor Emerita
Boston University
Massachusetts, U.S.

Joan Lebold Cohen
Art Critic
Associate
Fairbank Center for East Asian Studies
Harvard University
Cambridge, U.S.

Justice Richard J. Goldstone
Former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda
South Africa

R. Scott Greathead
Board Member, Human Rights First
Board Member, Human Rights in China
New York, U.S.

Dr. Gerry Groot
Senior Lecturer in Chinese Studies
Centre for Asian Studies
University of Adelaide, Australia
Paul Hoffman
Civil Rights Lawyer
Schonbrun, DeSimone, Seplow, Harris & Hoffman
Hermosa Beach, California, U.S.

Sharon Hom
Executive Director
Human Rights in China
New York, U.S.

Carol Jones
Professor
University of Glamorgan Law School
Wales, U.K.

Richard C. Kagan
Professor Emeritus
Hamline University
Minnesota, U.S.

David Kelly
Senior Research Fellow
East Asian Institute
National University of Singapore
Singapore

Joanne Leedom-Ackerman
International Secretary
International PEN
Washington, DC, U.S.

Xiaorong Li
Institute for Philosophy & Public Policy
University of Maryland
College Park, Maryland, U.S.

Perry Link
Professor of East Asian Studies
Princeton University
New Jersey, U.S.

Daniel Lynch
Associate Professor
School of International Relations
University of Southern California
California, U.S.

Roderick MacFarquhar
Leroy B. Williams Professor of History and Political Science
Harvard University
Cambridge, U.S.

James Mann
Author-in-Residence
Johns Hopkins SAIS
Washington, DC, U.S.

Jonathan Mirsky
Journalist
London, U.K.

Robin Munro
Research Associate
SOAS Law Department
London, U.K.

Andrew J. Nathan
Class of 1919 Professor of Political Science
Columbia University
New York, U.S.

Eva Pils
Visiting Assistant Professor of Law
Cornell University Law School
Ithaca, New York, U.S.

Victoria Riskin
Writer/Producer
Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Barnett R. Rubin
Director of Studies and Senior Fellow
Center on International Cooperation
New York University
New York, U.S.

Sophie Richardson, PhD.
Deputy Director
Asia Division
Human Rights Watch
New York, U.S.

Allan Roth
Professor Emeritus
Rutgers University
New Jersey, U.S.

Kenneth Roth
Executive Director
Human Rights Watch
New York, U.S.

Sidney Sheinberg
Partner
The Bubble Factory
Former COO of MCA/Universal
Song Yongyi
Librarian Faculty
California State University
Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Hatla Thelle
Researcher
Copenhagen, Denmark
Steve Tsang, MA, DPhil. (Oxon)
Louis Cha Fellow and University Reader in Politics
St. Antony’s College
Oxford, U.K.

Willem van Kemenade
Senior Fellow
Netherlands Institute of International Relations ‘Clingendael’
The Hague, Netherlands

Peter Van Ness, PhD.
Contemporary China Centre and Department of International Relations
Australian National University
Canberra, Australia

Xiao Qiang
Director
China Internet Project
The Graduate School of Journalism
University of California at Berkeley
Berkeley, California, U.S.

Michael Yahuda
Emeritus Professor of International Relations
The London School of Economics and Political Science
London, U.K.

Fellow
The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
Washington, DC, U.S., Columbia University, U.S.

Yu Maochun
China specialist
Annapolis, Maryland, U.S.

cc: Ambassador Zhou Wenzhong
Embassy of the People’s Republic of China
Via fax: +1-202-588-0032

For more information, please contact:
In New York, Sophie Richardson (English, Mandarin): +1-212-216-1257
In New York, Mickey Spiegel (English): +1-212-216-1229
In Hong Kong, Nicholas Bequelin (English, Mandarin): +852-98-059-120



China Aid Contacts
Rachel Ritchie, English Media Director
Cell: (432) 553-1080 | Office: 1+ (888) 889-7757 | Other: (432) 689-6985
Email: [email protected] 
Website: www.chinaaid.org

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Letter to President Hu Jintao: Stop Harassment of Advocates for Social Justice

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