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Human Rights Watch - China

OrionHunter

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China continues to be an authoritarian one-party state that imposes sharp curbs on freedom of expression, association, and religion; openly rejects judicial independence and press freedom; and arbitrarily restricts and suppresses human rights defenders and organizations, often through extra-judicial measures.

The government also censors the internet; maintains highly repressive policies in ethnic minority areas such as Tibet, Xinjiang, and Inner Mongolia; systematically condones—with rare exceptions—abuses of power in the name of “social stability” ; and rejects domestic and international scrutiny of its human rights record as attempts to destabilize and impose “Western values” on the country. The security apparatus—hostile to liberalization and legal reform—seems to have steadily increased its power since the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

At the same time Chinese citizens are increasingly rights-conscious and challenging the authorities over livelihood issues, land seizures, forced evictions, abuses of power by corrupt cadres, discrimination, and economic inequalities. Official and scholarly statistics estimate that 250-500 protests occur per day; participants number from ten to tens of thousands. Internet users and reform-oriented media are aggressively pushing the boundaries of censorship, despite the risks of doing so, by advocating for the rule of law and transparency, exposing official wrong-doing, and calling for reforms.

Several lawyers including Liu Shihui, described being interrogated, tortured, threatened, and released only upon signing “confessions” and pledges not to use Twitter, or talk to media, human rights groups, or foreign diplomats about their detention.

China continued to lead the world in executions. The exact number remains a state secret but is estimated to range from 5,000 to 8,000 a year.

Tibet

The situation in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) and the neighboring Tibetan autonomous areas of Qinghai, Sichuan, Gansu, and Yunnan province, remained tense following the massive crackdown on popular protests that swept the plateau in 2008.
Chinese security forces maintain a heavy presence and the authorities continue to tightly restrict access and travel to Tibetan areas, particularly for journalists and foreign visitors. Tibetans suspected of being critical of political, religious, cultural, or economic state policies are targeted on charges of “separatism.”

The government continues to build a “new socialist countryside” by relocating and rehousing up to 80 percent of the TAR population, including all pastoralists and nomads.

The Chinese government has given no indication it would accommodate the aspirations of Tibetan people for greater autonomy, even within the narrow confines of the country's autonomy law on ethnic minorities' areas. It has rejected holding negotiations with the new elected leader of the Tibetan community in exile, Lobsang Sangay, and warned that it would designate the next Dalai Lama itself.

Xinjiang

The Urumqi riots of July 2009—the most deadly episode of ethnic unrest in recent Chinese history—continued to cast a shadow over developments in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. The government has not accounted for hundreds of persons detained after the riots, nor investigated the serious allegations of torture and ill-treatment of detainees that have surfaced in testimonies of refugees and relatives living outside China. The few publicized trials of suspected rioters were marred by restrictions on legal representation, overt politicization of the judiciary, and failure to publish notification of the trials and to hold genuinely open trials as mandated by law.

Under the guise of counter terrorism and anti-separatism efforts, the government also maintains a pervasive system of ethnic discrimination against Uighurs and other ethnic minorities, along with sharp curbs on religious and cultural expression and politically motivated arrests.


World Report 2012: China | Human Rights Watch

And then of course there is that typical Chinese bluff and bluster regarding the South China Sea where the Han Dynasty refuses to comply with UNCLOS preferring instead to use 'gun-boat diplomacy' resulting in conflict with a number of countries including Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia etc.

Now let the trolling begin, as is inevitable. The Hans and their cohorts are going to counter this World Human Rights Report with rapes, toilets, and poverty in India!!

As for me I'm gonna sit back and watch the fun unfold with some popcorn and soda! :pop:
 
long time no see OrionHunter's bashing China thread,make me feeling it's not PDF
Well, it's actually the World Human Rights Watch that's bashing China!! :P I haven't been to China myself and so haven't a clue of the extent of human rights abuses going on out there! :smokin:

But tell me frankly, isn't most of it true? :what:
 
Well, it's actually the World Human Rights Watch that's bashing China!! :P I haven't been to China myself and so haven't a clue of the extent of human rights abuses going on out there! :smokin:

But tell me frankly, isn't most of it true? :what:
go ask indians who had experience living in China.
there are many on PDF.maybe @sms now is still in Shanghai!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
And then of course there is that typical Chinese bluff and bluster regarding the South China Sea where the Han Dynasty refuses to comply with UNCLOS preferring instead to use 'gun-boat diplomacy' resulting in conflict with a number of countries including Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia etc.

Epic FAIL. Yes, please show use the nonexistent conflict with Malaysia and Indonesia?

Malaysia says China is not a threat and that its other countries which are threatening Chibna.

http://ajw.asahi.com/article/asia/south_east_asia/AJ2011110916910

Mahathir: China no threat to Malaysia

Koleksi Arkib Ucapan Ketua Eksekutif

Mahathir Mohamad

Another fail- Taiwan also claims the entire south China sea paracel and spratly island chains, and has never ever cooperated with ASEAN on this issue since Taiwan categorically REJECTS Vietnam and the Philippines claims. Taiwan has fired on Vietnamese ships in 1996 and continues to rub Vietnams face by holding live fire drills on Taiping island.

Vietnam Demands Taiwan Cancel Spratly Island Live Fire Drill - Bloomberg

Another fail in the human rights watch report is that they fail to mention that Xinjiang is divided into two distinct areas- the Tarim basin aka southern Xinjiang and the northern region, aka Dzungharia, which includes Urumqi.

Uyghurs are only native to the south, they lived the during the Chagatai Khanate. The north was inhabited by Dzunghar Mongols under the Zunghar Khanate. The buddhist Zunghar Mongols attacked the Chagatai Khanate and forced the Uyghurs into submission and made them paid tribute. Then China attacked the Dzunghars and the Uyghurs, including a Chagatai prince joined China and nearly wiped the Dzunghars off the face of the planet in 1758-1759. The Chagatai princes and the rest of the Uyghur Khans and Begs then submitted to China except for the pro Dzunghar Aqtaghliks.

China then opened up the entire Dzungharia-northern Xinjiang to both Uyghur, Han chinese, Hui and Manchu immigration. Urumqi's name is derived from the Dzunghar, not Uyghur language, and it was first settled by Han an Hui after the Dzunghars were all killed. There was never any ancient Uyghur heritage in Urumqi or Dzungharia, only in the tarim basin.

Almost all Han immigration is directed into Dzungharia-northern Xinjiang, which is former Dzunghar land. The Tarim basin is majority Uyghur and in some places it reaches 99%.

Uyghurs do not have any right to complain about Han immigration or laws in northern Xinjiang, because they are also invaders and immigrants and the true natives are the Dzunghars. They are not being swamped in the tarim where they are native to.

China also runs two separate schools systems in Xinjiang. One is Uyghur language schools where holidays including Ramadan are implemented. The other is mandarin language schools like the rest of China. Uyghurs are allowed to attend either school of their choice, its not apartheid since they have a choice. Some of them choose to atten the Mandarin school and them complain about not getting Ramadan off.....
 
This is usual "Chinese CCP" is an opposite word to "Human rights".
 
Gao Zhisheng, China Rights Lawyer, Denied Visits In Remote Jail

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BEIJING -- Relatives of an outspoken human rights lawyer jailed after being secretly held by Chinese security agents were told Tuesday that he is undergoing a three-month "education period" and will be denied visitors for at least that much time, his wife said.

Authorities told relatives who traveled to China's remote Xinjiang region to see Gao Zhisheng that he will be able to have visitors after the education period only if he behaves well, said Geng He, his wife. She spoke in a telephone interview from California, where she now lives.

"I don't know what they're up to, but this seems very wrong," said Geng. "And we still have no proof that Gao is actually in that jail."

Gao was held incommunicado in apparent disregard of laws and regulations for all but two months of the last three years, and the forced disappearances set off an international outcry.

According to state media, he began serving a three-year sentence for subversion last month in Shaya county in the far western Xinjiang region.

Gao was a galvanizing figure for the rights movement, advocating constitutional reform and arguing landmark cases to defend property rights and political and religious dissenters. He was convicted in the subversion case in 2006, but was released on probation.

In 2009, however, Gao was taken away by security agents. When he emerged 14 months later, in April 2010, he told The Associated Press that he had been shunted among detention centers, farm houses and apartments across northern China and had been repeatedly beaten and abused. He said he had been hooded several times, and that his captors made him sit motionless for up to 16 hours and threatened to kill him and dump his body in a river.

Not long after the interview, Gao disappeared again.

While he was missing, Gao's case was raised by the U.S. and European governments, drawing cryptic responses from Chinese officials. In December, state media reported that he was being sent back to prison for violating the terms of his probation.

Gao's elder brother received a notice on Jan. 1 that Gao was being held in Shaya. Geng said the family repeatedly tried to reach Shaya prison authorities by phone before they traveled to Xinjiang, but the phone there was never answered.

Beijing lawyer Pu Zhiqiang said Chinese prisons routinely enforce tougher restrictions for new prisoners during their first few weeks or their first month in jail, but he added that a three-month education period seemed unusually long.

Gao Zhisheng, China Rights Lawyer, Denied Visits In Remote Jail
 
World powers express concern for Tibet at UN Human Rights Council

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Geneva: - 12 March: The EU, USA, Germany, the Czech Republic, Sweden and Austria today expressed concern about the critical human rights situation in Tibet during the 22nd Session of the UN Human Rights Council.

"The EU is profoundly saddened by the numerous self-immolations in Tibetan-inhabited areas," said the EU delegate to the UN Human Rights Council.

Speaking on behalf of the 27 member states, the EU delegate said that Europe "encourages China to re-engage in constructive dialogue with the Tibetan people and to allow free access to the Tibetan autonomous area."

The EU further urged China to take steps to implement the right to freedom of expression, including on the internet, as well as freedom of assembly and called for the release of2010 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo along withother prisoners of conscience.

The EU delegate deplored "the widespread use of the death penalty and calls on the Chinese authorities to take immediate steps to reduce its application whilst moving towards a moratorium."

The US said that China's policies undermine the language, culture and traditions of ethnic religious minorities – heightening tensions in Xinjiang and Tibetan areas of China.

"Recent decision to use criminal proceedings against the families and associates of Tibetans who have self-immolated has further increased tension," said the US delegate.

The US delegate said that China continues to silence dissidents through arrest, conviction, forced disappearances, illegal detention & other forms of intimidation. The US delegate highlighted the tightened controls on the internet, persecution of human rights lawyers and the intimidation of activists' families. It also said that China is impeding civil society, harassing domestic and international journalists and limiting religious freedom.

Germany expressed its continued concern about human rights violations in China. It raised strong concerns about the recent reports about "detention and harsh sentences against Tibetans, charging them with incitement and incitements to self-immolation."

Germany called on the Chinese authorities to respect fundamental rights and the rule of law. It urged China "to address the deep rooted causes of ongoing self-immolations in a peaceful manner, respecting the cultural & religious rights of Tibetans." Germany further encouraged China to facilitate the visit of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in the near future.

The Czech Republic, who have consistently raised the Tibetan issue in the UN, said, "We would like to address the overall human rights situation in China as there is a lack of effort by authorities to debate this issue. We remain deeply concerned by the continuing self-immolations in Tibet."

The Czech Republic raised the detention and prosecution of Tibetans "who have allegedly been associated with self-immolation protests of other Tibetans like Mr. Lorang Tsering and Mr. Lorang Konchok."

The Austrian delegate called upon the Chinese authorities to ensure that the rights of all minorities, including Tibetans and Uyghurs, are respected as guaranteed in China's constitution. The Swedish delegation also expressed its government's concern about the rights of Tibetan and Uyghur people.

"We are particularly alarmed by the rising number of self-immolations among Tibetans," said the Austrian delegate.

Mr. Tenzin S Kayta, speaking on behalf of the Society for Threatened Peoples said that the human rights situation in Tibetan areas has significantly deteriorated since March 2008. The dignity of the Tibetans and their very basic human rights have been severely violated.

107 Tibetans from all walks of life have self-immolated since February 2009 while calling for "return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama" and "freedom in Tibet". Sadly of this number, 90 have died.

There is a direct relationship between self-immolations and China's political repression, economic marginalization, environmental destruction and cultural assimilation in Tibet.

Mr. Kayta further said that there is no space for protest to express one's grievances in Tibet today. In June 2012, 17-year-old Jigme Dolma protested in Kardze region of eastern Tibet. The Chinese security forces beat her and two months later she was sentenced to three years imprisonment.

He said that Chinese officials, however, are saying, "We have nothing to hide. Anyone can come and see by themselves", yet China has failed to accept visit requests by 12 UN Special Procedures mandate holders as well as foreign journalists and diplomats.

Mr. Kayta said the international community must hold China accountable to its pledges and obligations to protect human rights, religious freedom and freedom of expression in Tibet, Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia.

World powers express concern for Tibet at UN Human Rights Council
 
^^^^

Internal matters. Don't you know?

Same thing as the Naxalite in India.

You can kill them all. Nobody cares. They are Indians anyway.
 

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