On July 13th 2001, when Beijing won the right to host the 2008
Olympic Games, the Chinese government promised the world it would
improve China's human rights record. In June 2004, Beijing announced
its Olympic Games slogan, "One World, One Dream." From their inception
in 1896, the modern Olympic Games have always had as their mission the
promotion of human dignity and world peace. China and the world
expected to see the Olympic Games bring political progress to the
country. Is Beijing keeping its promises? Is China improving its human
rights record?
When you come to the Olympic Games in Beijing, you will see
skyscrapers, spacious streets, modern stadiums and enthusiastic people.
You will see the truth, but not the whole truth, just as you see only
the tip of an iceberg. You may not know that the flowers, smiles,
harmony and prosperity are built on a base of grievances, tears,
imprisonment, torture and blood.
We are going to tell you the truth about China. We believe that for
anyone who wishes to avoid a disgraceful Olympics, knowing the truth is
the first step. Fang Zheng, an excellent athlete who holds two national
records for the discus throw at China's Special Sport Games, has been
deprived of the opportunity to participate in the 2008 Paralympics
because he has become a living testimony to the June 4, 1989(,)
massacre. That morning, in Tiananmen Square, his legs were crushed by a
tank while he was rescuing a fellow student. In April 2007, the
Ministry of Public Security issued an internal document secretly
strengthening a political investigation which resulted in forbidding
Olympics participation by 43 types of people from 11 different
categories, including dissidents, human rights defenders, media
workers, and religious participants. The Chinese police never made the
document known to either the Chinese public or the international
community.
Huge investment in Olympic projects and a total lack of transparency
have facilitated serious corruption and widespread bribery. Taxpayers
are not allowed to supervise the use of investment amounting to more
than $40 billion. Liu Zhihua, formerly in charge of Olympic
construction and former deputy mayor of Beijing, was arrested for
massive embezzlement.
To clear space for Olympic-related construction, thousands of
civilian houses have been destroyed without their former owners being
properly compensated. Brothers Ye Guozhu and Ye Guoqiang were
imprisoned for a legal appeal after their house was forcibly
demolished. Ye Guozhu has been repeatedly handcuffed and shackled, tied
to a bed and beaten with electric batons. During the countdown to the
Olympic Games he will continue to suffer from torture in Chaobei Prison
in Tianjin.
It has been reported that over 1.25 million people have been forced
to move because of Olympic construction; it was estimated that the
figure would reach 1.5 million by the end of 2007. No formal
resettlement scheme is in place for the over 400,000 migrants who have
had their dwelling places demolished. Twenty percent of the demolished
households are expected to experience poverty or extreme poverty. In
Qingdao, the Olympic sailing city, hundreds of households have been
demolished and many human rights activists as well as "civilians" have
been imprisoned. Similar stories come from other Olympic cities such as
Shenyang, Shanghai and Qinhuangdao.
In order to establish the image of civilized cities, the government
has intensified the ban against - and detention and forced repatriation
of - petitioners, beggars and the homeless. Some of them have been kept
in extended detention in so-called shelters or have even been sent
directly to labor camps. Street vendors have suffered brutal
confiscation of their goods by municipal agents. On July 20, 2005, Lin
Hongying, a 56-year-old woman farmer and vegetable dealer, was beaten
to death by city patrols in Jiangsu. On November 19, 2005, city patrols
in Wuxi beat 54-year-old bicycle repairman Wu Shouqing to death. In
January 2007, petitioner Duan Huimin was killed by Shanghai police. On
July 1, 2007, Chen Xiaoming, a Shanghai petitioner and human rights
activist, died of an untreated illness during a lengthy detention
period. On August 5, 2007, right before the one-year Olympics
countdown, 200 petitioners were arrested in Beijing.
China has consistently persecuted human rights activists, political
dissidents and freelance writers and journalists. The blind activist
Chen Guangcheng, recipient of the 2007 Ramon Magsaysay Award and named
in 2006 by Time Magazine as one of the most influential 100 people
shaping our world, is still serving his sentence of four years and
three months for exposing the truth of forced abortion and
sterilization. The government refused to give him the Braille books and
the radio that his relatives and friends brought to Linyi prison in
Shandong. Chen has been beaten while serving his sentence. On August
24, 2007, Chen's wife, Yuan Weijing, was kidnapped by police at the
Beijing airport while waiting to fly to the Philippines to receive the
Ramon Magsaysay Award on behalf of her husband. On August 13, 2007,
activist Yang Chunlin was arrested in Heilongjiang and charged with
subversion of state power "for initiating the petition ‘Human Rights
before Olympics.' "
China still practices literary inquisition and holds the world
record for detaining journalists and writers, as many as several
hundred since 1989, according to incomplete statistics. As of this
writing, 35 Chinese journalists and 51 writers are still in prison.
Over 90 percent were arrested or tried after Beijing's successful bid
for the Olympics in July 2001. For example, Shi Tao, a journalist and a
poet, was sentenced to ten years in prison because of an e-mail sent to
an overseas website. Dr. Xu Zerong, a scholar from Oxford University
who researched the Korean War, was sentenced to 13 years' imprisonment
for "illegally providing information abroad." Qingshuijun (Huang
Jinqiu), a freelance writer, was sentenced to a 12-year term for his
online publications. Some writers and dissidents are prohibited from
going abroad; others from returning to China.
Every year in mainland China, countless websites are closed, blogs
deleted, sensitive words filtered. Many websites hosted abroad are
blocked. Overseas radio and television programs are interfered with or
strictly prohibited. Although the Chinese government has promised media
freedom for foreign journalists for 22 months, before, during, and
after the Beijing Olympics, and ending on October 17, 2008, an FCCC
(Foreign Correspondents Club in China) survey showed that 40 percent of
foreign correspondents have experienced harassment, detention or an
official warning during news gathering in Beijing and other areas. Some
reporters have complained about repeated violent police interference at
the time they were speaking with interviewees. Most seriously, Chinese
interviewees usually become vulnerable as a result. In June 2006, Fu
Xiancai was beaten and paralyzed after being interviewed by German
media. In March 2007, Zheng Dajing was beaten and arrested after being
interviewed by a British TV station.
Religious freedom is still under repression. In 2005, a Beijing
pastor, Cai Zhuohua, was sentenced to three years for printing Bibles.
Zhou Heng, a house church pastor in Xinjiang, was charged with running
an "illegal operation" for receiving dozens of boxes of Bibles. From
April to June 2007, China expelled over 100 suspected U.S., South
Korean, Canadian, Australian, and other missionaries. Among them were
humanitarian workers and language educators who had been teaching
English in China for 15 years. During this so-called Typhoon 5
campaign, authorities took aim at missionary activities so as to
prevent their recurrence during the Olympics.
On September 30, 2006, Chinese soldiers opened fire on 71 Tibetans
who were escaping to Nepal. A 17-year-old nun died and a 20-year-old
man was severely injured. Despite numerous international witnesses, the
Chinese police insisted that the shooting was in self-defense. One year
later, China tightened its control over Tibetan Buddhism. A September
1, 2007, regulation requires all reincarnated lamas to be approved by
Chinese authorities, a requirement that flagrantly interferes with the
tradition of reincarnation of living Buddhas as practiced in Tibet for
thousands of years. In addition, Chinese authorities still ban the
Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibet and a world-renowned
pacifist, from returning to Tibet.
Since 1999, the government has banned many religious beliefs such as
Falungong and the Three Servants. Their followers have experienced
extremely cruel and planned persecutions. Many died from abuse,
suffered torture, brainwashing, imprisonment and labor camp internment
for persisting in their faith, possessing religious books, making DVDs
and writing articles to expose the truth of the persecution.
China has the highest death penalty rate in the world. Execution
statistics are treated as "state secrets." However, experts estimate
that 8,000-10,000 people are sentenced to death in China every year,
among them not only criminals and economic convicts, but totally
innocent citizens, such as Nie Shubin, Teng Xingshan, Cao Haixin and
Hugejiletu, whose innocence was proven only after they were already
dead.
Another eight innocent farmers, Chen Guoqing, He Guoqiang, Yang
Shiliang, Zhu Yanqiang, Huang Zhixiang, Fang Chunping, Cheng Fagen and
Cheng Lihe, who confessed their "crimes" after being cruelly tortured
by the police, have been sentenced to death and are currently held in
prisons in Hebei (province) and in Jingdezhen (in Jiangxi province).
Torture is very common in China's detention centers, labor camps and
prisons. Torture methods include electric shock, burning, use of
electric needles, beating and hanging, sleep deprivation, forced
chemical injection causing nerve damage, and piercing the fingers with
needles. Every year, there are reported cases of Chinese citizens being
disabled or killed by police torture.
Labor camps are still retained as a convenienu Chinese system which
allows the police to lock up citizens without trial for up to four
years. The detention system is another practice that the police favor,
freeing them to detain citizens for six months to two years. Dissidents
and human rights activists are particularly vulnerable targets and are
often sent to labor camps, detention centers or even mental hospitals
by authorities who want to simplify legal procedures and mislead the
media.
China has the world's largest secret police system, the Ministry of
National Security (guo an) and the Internal Security Bureau (guo bao)
of the Ministry of Public Security, which exercise power beyond the
law. They can easily tap telephones, follow citizens, place them under
house arrest, detain them and impose torture. On June 3, 2004, the
Chinese secret police planted drugs on Chongqing dissident Xu Wanping
and later sentenced him to 12 years' imprisonment for "subversion of
state power."
Chinese citizens have no right to elect state leaders, local
government officials or representatives. In fact, there has never been
free exercise of election rights in township-level elections. Wuhan
resident Sun Bu'er, a member of the banned political party the Pan-Blue
Alliance, was brutally beaten in September 2006 for participating as an
independent candidate during an election of county-level people's
congress representatives. Mr. Sun disappeared on March 23, 2007.
China continues to cruelly discriminate against its rural
population. According to the Chinese election law, a farmer's right to
vote is worth one quarter of that of an urban resident. In June 2007,
the Shanxi kiln scandal was exposed by the media. Thousands of 8-
(to-)13(-)year-old trafficked children had been forced to labor in
illegal kilns, almost all with local government connections. Many of
the children were beaten, tortured and even buried alive.
The Chinese judiciary still illegally forbids any HIV/AIDS lawsuits
against government officials responsible for the tragedy. AIDS
sufferers and activists have been constantly harassed by the secret
police.
The Chinese government has been selling arms and weapons to Darfur
and other African regions to support ethnic cleansing and crimes
against humanity. The Chinese authorities have forcibly repatriated
North Korean refugees, knowing that they would be sent to labor camps
or executed once back home. This significantly contravenes China's
accession to the "Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees" and
the "Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees."
-- Please be aware that the Olympic Games will be held in a country
where there are no elections, no freedom of religion, no independent
courts, no independent trade unions; where demonstsations and strikes
are prohibited; where torture and discrimination are supported by a
sophisticated system of secret police; where the government encourages
the violation of human rights and dignity, and is not willing to
undertake any of its international obligations.
-- Please consider whether the Olympic Games should coexist with
religious persecution(,) labor camps, modern slavery, identity
discrimination, secret police and crimes against humanity.
As the Beijing Olympics slogan says, we live in "one world" with
"one dream." We hope that one day the Chinese people will be able to
share universal human rights, democracy and peace with people from all
around the world. However, we can see that the Chinese government
obviously is not yet prepared to honor its promise. As a matter of
fact, the preparations for the Olympics have provided the perfect
excuse for the Chinese government to restrict civil liberties and
suppress human rights!
We do not want China to be contained or isolated from the rest of
the world. We believe that only by adhering to the principles of human
rights and through open dialogue can the world community pressure the
Chinese government to change. Ignoring these realities and tolerating
barbaric atrocities in (the) name of the Beijing Olympics will disgrace
the Olympic Charter and shake the foundations of humanity. Human rights
improvement requires time, but we should at least stop China's human
rights situation from deteriorating. Having the Olympics hosted in a
country where human dignity is trampled on will not honor its people or
the Olympic Games.
We sincerely hope that the Olympic Games will bring the values of
peace, equality, freedom and justice to 1.3 billion Chinese citizens.
We pray that the Olympics will be held in a free China. We must push
for the 2008 Olympics to live up to the Olympic Charter(,) and we must
advocate for the realization of "one world" with "one human rights
dream." We believe that only an Olympic Games true to the Olympic
Charter can promote China's democratic progress, world peace and
development.
We firmly hold to the belief that there can be no true Olympic Games
without human rights and dignity. For China and for the Olympics, human
rights must be upheld!
When you come to the Olympic Games in Beijing, you will see
skyscrapers, spacious streets, modern stadiums and enthusiastic people.
You will see the truth, but not the whole truth, just as you see only
the tip of an iceberg. You may not know that the flowers, smiles,
harmony and prosperity are built on a base of grievances, tears,
imprisonment, torture and blood.
We are going to tell you the truth about China. We believe that for
anyone who wishes to avoid a disgraceful Olympics, knowing the truth is
the first step. Fang Zheng, an excellent athlete who holds two national
records for the discus throw at China's Special Sport Games, has been
deprived of the opportunity to participate in the 2008 Paralympics
because he has become a living testimony to the June 4, 1989(,)
massacre. That morning, in Tiananmen Square, his legs were crushed by a
tank while he was rescuing a fellow student. In April 2007, the
Ministry of Public Security issued an internal document secretly
strengthening a political investigation which resulted in forbidding
Olympics participation by 43 types of people from 11 different
categories, including dissidents, human rights defenders, media
workers, and religious participants. The Chinese police never made the
document known to either the Chinese public or the international
community.
Huge investment in Olympic projects and a total lack of transparency
have facilitated serious corruption and widespread bribery. Taxpayers
are not allowed to supervise the use of investment amounting to more
than $40 billion. Liu Zhihua, formerly in charge of Olympic
construction and former deputy mayor of Beijing, was arrested for
massive embezzlement.
To clear space for Olympic-related construction, thousands of
civilian houses have been destroyed without their former owners being
properly compensated. Brothers Ye Guozhu and Ye Guoqiang were
imprisoned for a legal appeal after their house was forcibly
demolished. Ye Guozhu has been repeatedly handcuffed and shackled, tied
to a bed and beaten with electric batons. During the countdown to the
Olympic Games he will continue to suffer from torture in Chaobei Prison
in Tianjin.
It has been reported that over 1.25 million people have been forced
to move because of Olympic construction; it was estimated that the
figure would reach 1.5 million by the end of 2007. No formal
resettlement scheme is in place for the over 400,000 migrants who have
had their dwelling places demolished. Twenty percent of the demolished
households are expected to experience poverty or extreme poverty. In
Qingdao, the Olympic sailing city, hundreds of households have been
demolished and many human rights activists as well as "civilians" have
been imprisoned. Similar stories come from other Olympic cities such as
Shenyang, Shanghai and Qinhuangdao.
In order to establish the image of civilized cities, the government
has intensified the ban against - and detention and forced repatriation
of - petitioners, beggars and the homeless. Some of them have been kept
in extended detention in so-called shelters or have even been sent
directly to labor camps. Street vendors have suffered brutal
confiscation of their goods by municipal agents. On July 20, 2005, Lin
Hongying, a 56-year-old woman farmer and vegetable dealer, was beaten
to death by city patrols in Jiangsu. On November 19, 2005, city patrols
in Wuxi beat 54-year-old bicycle repairman Wu Shouqing to death. In
January 2007, petitioner Duan Huimin was killed by Shanghai police. On
July 1, 2007, Chen Xiaoming, a Shanghai petitioner and human rights
activist, died of an untreated illness during a lengthy detention
period. On August 5, 2007, right before the one-year Olympics
countdown, 200 petitioners were arrested in Beijing.
China has consistently persecuted human rights activists, political
dissidents and freelance writers and journalists. The blind activist
Chen Guangcheng, recipient of the 2007 Ramon Magsaysay Award and named
in 2006 by Time Magazine as one of the most influential 100 people
shaping our world, is still serving his sentence of four years and
three months for exposing the truth of forced abortion and
sterilization. The government refused to give him the Braille books and
the radio that his relatives and friends brought to Linyi prison in
Shandong. Chen has been beaten while serving his sentence. On August
24, 2007, Chen's wife, Yuan Weijing, was kidnapped by police at the
Beijing airport while waiting to fly to the Philippines to receive the
Ramon Magsaysay Award on behalf of her husband. On August 13, 2007,
activist Yang Chunlin was arrested in Heilongjiang and charged with
subversion of state power "for initiating the petition ‘Human Rights
before Olympics.' "
China still practices literary inquisition and holds the world
record for detaining journalists and writers, as many as several
hundred since 1989, according to incomplete statistics. As of this
writing, 35 Chinese journalists and 51 writers are still in prison.
Over 90 percent were arrested or tried after Beijing's successful bid
for the Olympics in July 2001. For example, Shi Tao, a journalist and a
poet, was sentenced to ten years in prison because of an e-mail sent to
an overseas website. Dr. Xu Zerong, a scholar from Oxford University
who researched the Korean War, was sentenced to 13 years' imprisonment
for "illegally providing information abroad." Qingshuijun (Huang
Jinqiu), a freelance writer, was sentenced to a 12-year term for his
online publications. Some writers and dissidents are prohibited from
going abroad; others from returning to China.
Every year in mainland China, countless websites are closed, blogs
deleted, sensitive words filtered. Many websites hosted abroad are
blocked. Overseas radio and television programs are interfered with or
strictly prohibited. Although the Chinese government has promised media
freedom for foreign journalists for 22 months, before, during, and
after the Beijing Olympics, and ending on October 17, 2008, an FCCC
(Foreign Correspondents Club in China) survey showed that 40 percent of
foreign correspondents have experienced harassment, detention or an
official warning during news gathering in Beijing and other areas. Some
reporters have complained about repeated violent police interference at
the time they were speaking with interviewees. Most seriously, Chinese
interviewees usually become vulnerable as a result. In June 2006, Fu
Xiancai was beaten and paralyzed after being interviewed by German
media. In March 2007, Zheng Dajing was beaten and arrested after being
interviewed by a British TV station.
Religious freedom is still under repression. In 2005, a Beijing
pastor, Cai Zhuohua, was sentenced to three years for printing Bibles.
Zhou Heng, a house church pastor in Xinjiang, was charged with running
an "illegal operation" for receiving dozens of boxes of Bibles. From
April to June 2007, China expelled over 100 suspected U.S., South
Korean, Canadian, Australian, and other missionaries. Among them were
humanitarian workers and language educators who had been teaching
English in China for 15 years. During this so-called Typhoon 5
campaign, authorities took aim at missionary activities so as to
prevent their recurrence during the Olympics.
On September 30, 2006, Chinese soldiers opened fire on 71 Tibetans
who were escaping to Nepal. A 17-year-old nun died and a 20-year-old
man was severely injured. Despite numerous international witnesses, the
Chinese police insisted that the shooting was in self-defense. One year
later, China tightened its control over Tibetan Buddhism. A September
1, 2007, regulation requires all reincarnated lamas to be approved by
Chinese authorities, a requirement that flagrantly interferes with the
tradition of reincarnation of living Buddhas as practiced in Tibet for
thousands of years. In addition, Chinese authorities still ban the
Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibet and a world-renowned
pacifist, from returning to Tibet.
Since 1999, the government has banned many religious beliefs such as
Falungong and the Three Servants. Their followers have experienced
extremely cruel and planned persecutions. Many died from abuse,
suffered torture, brainwashing, imprisonment and labor camp internment
for persisting in their faith, possessing religious books, making DVDs
and writing articles to expose the truth of the persecution.
China has the highest death penalty rate in the world. Execution
statistics are treated as "state secrets." However, experts estimate
that 8,000-10,000 people are sentenced to death in China every year,
among them not only criminals and economic convicts, but totally
innocent citizens, such as Nie Shubin, Teng Xingshan, Cao Haixin and
Hugejiletu, whose innocence was proven only after they were already
dead.
Another eight innocent farmers, Chen Guoqing, He Guoqiang, Yang
Shiliang, Zhu Yanqiang, Huang Zhixiang, Fang Chunping, Cheng Fagen and
Cheng Lihe, who confessed their "crimes" after being cruelly tortured
by the police, have been sentenced to death and are currently held in
prisons in Hebei (province) and in Jingdezhen (in Jiangxi province).
Torture is very common in China's detention centers, labor camps and
prisons. Torture methods include electric shock, burning, use of
electric needles, beating and hanging, sleep deprivation, forced
chemical injection causing nerve damage, and piercing the fingers with
needles. Every year, there are reported cases of Chinese citizens being
disabled or killed by police torture.
Labor camps are still retained as a convenienu Chinese system which
allows the police to lock up citizens without trial for up to four
years. The detention system is another practice that the police favor,
freeing them to detain citizens for six months to two years. Dissidents
and human rights activists are particularly vulnerable targets and are
often sent to labor camps, detention centers or even mental hospitals
by authorities who want to simplify legal procedures and mislead the
media.
China has the world's largest secret police system, the Ministry of
National Security (guo an) and the Internal Security Bureau (guo bao)
of the Ministry of Public Security, which exercise power beyond the
law. They can easily tap telephones, follow citizens, place them under
house arrest, detain them and impose torture. On June 3, 2004, the
Chinese secret police planted drugs on Chongqing dissident Xu Wanping
and later sentenced him to 12 years' imprisonment for "subversion of
state power."
Chinese citizens have no right to elect state leaders, local
government officials or representatives. In fact, there has never been
free exercise of election rights in township-level elections. Wuhan
resident Sun Bu'er, a member of the banned political party the Pan-Blue
Alliance, was brutally beaten in September 2006 for participating as an
independent candidate during an election of county-level people's
congress representatives. Mr. Sun disappeared on March 23, 2007.
China continues to cruelly discriminate against its rural
population. According to the Chinese election law, a farmer's right to
vote is worth one quarter of that of an urban resident. In June 2007,
the Shanxi kiln scandal was exposed by the media. Thousands of 8-
(to-)13(-)year-old trafficked children had been forced to labor in
illegal kilns, almost all with local government connections. Many of
the children were beaten, tortured and even buried alive.
The Chinese judiciary still illegally forbids any HIV/AIDS lawsuits
against government officials responsible for the tragedy. AIDS
sufferers and activists have been constantly harassed by the secret
police.
The Chinese government has been selling arms and weapons to Darfur
and other African regions to support ethnic cleansing and crimes
against humanity. The Chinese authorities have forcibly repatriated
North Korean refugees, knowing that they would be sent to labor camps
or executed once back home. This significantly contravenes China's
accession to the "Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees" and
the "Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees."
-- Please be aware that the Olympic Games will be held in a country
where there are no elections, no freedom of religion, no independent
courts, no independent trade unions; where demonstsations and strikes
are prohibited; where torture and discrimination are supported by a
sophisticated system of secret police; where the government encourages
the violation of human rights and dignity, and is not willing to
undertake any of its international obligations.
-- Please consider whether the Olympic Games should coexist with
religious persecution(,) labor camps, modern slavery, identity
discrimination, secret police and crimes against humanity.
As the Beijing Olympics slogan says, we live in "one world" with
"one dream." We hope that one day the Chinese people will be able to
share universal human rights, democracy and peace with people from all
around the world. However, we can see that the Chinese government
obviously is not yet prepared to honor its promise. As a matter of
fact, the preparations for the Olympics have provided the perfect
excuse for the Chinese government to restrict civil liberties and
suppress human rights!
We do not want China to be contained or isolated from the rest of
the world. We believe that only by adhering to the principles of human
rights and through open dialogue can the world community pressure the
Chinese government to change. Ignoring these realities and tolerating
barbaric atrocities in (the) name of the Beijing Olympics will disgrace
the Olympic Charter and shake the foundations of humanity. Human rights
improvement requires time, but we should at least stop China's human
rights situation from deteriorating. Having the Olympics hosted in a
country where human dignity is trampled on will not honor its people or
the Olympic Games.
We sincerely hope that the Olympic Games will bring the values of
peace, equality, freedom and justice to 1.3 billion Chinese citizens.
We pray that the Olympics will be held in a free China. We must push
for the 2008 Olympics to live up to the Olympic Charter(,) and we must
advocate for the realization of "one world" with "one human rights
dream." We believe that only an Olympic Games true to the Olympic
Charter can promote China's democratic progress, world peace and
development.
We firmly hold to the belief that there can be no true Olympic Games
without human rights and dignity. For China and for the Olympics, human
rights must be upheld!
I applaud Google for its brave stand on ...