首頁   聯絡我們
 
‧人權新知
 
‧世界人權宣言
 
高雄國際人權宣言
 
‧人權影音資料館藏
 
‧人權圖書資料館藏
 


China's Hu - Presiding over a messed-up system

China’s blatant abuse of human rights – Ai Weiwei is simply the victim of a messed-up political system

The mother of detained artist Ai Weiwei said Thursday that authorities in China were trying to silence her son with their investigation of his alleged economic crimes, which she called “unacceptable.” In a one-paragraph dispatch, the official Xinhua news agency said Ai — who was detained Sunday at Beijing’s international airport while awaiting a flight to Hong Kong — was being investigated for suspected economic crimes. ”I don’t believe these charges of economic crimes … I don’t think this is the reason they have taken him away,” Gao Ying, who is nearly 80, told AFP in a telephone interview. ”This is unacceptable, it is not right.”

Ai, a widely respected artist and the son of a poet revered by China’s early Communist leaders, helped design the Bird’s Nest Olympic Stadium for the 2008 Beijing Games, but has since irritated the government with his social activism. He probed the collapse of schools in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, looked into a Shanghai high-rise fire last November that killed dozens, and says police beat him when he tried to testify on behalf of another activist in 2009. ”What has happened is not right. He must have his voice, his work, it is not right that they take him away like this and accuse him of being a criminal,” Ai’s mother said between sobs. ”He must be treated fairly. He has the right to voice his views. The actions of the state show that someone wants to take his voice away,” she said. ”Ai Weiwei is not a politician, he has no political background. What he does, he does for the nation and for the people — he is not doing this for himself.”

On Sunday, police raided the Beijing studio of the 53-year-old artist — a burly man with a distinctive wispy beard whose work is currently on display in London’s Tate Modern gallery. Since he was taken into custody, no charges have been filed against him and the police have so far refused to confirm why he was detained. The police silence prompted Gao to post a missing person’s notice on the Internet on Wednesday, urging people with knowledge of Ai’s disappearance to come forward, she said. ”They have to inform us why they have taken him away,” Gao said. ”There are a lot of people who will support me, there are a lot of people who will back us. We need justice.”


(2011-4-7/newstimeafrica)

 
  2009 2010 2011 2012
 
4/1: UN Human Rights Committee Concerned About Human Rights After july riots (ubpost)
4/1: Amnesty: Nigeria signs landmark Human Rights bill (bikyamasr.com)
4/2: BRICS Form Unstable Foundation for Multilateral Action (ForeignPolicyJournal)
4/2: Saudi Shias Protest Peacefully (ArabTimesOnline)
4/3: Hindu marriages(dawn.com)
4/3: People with disabilities set to be more visible in general elections (todayszaman)
4/6: Now, human rights is a compulsory course (MiD-DAY)
4/6: Plans to put human rights staff at Corrib Gas site (BelfastTelegraph)
4/7: China’s blatant abuse of human rights – Ai Weiwei is simply the victim of a messed-up political system (newstimeafrica)
4/7: Palestinian Harassment of Press Growing, Rights Group Says (bloomberg)
 
人權學堂 ∣Human Rights Learning Studio

位置:高雄捷運O5/R10美麗島穹頂大廳方向往出口9
Position: Kaohsiung MRT 05/R10 Formosa Boulevard Hall Exit 9
郵寄地址:81249高雄市小港區大業北路436號
Address: No. 436, Daye North Rd. Siaogang Dist., Kaohsiung City 81249, Taiwan
電話Tel:886-7-2357559∣傳真Fax:886-7-2351129
Email: hr-learning@ouk.edu.tw