首頁Home 

  聯絡我們Contact us

Human Rights Data

 
‧人權新知NEWS
 
‧世界人權宣言Universal Declaration of Human Rights
 
高雄國際人權宣言Kaohsiung Declaratinn of Human Rights
 
‧人權影音資料館藏Videos
 
‧人權圖書資料館藏Books
 
‧高雄市人權委員會Kaohsiung Human Rights Committee
 
城市人權新聞獎Kaohsiung Human Rights Press Prize
> 07/17:U.S. Government Must Heed Call of Human Rights Experts Worldwide to Respect Snowden's Right to Seek Asylum(aclu) 07/17:Tanzania: Below the Radar - How Human Rights Abuses Are Being Ignored in Tanzania(allafrica)
                              NEWS
 

A Leading Chinese Human Rights Advocate Is Detained in Beijing

HONG KONG — The police in Beijing have detained one of China’s most prominent rights advocates, the latest in a series of arrests that critics said showed the Communist Party’s determination to silence campaigners who have challenged the party to act on its vows to expose official corruption and respect rule of law. Enlarge This Image

Greg Baker/Associated Press Xu Zhiyong in 2009. He faces charges of unlawful assembly. World Twitter Logo. Connect With Us on Twitter Follow @nytimesworld for international breaking news and headlines. Twitter List: Reporters and Editors The rights advocate, Xu Zhiyong, was held by the public transportation police on Tuesday on charges of “assembling a crowd to disrupt order in a public place,” although he has been under informal house arrest for more than three months, his wife, Cui Zheng, confirmed by telephone on Wednesday. Liu Weiguo, a lawyer whom Mr. Xu had earlier asked to represent him, said he was baffled that Mr. Xu, a legal scholar accustomed to police pressure, could be accused of thwarting his guards and starting a public ruckus.

“As I understand it, he’s been under house arrest for 70 or 80 days or longer, so how could it be possible for him to engage in so-called disruption of public order? It’s mystifying,” Mr. Liu said. He said he hoped to meet Mr. Xu on Thursday to clarify the accusations, which, if taken to trial, can bring a maximum penalty of five years in prison. “Many of his friends feel shocked that someone as mild, restrained and softly spoken as him can’t be tolerated,” Mr. Liu said.

If Mr. Xu is held for long, supporters said that his case was likely to attract wider attention as a test of China’s beleaguered “rights defense” movement, which he helped build. That loose network of lawyers, scholars and advocates has sought to use litigation, publicity and petitions to secure political and social rights. Recently, Mr. Xu has promoted a “New Citizens’ Movement” demanding that officials disclose their wealth; other participants in that campaign have been arrested and some may soon stand trial.

“To arrest someone like him will have a big social impact and impose a heavy price on the authorities, especially if he’s tried and convicted, and that seems possible,” said Guo Yushan, a longtime friend of Mr. Xu, and an early collaborator in his rights efforts.

“He’s been a moderate, arguing for opportunities to work for change within the system,” said Mr. Guo, the head of the Transition Institute, a research group in Beijing that advocates political and economic liberalization. “But it looks like the authorities are determined to act, despite the price. We can all feel the pressure. I’ve also been under house arrest for the past two weeks.”

Mr. Xu’s supporters said his detention was reprisal for his role in the campaign demanding that officials disclose their wealth, an idea that some officials have also endorsed, albeit in more cautious terms. The Chinese authorities have now detained 16 people involved in the campaign, including Mr. Xu, said Maya Wang, a researcher on Asia for Human Rights Watch, an advocacy group with headquarters in New York. Three of them could soon stand trial in Jiangxi Province in southern China, she said, citing earlier court notices.

“Civic groups are enduring another round of repression, but still more and more obedient vassals are awakening as citizens,” Mr. Xu wrote in an assessment of his career of activism, which he published on his blog in May.

Since his appointment as Communist Party leader in November, Xi Jinping has repeatedly said that the party must eradicate brazen corruption, which has stirred deepening public anger. But Ms. Wang, the rights researcher, said the detentions have demonstrated the limits of changes under Mr. Xi.

“When the activists are saying the same thing as Xi Jinping says, they are punished,” she said. “The fact that they have been going onto the streets and across the country to spread that message, that probably makes the authorities very nervous.”

Officials at the detention center in Beijing where Mr. Xu was held would not answer questions. Questions sent to the propaganda office of the Beijing Public Security Bureau also were not answered.

Mr. Xu, 40, came to national prominence in 2003 as an advocate for Sun Zhigang, a young man whose death caused an uproar after he was fatally beaten in a detention center for vagrants and rural migrants without the right official documents. The government abolished those centers, giving a boost to Mr. Xu’s ideas of combining litigation and publicity to press for wider rights.

Mr. Xu, who has worked as a law lecturer in Beijing, in 2003 won a term as an independent delegate on a district People’s Congress in Beijing, a rare victory in a body dominated by party-appointed officials. In 2009 he was arrested on tax-evasion allegations that he rejected as an effort to stifle his advocacy. He was released on bail and never brought to trial on that charge.

More recently, he has helped organize citizens’ raids on “black jails” used to detain petitioners coming to Beijing to present grievances, and has helped parents campaigning against discriminatory barriers that prevent children from the countryside from enjoying the same schools and chances for advancement as established urban residents.

Mr. Liu, the lawyer, said that the authorities had refused to give Mr. Xu a license to practice as a lawyer, cramping his efforts to use litigation to force reforms.

“Many lawyers will come forward to defend him for the public good and for rule of law,” Mr. Liu said. “In China, we say that the best lawyers are the ones who can’t obtain a license.”


(2013-07-18/nytimes)

 
  2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
 
07/01:Egyptian Human Rights Attorney Ragia Omran Selected for 30th Annual Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award(allafrica)
07/01:Human Rights Watch needs to investigate faulty sexual assault report(washingtonpost)
07/02:Global human rights philanthropy topped $1.2 billion in 2010(philanthropyjournal)
07/02:Egypt: Epidemic of Sexual Violence(hrw)
07/03:Human Rights Appointments Draw Fire In Afghanistan(rferl)
07/03:Human Rights Commission Appointments Draw Fire In Afghanistan(raw)
07/04:Cambodia: Report Finds Marked Deterioration In Human Rights(hrw)
07/04:Kristen Bell Raises Money for Human Rights Cause, Promises Date to Lucky Donor(moviefone)
07/05:Cambodia: Report Finds Marked Deterioration In Human Rights(scoop)
07/05:Aid and development RSS Feed Warden and Wood: Another non-report on human rights and free trade with Colombia(ottawacitizen)
07/06:May hits out over human rights laws(uk)
07/06:Ministers face new terrorist human rights row(telegraph)
07/07:Indonesia urged to be transparent on human rights record(thejakartapost)
07/07:Human Rights group to vote on resolution tonight(recorder)
07/08:Turning Up the Volume on Human Rights in Europe(nytimes)
07/08:John Kerry asked to raise human rights issues with China(indianexpress)
07/09:Human Rights Act held up Abu Qatada's exit, says Theresa May(express)
07/09:Bahrain No More Stable as Nabeel Rajab Marks One Year in Custody(humanrightsfirst)
07/10:Sudan urged to tackle human rights violation(enca)
07/10:Russian suspects in Sergei Magnitsky death barred from entry to UK(guardian)
07/11:Safe drinking water for Tokomaru 'a basic human right'(stuff)
07/11:Sentenced to Forfeit Human Rights(huffingtonpost)
07/12:Israel: High Court Rejects Legal Ban on White Phosphorus(hrw)
07/12:Snowden meets with rights groups, seeks temporary asylum in Russia(cnn)
07/14:Labour's 'secret plan' to make claiming benefits a human right(telegraph)
07/14:Labour 'plans benefits human right'(express)
07/15:Afghanistan: Escalating Setbacks for Women(hrw)
07/15:Human Rights Watch condemns Israel's refugee asylum policy(upi)
07/16:Human Rights Foundation: Jennifer Lopez Made Millions 'Serenading Crooks And Dictators'(huffingtonpost)
07/16:UK Raises Human Rights With Myanmar President(abcnews)
07/17:U.S. Government Must Heed Call of Human Rights Experts Worldwide to Respect Snowden's Right to Seek Asylum(aclu)
07/17:Tanzania: Below the Radar - How Human Rights Abuses Are Being Ignored in Tanzania(allafrica)
07/18:A Leading Chinese Human Rights Advocate Is Detained in Beijing(nytimes)
07/18:Senate Urged to Swiftly Confirm Power(humanrightsfirst)
07/19:Abbotsford must defend its drug users bylaw before B.C. Human Rights Tribunal(theprovince)
07/19:Israel: Excessive Force against Protesters(hrw)
 
 
 
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