SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

China Jails over 1,500 in Six-Year Crackdown on Dissent

Chinese human rights advocates (CHRD) released a report on Wednesday, a non-government human rights group, which revealed that over 1,500 people have been arbitrarily detained by the Chinese Communist Party government over the past six years in a wide range of objections.

Chrd's Report Regarding restraints in China, “in prison cell waiting for dawn” has led to the scale of crimes against humanity in China following the conclusion reached by the UN Working Group in 2017 on arbitrary detention.

“Every element of China's criminal justice system — police, prosecutors and courts have been involved in shutting down people with unfounded accusations of blatant violations of the government's domestic and international human rights obligations,” said Sophie Richardson, CHRD's co-executive director.

“It's not a crime to post critical comments online, advocate for civil liberties and oppose human rights abuses,” Richardson said.

The CHRD recorded 1,545 “constitutionals of conscience” in China, and was “declared and imprisoned on charges arising from laws that do not comply with the Chinese government's domestic and international human rights obligations.”

“Women activists, including Tibetans and Uyghurs, and marginalized communities are disproportionately among people who are illegally detained. Of the more than 700 conscience prisoners defined as age 60 or older, two-thirds are women,” the report states.

“Human rights experts and international experts have raised that people over the age of 60 should not be detained in general because they affect physical and mental health,” says Angeli Dutt, research consultant at CHRD, CHRD. I said Thursday's Radio Free Asia (RFA).

“Two-thirds of them were women,” Dutt added.

Many of the arrests were made in Hong Kong. There, a massive democratic movement flourished in 2019 and flourished relentlessly. It was crushed In 2020, it used an outrageous new “national security law” that criminalized virtually all criticism of the Chinese Communist Party and its Hong Kong doll government.

Chrd highlighted the relentless abuse of China's communist regime's favorite all-purpose accusations to silence the opposition, and the relentless abuse of “choosing an argument and causing trouble.”

Though not well known internationally, it was also a favorite embrace against challenges by Chinese communists, with accusations that “organize and use cults to undermine the implementation of the law” and “put national security at risk.”

The former is useful for imprisoning religious figures Beijing disliked, while the latter became an effective tool for shutting down all political organisations except the Chinese Communist Party. As the CHRD Report pointed out, China Incarceration There are dozens of people simply taking part in the primary in Hong Kong.

“The frequent use of Beijing's national security charges indicates that leadership as a means of political restraint relies on the legal system, and the use of voluntary detention nationwide demonstrates the widespread and systemic nature of abuse,” Chrd said.

The report argued that China felt courageous to build that machine as it had long fled with industrial-scale human rights abuses in its soil. Cross-border suppression.

“The immunity that Chinese government officials enjoy at home will burn them to commit abuse overseas,” Chrd warned. The recent stories highlighting such concerns are from Thailand Undefensible decision The 40 Uyghurs could be returned to China in late February and delivered to potentially Chinese communist prison guards and torturers.

The report concludes with a long set of recommendations to the Chinese government, other countries concerned with the human rights of its people, and the United Nations. One of these recommendations was to constantly put pressure on Chinese dictator XI Jinping and his top officials to release prisoners of conscience profiled by the CHRD.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News