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U.N. asks China to release missing rights lawyer

Alphatech

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A U.N. committee has called on China to release a prominent human rights lawyer who has been missing for nearly a year, saying his detention violates international law.

The request for an immediate release of Gao Zhisheng— addressed to the Chinese government — came in July from the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, but was made public Monday by Freedom Now, a legal advocacy group.

The U.N. group also asked the government "for reparation for the harm caused," saying Gao's detention violated international law because he was exercising his fundamental rights and because the government had failed to meet minimum international standards for due process.
Gao is a major figure in the rights movement, advocating constitutional reform and arguing landmark cases to defend religious dissenters, including members of the Falun Gong spiritual movement.
Gao has been repeatedly detained and tortured by the Chinese government in the past.

His disappearance in 2009 resulted in an international outcry that may have played a role in his brief release in March last year. However, he disappeared again in April and has not reappeared.
China has clamped down hard on dissent in recent months in the wake of anonymous calls for Middle East-inspired protests. Activists have said they fear China's massive security apparatus is using the government's anxiety over calls for a "Jasmine Revolution" as a pretext for the crackdown.

More than 100 people, including lawyers and activists, across China have been questioned or followed by police or placed under house arrest in recent weeks, human rights groups have said.
A blogger who frequently commented on China's politics and its leadership has been arrested by police and charged with challenging the government, his wife said Monday.
Writer and blogger Ran Yunfei was detained more than a month ago in the southwestern province of Sichuan, his wife told The Associated Press in a phone interview. She said she received a notice Monday from Chengdu police that he was formally arrested and charged with inciting subversion of state power on Friday, and that she has not been allowed to visit him.

Gao's wife, Geng He, who sought political asylum in the United States with her two children, wrote a commentary published Sunday in the New York Times calling on President Obama to help push for her husband's release.

"The Chinese government must not be allowed to claim that China is a nation operating under the rule of law while persecuting those who try to ensure that it respects the law. And when the government silences dissent, the international community must speak up," she wrote.
 
If the whole purpose here is to make your 'China is not a rule of law country' why bother to waste your to post a article comes from nowhere?
 
How about helping to "find" him?

Is that your job or CIA's job? And how come you believe so firmly that no one is helping out? And I bet you don't really know this guy do you? And you don't really care about him or his family.

The more 'sad' his story looks like, the more happy and joy you get from using that story to make China looks bad.
 
Don't you find their logic strange? How can you 'release' someone is 'missing'?

Oh come on. You say you are Chinese and yet you ask such a silly question. It would be hard for a needle to go missing in China without the knowledge of your paranoid government.
 
Oh come on. You say you are Chinese and yet you ask such a silly question. It would be hard for a needle to go missing in China without the knowledge of your paranoid government.

China's missing children - upiasia.com

Based on conservative estimates, more than 70,000 children go missing in China every year – an average of 192 per day. The most common cases occur in poor mountain areas – where a family might sell a child for money or buy a son to carry on the family line – and in big cities where many migrant workers move with their families to live in crowded temporary housing without proper documentation.

Not even counting adults.

It's a big country. People go missing. Some people want to disappear. I can disappear tomorrow by switching off my cell phone and stepping on a train to where ever. No one will ever be able to find me, not the police, not the government, no one.

It has gotten better with the use of electronic identity cards recently, but for someone kidnapped or someone who wants to disappear, just throw the card away and get a fake one.
 
Oh come on. You say you are Chinese and yet you ask such a silly question. It would be hard for a needle to go missing in China without the knowledge of your paranoid government.

You are wayyy overestimating the ability of the government.

You say you come from a civilized country but can I call you abusive and rude according to your personal attack record?
 
I think it is probably a CIA job. When did they outsourced the job to India?

What's India got to do with this?

It could very well be the CIA's job... that they are able to roam freely in China and make some "pro-democracy" activists disappear? Oh I totally believe you.
 
art_yang-hengjun-200x0.jpg


My friend, the dissident who 'disappeared' John Garnaut March 30, 2011

You might think it gets easier to stomach news of a good friend or terrific individual ''disappearing'' in China, given the rate at which it has been happening. But Yang Hengjun vanishing from Guangzhou's Baiyun Airport hits deeper into the abdomen and rises further up the throat, I think, because it comes with an added feeling that the ground for everyone in China is shifting fast beneath our feet.

Nobody has heard from ''Henry'' Yang since Sunday when the Sydney writer phoned a colleague to say he was being followed by three men. Australian diplomats, already struggling to cope with the growing list of detained ethnic Chinese Australians, say they are urgently trying to find him. Yesterday Yang's legions of online followers voiced hope that this increasingly brutal system would not be so irrational as to ''disappear'' him, rather than simply warn him that the censor's red line was closing in.

Bizarrely, Yang's writings remained freely available on the Chinese internet yesterday. But if the system has swallowed this hugely popular commentator - as it has done to dozens of lower-profile Chinese lawyers and activists in recent weeks - are there no longer any limits?

I first caught up with Yang's online political commentaries during his one-man campaign to persuade ethnic Chinese patriots to abort an embassy-supported march on Canberra's Parliament House to ''defend the sacred Olympic torch''.

''I'm sending a friendly message to the Chinese government that this is very serious,'' Yang Hengjun said from his Hornsby home. ''And I'm telling Chinese students here that they are dumb: if you really want to show your patriotism, then go to Tiananmen Square.''

Yang foresaw the Chinese ethnic firestorm and international backlash well before officials in either country.

''The best way of being patriotic is seeking liberty, rule of law and democracy,'' he said in December. He watched how civil society and democracy worked in the West and wrote about how it could in China.

Yang is a former Chinese diplomat and his classmates from Fudan University's department of international relations are now spread through the bureaucracy and business. His most influential teacher was Wang Huning, who now accompanies President Hu Jintao on every overseas trip. These connections provided fodder for his fiction and informed his views. And they partly explain how he has been allowed to survive long enough to attract the phenomenal following he has on the Chinese-language internet.

Yang also stood at the centre of a vast network of journalists, intellectuals and activists and retained his optimism that China would continue to evolve away from its former totalitarian path. He believed there really was no other option.

''I believe China has two choices now: political reform and democracy or cultural revolution,'' he said in December. ''The first is a path of life. The latter may be a path of life for some but for the nation it is a road to death.''

In recent days Yang has critiqued a new surveillance system at Peking University aimed at identifying potentially ''radical'' students. He lamented the ''burden'' carried by China's intellectuals after the dissident Liu Xianbin was sentenced on Friday to 10 years in prison for inciting subversion.
The last time we met, Yang laughed at how a government publishing house had agreed to print a compilation of his writings, including several pieces that Chinese language websites in Australia had opted to self-censor. But that was two months ago, before the government's pre-emptive frenzy about a jasmine revolution.

For China's sake as much as Yang's, I hope the gap between laughingly legitimate and subversion has not become so arbitrary and narrow.
 

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