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Report: Torture is routinely used in China to obtain confessions and silence human-rights lawyers

Zhang Fan

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Human-rights lawyers, activists, and people accused of crimes are regularly tortured, detained, and subject to other forms of mistreatment, according to a report released Thursday by Amnesty International.

For the report, Amnesty interviewed 37 lawyers practicing in China and multiple experts in the Chinese criminal-justice system, as well as analyzed 590 court decisions involving torture claims and "forced confessions."

China's response has been schizophrenic at best.

The country voluntarily joined the UN Convention against Torture, or UNCAT, in 1986 and has made efforts in recent years to put an end to torture and forced confessions through a series of legal initiatives, amendments, and regulations. The most notable reform was the ending of the "reeducation through labor" system in 2013.

This summer, Chinese President Xi Jinping launched a sweeping crackdown on human-rights lawyers, detaining nearly 250 of them in a move that many saw as a warning to any would-be activists.

Hong Lei, a spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, told The New York Times in response to the new report that Chinese law expressly forbids obtaining confessions through torture.

"China is a country of rule of law," Hong said.

But evidence collected by Amnesty International and testimony from a wide swath of human-rights lawyers in China would seem to indicate otherwise.

"I know from personal experience how widespread torture is in China's current law-enforcement environment. I hope one day to see torture classified in China as a crime against humanity," lawyer Yu Wensheng told Amnesty in the report.

Yu, a lawyer with Beijing-based Daoheng Law Firm, was arrested in 2014 and held for 99 days, refused access to a lawyer, and questioned more than 200 times. Yu was eventually handcuffed with his hands bound behind the back of an iron chair.

"My hands were swollen and I felt so much pain that I didn't want to live. The two police officers repeatedly yanked the handcuffs. I screamed every time they pulled them," said Yu.

The Chinese government has denied any "maltreatment" of Yu.

Other reported torture techniques include being bound to "tiger benches," beatings, sleep deprivation, starvation, dehydration, and psychological torture.

According to Amnesty International, the 37 interviewed lawyers "almost uniformly concur" that police officers in China widely use torture to obtain forced confessions from suspects in pretrial detention.

Often, Chinese lawyers who attempt to litigate cases where clients have had their human rights violated find that they end up becoming victims of torture from police officials. One lawyer told Amnesty that he was beaten and detained by police officers after trying to investigate the detainment of several practitioners of Falun Gong, a banned Chinese spiritual practice.

The Chinese government claims that its courts "carry out prompt and fair trials of cases of infringement of citizens' rights involving torture."

Amnesty InternationalOfficial data from China provided to Amnesty International.

Official data from China found that the nation's top prosecutorial body received nearly 1,500 reports of "extracting confession through torture" over the last seven years. Only 279 people were convicted of the offense.

According to lawyers interviewed in the report, one of the biggest reasons that torture has remained so widespread despite official censure is that police officers still view it as an expedient way to obtain evidence.

"Trials are often a matter of dressing up police work. Police will stop at nothing to crack a case, and once they can get a confession, the presumption of guilt carries through to the very end," lawyer Tang Jitian told Amnesty.

In the cases analyzed by Amnesty International, where confessions were allegedly obtained through torture, courts routinely admitted the forced confessions. Of the 590 cases analyzed, courts suppressed the confessions in only 16 cases. Only one of those 16 cases resulted in an acquittal.

In addition, police are far more powerful in China than courts or prosecutors, thereby making it difficult for courts to prosecute police officers who torture citizens or obtain forced confessions.

"Since the establishment of the [People's Republic of China], the police have been the most powerful organ in the criminal process and the courts' role has been marginal. In this police-centric system, the court cannot be effective in vetoing a police decision," Fu Hualing, a law professor and a criminal-justice expert at the University of Hong Kong, told Amnesty.

The United Nations Committee against Torture has repeatedly called out China for it's failure to comply with UNCAT, an agreement it joined voluntarily. China will undergo another review of its torture record, as required by UNCAT, in Geneva, Switzerland, next week.
Amnesty International Report on torture - Business Insider
 
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Pff, "human right lawyers" is pretty much synonym to bottom feeding scum these days. You have decades of US staged coups around the world to thank for that.

BTW, if these individual are "too good" for ordinary labor, then I can't say I am surprised why they forego honest work and instead taking up their current occupation.
 
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Pff, "human right lawyers" is pretty much synonym to bottom feeding scum these days. You have decades of US staged coups around the world to thank for that.

BTW, if these individual are "too good" for ordinary labor, then I can't say I am surprised why they forego honest work and instead taking up their current occupation.
you still hold the habit of "keeee pfff!!" while walking on USA's streets and seeing a pedestrian you don't like???
 
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Pff, "human right lawyers" is pretty much synonym to bottom feeding scum these days. You have decades of US staged coups around the world to thank for that.

BTW, if these individual are "too good" for ordinary labor, then I can't say I am surprised why they forego honest work and instead taking up their current occupation.

Man I whole heartedly agree with some of your comments about these human rights groups etc.

But the whole issue is different. What they are doing is to use a legitimate issue present in Chinese system + adding some of their own twists + exaggerating things + demonizing and admonishing China.

So I whole heartedly agree, that these human rights groups need to be paid no attention.

Yet, there are legitimate cases of abuse of power, some of which are never revealed.

Their is the famous case of Huligjit, a person falsely convicted for rape, then executed, on the basis of a forced confession, only to find 19 years later, that the case was false. The police just got the confession out of him.

Don't you agree guys? @Chinese Bamboo @AndrewJin @Shotgunner51
 
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Pff, "human right lawyers" is pretty much synonym to bottom feeding scum these days. You have decades of US staged coups around the world to thank for that.

BTW, if these individual are "too good" for ordinary labor, then I can't say I am surprised why they forego honest work and instead taking up their current occupation.
So approved of torture in China by someone who lives in the US. :lol:
 
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Human-rights lawyers, activists, and people accused of crimes are regularly tortured, detained, and subject to other forms of mistreatment, according to a report released Thursday by Amnesty International.

For the report, Amnesty interviewed 37 lawyers practicing in China and multiple experts in the Chinese criminal-justice system, as well as analyzed 590 court decisions involving torture claims and "forced confessions."

China's response has been schizophrenic at best.

The country voluntarily joined the UN Convention against Torture, or UNCAT, in 1986 and has made efforts in recent years to put an end to torture and forced confessions through a series of legal initiatives, amendments, and regulations. The most notable reform was the ending of the "reeducation through labor" system in 2013.

This summer, Chinese President Xi Jinping launched a sweeping crackdown on human-rights lawyers, detaining nearly 250 of them in a move that many saw as a warning to any would-be activists.

Hong Lei, a spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, told The New York Times in response to the new report that Chinese law expressly forbids obtaining confessions through torture.

"China is a country of rule of law," Hong said.

But evidence collected by Amnesty International and testimony from a wide swath of human-rights lawyers in China would seem to indicate otherwise.

"I know from personal experience how widespread torture is in China's current law-enforcement environment. I hope one day to see torture classified in China as a crime against humanity," lawyer Yu Wensheng told Amnesty in the report.

Yu, a lawyer with Beijing-based Daoheng Law Firm, was arrested in 2014 and held for 99 days, refused access to a lawyer, and questioned more than 200 times. Yu was eventually handcuffed with his hands bound behind the back of an iron chair.

"My hands were swollen and I felt so much pain that I didn't want to live. The two police officers repeatedly yanked the handcuffs. I screamed every time they pulled them," said Yu.

The Chinese government has denied any "maltreatment" of Yu.

Other reported torture techniques include being bound to "tiger benches," beatings, sleep deprivation, starvation, dehydration, and psychological torture.

According to Amnesty International, the 37 interviewed lawyers "almost uniformly concur" that police officers in China widely use torture to obtain forced confessions from suspects in pretrial detention.

Often, Chinese lawyers who attempt to litigate cases where clients have had their human rights violated find that they end up becoming victims of torture from police officials. One lawyer told Amnesty that he was beaten and detained by police officers after trying to investigate the detainment of several practitioners of Falun Gong, a banned Chinese spiritual practice.

The Chinese government claims that its courts "carry out prompt and fair trials of cases of infringement of citizens' rights involving torture."

Amnesty InternationalOfficial data from China provided to Amnesty International.

Official data from China found that the nation's top prosecutorial body received nearly 1,500 reports of "extracting confession through torture" over the last seven years. Only 279 people were convicted of the offense.

According to lawyers interviewed in the report, one of the biggest reasons that torture has remained so widespread despite official censure is that police officers still view it as an expedient way to obtain evidence.

"Trials are often a matter of dressing up police work. Police will stop at nothing to crack a case, and once they can get a confession, the presumption of guilt carries through to the very end," lawyer Tang Jitian told Amnesty.

In the cases analyzed by Amnesty International, where confessions were allegedly obtained through torture, courts routinely admitted the forced confessions. Of the 590 cases analyzed, courts suppressed the confessions in only 16 cases. Only one of those 16 cases resulted in an acquittal.

In addition, police are far more powerful in China than courts or prosecutors, thereby making it difficult for courts to prosecute police officers who torture citizens or obtain forced confessions.

"Since the establishment of the [People's Republic of China], the police have been the most powerful organ in the criminal process and the courts' role has been marginal. In this police-centric system, the court cannot be effective in vetoing a police decision," Fu Hualing, a law professor and a criminal-justice expert at the University of Hong Kong, told Amnesty.

The United Nations Committee against Torture has repeatedly called out China for it's failure to comply with UNCAT, an agreement it joined voluntarily. China will undergo another review of its torture record, as required by UNCAT, in Geneva, Switzerland, next week.
Amnesty International Report on torture - Business Insider

There were frequent tortures before but not now. It is difficult to cover up internet exposure of wrong doings nowadays. I don't believe this report.
 
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China still uses medieval torture methods against opponents – Amnesty | World news | The Guardian

image.jpg
 
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there's a weird phenomenon befuddling me a lot,and this phenomenon almost applies to all my overseas Chinese friends,which is:the longer they become an American or British(whatsoever) citizen,the more patriotic(towards China) they will be.I suppose it's the relatively free,open,mature western societies that widened their views opened their minds and gave them a broader,uncensored lense through which they can get access to inspect something they couldn't have gotten angles to unravel to themselves back in China.However,they all begin to defend China's government 360 degrees unconditionally like defending their dear big daddy after they benefit from something of west that their homeland environments can't or simply prohibit to provide.Maybe they just need a patriarchal figure more intimate to them to latch on,and obviously the westen society that more emphasizes personal value is not the right option for them.

Ask your wife if she believes it or she has found it true...
maybe the tools are not that horrible,but fist,kick,binding also kill
 
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:coffee:
It is so obvious that people will love their country even more if they went aboard. Same thing happen to me.
For China mix with geopolitics, you seriously don't want outsiders (with their own agenda) to be involved in the internal political struggle, because it will make everything even more complicated (especially those NGOs sponsored by someone behind the scene).
there's a weird phenomenon befuddling me a lot,and this phenomenon almost applies to all my overseas Chinese friends,which is:the longer they become an American or British(whatsoever) citizen,the more patriotic(towards China) they will be.I suppose it's the relatively free,open,mature western societies that widened their views opened their minds and gave them a broader,uncensored lense through which they can get access to inspect something they couldn't have gotten angles to unravel to themselves back in China.However,they all begin to defend China's government 360 degrees unconditionally like defending their dear big daddy after they benefit from something of west that their homeland environments can't or simply don't want to provide.Maybe they just need a patriarchal figure more intimate to them to latch on,and obviously the westen society that more emphasizes personal value is not the right option for them.


maybe the tools are not that horrible,but fist,kick,binding also kill
 
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Ask your wife if she believes it or she has found it true...

My wife's personal answer would be based on a 15 year old reference point (which as you pointed out China has had torture issues pre-Internet). She'd have to ask her parents/relatives or WeChat friends.

Plus you'd just call her a "banana" anyway.

The US shills:

BTW, Amnesty International is sponsored by
Amnesty International: Soros Propaganda – NGOs Gone Wild | Thick Toast

More about AI
Amnesty International

Hey the U.S. isnt outside their bullseye:

US Needs Accountability for Torture! | Amnesty International USA

USA: Prisoners held in extreme solitary confinement in breach of international law | Amnesty International
 
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there's a weird phenomenon befuddling me a lot,and this phenomenon almost applies to all my overseas Chinese friends,which is:the longer they become an American or British(whatsoever) citizen,the more patriotic(towards China) they will be.I suppose it's the relatively free,open,mature western societies that widened their views opened their minds and gave them a broader,uncensored lense through which they can get access to inspect something they couldn't have gotten angles to unravel to themselves back in China.However,they all begin to defend China's government 360 degrees unconditionally like defending their dear big daddy after they benefit from something of west that their homeland environments can't or simply prohibit to provide.Maybe they just need a patriarchal figure more intimate to them to latch on,and obviously the westen society that more emphasizes personal value is not the right option for them.

If you stay in the west long enough, you'll find out that the same thing happens everywhere, not just in China. What's fed to you by both the Chinese propaganda and the western propaganda are pure idealism. The difference is that in China, you know the idealism of the Chinese propaganda are just that propaganda, but you believe the western propaganda however being true.
 
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Torture? Can we compare to the torture super power?

So called human rights lawyers are all benefits oriented business men. You just can't expect anything more from these individuals.

Some professional gangs are always the people break law most.

There do exist some rights lawyers but they are not mentioned in the article.

There are too many scandals for the 'human rights lawyer'. It's just enough.
 
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My wife's personal answer would be based on a 15 year old reference point (which as you pointed out China has had torture issues pre-Internet). She'd have to ask her parents/relatives or WeChat friends.

Plus you'd just call her a "banana" anyway.



Hey the U.S. isnt outside their bullseye:

US Needs Accountability for Torture! | Amnesty International USA

USA: Prisoners held in extreme solitary confinement in breach of international law | Amnesty International

They are not stupid, of course they would say something about the US. But look at the amount and wording of their reports. It's nothing but some fig leaves.

Duh, some people are just too naive.
 
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They are not stupid, of course they would say something about the US. But look at the amount and wording of their reports. It's nothing but some fig leaves.
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I suppose all the world outrage over their alerting of Guantanamo torture offenses was just "fluff".

Guantánamo is gulag of our time, says Amnesty | World news | The Guardian

Duh, some people are just too naive.

Other people have short memories (or conveniently block out obvious facts that go against their agenda)
 
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