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- <text>
- <title>
- China And Tibet
- </title>
- <article>
- <hdr>
- Human Rights Watch World Report 1992
- Asia Watch: China and Tibet
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Human Rights Developments
- </p>
- <p> If anything, the Chinese authorities showed themselves even
- less willing in 1991 than in 1990 to ease up on the relentless
- repression that they have pursued since the military crackdown
- in Beijing and other cities on June 4, 1989. The year brought
- no large-scale releases of pro-democracy activists, unlike
- 1990, when a total of 881 such releases were announced by the
- authorities. Instead, as if to symbolize the regime's
- unrepentant stance in the face of international censure, the
- year began with the biggest wave of dissident trials in China
- since the summer of 1989. Dozens of leading Tiananmen activists
- some of them dubbed "black hands" of the movement were brought
- before the Beijing Intermediate Court and sentenced, after
- wholly unfair trials, to prison terms ranging from two to
- thirteen years.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, thousands of other pro-democracy activists (the
- precise number remains unknown) remain behind bars, many having
- been brought to trial and sentenced secretly, while many others
- were sent by the police, without any trial at all, for up to
- three years of administrative detention (so-called "reeducation
- through labor"). Others continue to languish, long over the
- lawful time-limits for pretrial detention, in police lockups
- and local detention centers, their cases as yet unresolved.
- </p>
- <p> The identities of most of those detained after June 4, 1989
- were either never publicly reported by the authorities, or were
- reported without follow-up, so there is no indication of their
- fate. In effect, China has a major "disappearance" problem. In
- addition, further well-documented instances of gross brutality
- toward detainees, extending from beatings to outright torture,
- were recorded throughout the year, contributing to a picture of
- generalized and often random state violence toward those in
- custody.
- </p>
- <p> Also indicative of the authorities' undiminished hard-line
- stance in 1991 was their harsh treatment of all those who dared
- to continue pro-democracy activities, of necessity in secrecy,
- well after Beijing's "quelling of the counter-revolutionary
- rebellion" of June 1989. A clear though unstated official
- policy of sentencing such people harshly emerged in the course
- of the year.
- </p>
- <p> Even for the several dozen pro-democracy activists who were
- released from prison in 1991, persecution and harassment did
- not come to an end. Most were left without jobs or income; many
- found themselves in broken health as a result of their harsh
- conditions of incarceration, while others were simply stripped
- of their urban residence permits and deported to the
- countryside. Discriminated against and often placed under
- near-constant surveillance, there seemed little opportunity for
- them to begin rebuilding their lives.
- </p>
- <p> Religious activities were further curtailed in 1991, with a
- fresh round of repression against Catholic priests who refused
- to renounce their allegiance to the Vatican and against leaders
- and participants of unofficial Protestant "house congregations."
- For example, an internal government directive on religious
- policy, issued in February, ordered a severe crackdown on all
- unauthorized religious groups, whether Christian, Buddhist or
- Muslim, and instructed security forces "to attack the use of
- religion for unlawful and criminal purposes and to firmly
- resist the infiltration of foreign religious inimical forces."
- ("Crackdown on 'illegal' churches," South China Morning Post,
- November 13, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> Government attempts to silence dissident or nationalist
- voices among China's main ethnic minorities also intensified.
- The list of Buddhist monks, nuns and others imprisoned for
- espousing the independence of Tibet continued to grow, amid
- mounting evidence of the widespread use by security forces in
- the region of brutal and often extreme forms of torture against
- such detainees.
- </p>
- <p> The authorities in May declared an "anti-separatist" war on
- another ethnic front, by launching a regionwide crackdown
- against Mongol academics, students and government cadres in
- Inner Mongolia who had sought legal registration of their newly
- founded ethnic study groups.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, freedom of expression was further reined in during
- 1991, with tightened censorship controls and escalating attacks
- on independent-minded academics and students. Such measures
- proceeded in tandem with a mounting official propaganda blitz
- against so-called "peaceful evolution" the code word for an
- alleged long-term plot by Western nations to undermine Chinese
- socialism from within by "smuggling" into China concepts of
- democracy, pluralism and freedom. In the course of this
- campaign, internal government documents designated the United
- States an "enemy" nation. Correspondingly, punitive action
- including expulsion from the country was taken against Western
- journalists, writers and others deemed to be the bearers of the
- "peaceful evolution" virus.
- </p>
- <p>Trials of the "black hands"
- </p>
- <p> The trials of several dozen leaders of the April-June 1989
- pro-democracy movement took place during January and February
- 1991, under cover of China's "cooperation" in the U.S.-led
- military action in the Persian Gulf, when international
- scrutiny was effectively diverted from events in Beijing. Aside
- from the spurious and entirely political nature of the
- "counterrevolutionary" charges laid against the principal
- accused, the trials themselves were invalid even under Chinese
- law, since the defendants had all been held long in excess of
- the maximum five and a half months of pretrial detention allowed
- by the 1980 Criminal Procedure Law.
- </p>
- <p> The trials showed all the hallmarks of China's criminal
- justice: there was no presumption of innocence; the defendants
- were denied all access to defense counsel until only days
- before their trials; lawyers were specifically barred from
- entering "not guilty" pleas on behalf of their clients (although
- in a number of highly honorable exceptions defense lawyers still
- presented spirited cases arguing innocence); requests to
- cross-examine prosecution witnesses and summon for questioning
- absent providers of testimonials for the prosecution were flatly
- denied; and official media reports, appearing well in advance
- of the trials, showed that guilt had been entirely predetermined
- by the political authorities and that the court hearings
- represented no more than the so-called "verdict first, trial
- second" scenario that has been increasingly condemned by the
- legal establishment itself in recent years.
- </p>
- <p> Student leader Liu Gang, one of four alleged prominent
- "black hands" behind the 1989 protests, declared at his trial
- that all statements made by him in pretrial custody should be
- discounted, since they had been extracted by interrogators who
- had repeatedly threatened him with death should he fail to
- comply.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, these ostensibly "open" trials were shrouded in
- secrecy, to the extent that in at least one reported case, that
- of veteran human rights campaigner Ren Wanding, even the
- accused's wife was not informed of the trial in advance and so
- could not attend. (Ren received a seven-year prison sentence
- for "counterrevolutionary propaganda and incitement.") All
- foreign observers were barred from attending, in accordance with
- obscure internal judicial regulations that also specifically
- encourage Chinese law-enforcement officers knowingly to violate
- provisions of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. All
- requests from Asia Watch, Amnesty International and other
- concerned groups to attend the trials and monitor observance of
- due process were ignored; the members of one monitoring group
- from Britain that had sought access to the trials were
- unceremoniously expelled from the country.
- </p>
- <p> Far from exhibiting the "lenience" noted by some foreign
- commentators and claimed by the Chinese authorities themselves,
- the trials and sentences of early 1991 showed only the extent
- to which criminal justice in China is administered at the
- fickle whim of the Communist Party. Wang Juntao and Chen Ziming,
- both prominent intellectuals who were hitherto relatively
- unknown in the West, were unfairly singled out by the
- authorities as being the "chief instigators" of the 1989
- protests and handed thirteen-year prison terms for
- counterrevolution and sedition. On the other hand, top student
- leader Wang Dan, well known in the West as one of the prime
- originators and leading strategists of the pro-democracy
- movement, received a "mere" four years' imprisonment. None of
- these peaceful advocates of democracy should ever have been
- arrested or brought to trial in the first place.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, the series of trials in Beijing in early 1991 were
- only the most visible aspect of a ruthless judicial apparatus
- that had been working nationwide without respite since the
- crackdown following the June 1989 massacre. Hundreds of
- reported trials of pro-democracy activists, and many others that
- were held in secret or simply went unrecorded by the official
- media, had already taken place in the provinces, and more were
- to follow. In particular, workers and minor functionaries,
- rather than students or intellectuals, continued to bear the
- brunt of this less visible aspect of the crackdown. Held in the
- worst prison conditions and stigmatized as mere "common
- criminals," they formed the great majority of those detained
- since June 1989 and have on average been handed significantly
- heavier sentences. A case in point is that of Yu Zhenbin, a
- twenty-eight-year-old cadre from the Qinghai Provincial Archives
- Bureau, who was sentenced to twelve years in prison in January
- 1991 for allegedly organizing a "counterrevolutionary clique"
- during the June 1989 disturbances. A central charge against Yu
- was that he had written and distributed leaflets calling for a
- revision of the Chinese Constitution, the establishment of a new
- central government, and an end to one-party rule.
- </p>
- <p> A second wave of trials began in late November, immediately
- following the visit to Beijing of U.S. Secretary of State James
- Baker. Among those tried were student leader Zhai Weimin who
- despite being on China's list of the "21 Most Wanted" after the
- 1989 Tiananmen protests managed to hide for almost a year. He
- was detained in May 1990, after the underground pro-democracy
- group he led, the Democratic Front for the Salvation of China
- held a secret press conference. He went on trial November 28.
- Eight days later, Li Minqi, the student detained on June 3, 1990
- for making a speech at Beijing University on the first
- anniversary of the June 4 crackdown, went on trial in the
- Beijing Intermediate Court.
- </p>
- <p> As in the previous year, there was no recorded instance in
- 1991 of any sentence passed on a pro-democracy activist having
- been quashed or even reduced after appeal to the higher courts.
- In addition, a further judicially sanctioned execution of a
- pro-democracy demonstrator a worker named Han Weijun, who was
- convicted of burning a car shortly after June 4, 1989 was
- carried out in March 1991, bringing the total number of such
- publicly announced executions to fifty.
- </p>
- <p>Scope of ongoing detentions
- </p>
- <p> The Asia Watch list of known pro-democracy detainees
- believed still held since the June 1989 crackdown has grown to
- well over one thousand. (This number does not include the
- several hundred pro-independence activists believed to be held
- in Tibet, nor several dozen Protestants, "unauthorized" Catholic
- priests, and a small but growing number of ethnic activists in
- Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang who are in detention.) The increase
- is accounted for both by earlier arrests that have only recently
- come to our attention and by a series of new arrests in 1991.
- On March 26, Tao Siju, the new minister of public security, gave
- the lie to earlier assurances given by Chinese leaders to
- visiting foreign dignitaries that the arrests and trials of
- Tiananmen dissidents were "basically over," when he openly
- declared to the National People's Congress (China's parliament)
- that the nationwide hunt for those placed on "wanted lists"
- after June 4, 1989 would continue. "Some of the wanted persons
- have been arrested, and some others are still at large," said
- Minister Tao, "We will continue the operation." (South China
- Morning Post, March 27, 1991.) The figure of over one thousand
- post-Tiananmen arrests and detentions refers only to those
- detainees whom Asia Watch has been able to identify by name,
- either from official Chinese press accounts or private sources.
- (In China, formal "arrest"--signifying the prosecution's
- filing of charges and preparation for trial--usually occurs
- only many months after a person's detention. However, since
- detention almost invariably leads to arrest, there is a little
- practical distinction between the two, so far as the detainee's
- lack of liberty is concerned. "Arrest" and "detention" thus are
- used largely interchangeably in this chapter.) However, reports
- in the provincial Chinese press in the summer of 1989 cited,
- often without individual names, numerous aggregate figures for
- pro-democracy detainees which sometimes went as high as several
- thousand for a single province. Since the authorities have never
- accounted for these thousands of anonymous detainees, there are
- firm grounds to believe that a large proportion of them remain,
- more than two years later, behind bars. Clear supporting
- evidence for this view emerged only in late 1991, when Asia
- Watch began to learn the identities and circumstances of several
- hundred previously unknown individuals, mainly workers, who are
- currently incarcerated in Hunan Province alone on account of
- their involvement in the 1989 pro-democracy movement. (The list
- of these Hunan detainees, together with a list of several
- hundred additional Tibetan prisoners--neither of which is
- included in our year-end list of over one thousand Chinese
- political prisoners--is scheduled for publication by Asia
- Watch in early 1992.) If extrapolated to a national level, in
- view of the authorities' own admission that the 1989 "turmoil"
- affected every province and region of China, the total of those
- still imprisoned since the June 1989 crackdown is likely to
- rise substantially.
- </p>
- <p>Recent arrests and trials
- </p>
- <p> Despite the repressive atmosphere in China since June 1989,
- pro-democracy activists have continued to find ways to organize
- themselves and to express their defiance of the nationwide
- crackdown on the freedoms of expression and association.
- However, the authorities have dealt even more severely with such
- persons, when they can find them, than with those detained in
- the immediate aftermath of the 1989 crackdown. At least four
- groups engaged in peaceful underground resistance activities are
- known to have been smashed, and their leaders arrested, in 1991.
- </p>
- <p> In one case, the two "principal ringleaders" of the
- dissident group former graduate students at Qinghua University
- named Chen Yanbin and Zhang Yafei were tried in Beijing on March
- 5, 1991 and given prison sentences of fifteen and eleven years.
- The verdict conveyed the flavor of the ongoing official assault
- on free speech in China today:
- </p>
- <p> "In February and March 1990, the defendants Chen Yanbin and
- Zhang Yafei, working in collusion, drafted the reactionary
- journal Tieliu (Iron Current), which attacked and slandered the
- leadership of the Chinese Communist Party as being 'an
- authoritarian tyranny,' the Chinese state as a 'forty-year-old
- authoritarian empire,' and socialism as 'a great disaster and
- retrogression of mankind in the twentieth century, and China's
- pitfall and calamity.' It incited the masses to overthrow the
- political power of the people's democratic dictatorship and the
- socialist system, and to wage a 'struggle to the death' against
- the Chinese Communist Party. Later, the defendants went to
- Shuangfeng County, Hunan Province, where they mimeographed over
- four hundred copies of the reactionary journal Tieliu. Chen
- Yanbin brought them to Beijing and, together with Zhang Donghui
- and others (prosecuted separately), distributed them in
- residential areas, on university campuses and in buses."
- </p>
- <p> The verdict added that the three accused (together with four
- others who were prosecuted separately) had formed a
- "counterrevolutionary" organization named the Chinese
- Revolutionary Democratic Front, and had "drawn up a reactionary
- political program with the abolition of the Four Cardinal
- Principles as its central content." As the charges demonstrate,
- the two graduate students and their five colleagues were
- accused of no more than independently publishing a political
- journal and trying to organize a peaceful, though necessarily
- clandestine, pro-democracy organization. No allegations of
- engaging in violent activity were brought against the group. The
- verdict of the court, however, was never in doubt.
- </p>
- <p> The second pro-democracy group known to have been broken up
- by the authorities in 1991 was the Study Group on Human Rights
- Issues in China, a small organization set up by intellectuals
- in Shanghai in late 1990 or early 1991. It was reportedly led
- by Gu Bin, a twenty-six-year-old student at the Shanghai
- Chemical Industry Special School, and Yang Zhou, a
- fifty-year-old intellectual who participated in the 1979-1981
- Democracy Wall movement and served three years in prison in
- connection with the Wei Jingsheng case from that era. In July
- 1990, Yang Zhou sent a letter by registered mail to Party
- General-Secretary Jiang Zemin, calling for the release of all
- political prisoners, the creation of a multiparty system, the
- right to register new political parties, respect for freedom of
- speech, and an end to the practice of labeling dissidents as
- counterrevolutionaries. Soon after its formation, the Study
- Group on Human Rights Issues in China mimeographed Yang's letter
- as a flyer and privately circulated it among colleagues and
- acquaintances. The group reportedly had plans to publish a
- regular newsletter carrying articles on human rights issues
- which had appeared in the Hong Kong press, but it is not known
- whether this project ever got off the ground.
- </p>
- <p> The group--the first human rights organization known to
- have been formed since June 5, 1989, when a group named the
- Committee to Protect Human Rights in China briefly emerged in
- Beijing to protest the military crackdown--was smashed in its
- infancy. On April 5 and 18, 1991, Gu Bin and Yang Zhou were
- secretly arrested. Both are still being held incommunicado in
- Shanghai. Up to eight other members of the group were also
- detained in mid-April, but are thought to have later been
- released.
- </p>
- <p> In a third case, Liu Xianbin, a young student at the
- prestigious People's University in Beijing, was secretly
- arrested by the authorities sometime during April 1991. Like
- Chen Yanbin and Zhang Yafei and the members of the Shanghai
- human rights group, Liu's "crime" was apparently that he had
- tried to publish a dissident magazine on his college campus. So
- far, no further information about Liu's case has become
- available, and it is not known whether other students were
- arrested in connection with his dissident publishing venture.
- </p>
- <p> A fourth case concerned a large pro-democracy organization
- in the northeastern city of Tianjin called the "89 Alliance."
- Eight Tianjin-based members of the one hundred-strong group,
- and possibly others from elsewhere in China, were arrested on
- March 25, 1991, after one of them was caught by the police
- trying to send a fax from Shenzhen to Hong Kong. The
- organization was set up in September 1989 by a group of Nankai
- University students in the hope of keeping alive the spirit of
- the crushed pro-democracy movement. Most of the detainees were
- reportedly released, but the leader of the group, a law graduate
- and teacher at Tianjin University named Li Baoming, was later
- sentenced to eighteen months' imprisonment. ("Tianjin reform
- group cracked," South China Morning Post, August 26, 1991. The
- relative leniency offered to this group may well have been due
- to the strong local influence in Tianjin of Li Ruihuan, the
- city's reform-minded former mayor who was recently promoted to
- a central leadership post.)
- </p>
- <p> Finally, a veteran dissident worker, Fu Shenqi, was arrested
- in his hometown of Shanghai in late May 1991, allegedly for
- possessing a mimeograph machine and publishing an underground
- pro-democracy journal. Formerly a worker in a Shanghai
- generator factory and a member of the Communist Youth League,
- Fu had served a four-year prison term in the early 1980s for his
- leading role in the Shanghai "democracy wall" movement of
- 1978-1981. In 1979, he founded a publication called Voice of
- Democracy, and one year later helped set up the dissident
- National Association of the People's Press and served as chief
- editor of its regular bulletin, Responsibility. There has been
- no word on Fu's fate since his latest arrest. ("Dissident Fu
- held by police," South China Morning Post, June 4, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> Significantly, none of the above-mentioned arrests of people
- involved in underground pro-democracy activities was ever
- publicly announced or reported in the Chinese media. Clearly,
- the authorities wished neither the Chinese public to know about
- these examples of renewed pro-democracy activity, nor the
- outside world to find out about the secret arrests of those
- involved and the suppression of their dissident groups.
- </p>
- <p>Prison Conditions and Widespread Use of Torture
- </p>
- <p> Following the June 1989 crackdown, the Chinese authorities
- adopted, in effect, a two-track system for incarcerating pro-democracy dissidents. A small number of well-known
- intellectuals and student leaders those upon whom international
- attention tended to be most sharply focused were held in
- relatively humane conditions and were by and large not subjected
- to gross ill-treatment. When released in the course of 1990,
- some of these detainees gave relatively favorable accounts of
- their conditions of imprisonment and general treatment.
- </p>
- <p> However, for the vast majority of lesser-known or entirely
- unknown pro-democracy detainees, a very different prison regime
- has been the norm. In detention centers and police lockups
- around the country, such prisoners were--and continue to be--held in conditions of extreme overcrowding and inadequate
- sanitation and diet, and subjected to gross physical and
- psychological brutality at the hands of prison guards and other
- inmates. Numerous reports received by Asia Watch from political
- prisoners who were released in 1991 and their families confirmed
- these and other details, including that ill prisoners are
- routinely denied proper medical care; indeed, withholding such
- care is one means commonly used by prison officials to force
- "confessions."
- </p>
- <p> The use of beatings and torture against prisoners became so
- widespread in 1991 that the central authorities have again had
- to appeal publicly for measures to curb it. In April, Deputy
- Chief Procurator Lian Guoqing reported that in the first three
- months of the year his department had investigated 2,900 cases
- of "perverting justice for bribes, extorting confessions by
- torture, illegal detention and neglect of duty." More than 490
- of these cases had resulted in death or serious injury, he
- added. Around the same time, the People's Public Security News
- commented, "the method of getting evidence by extracting
- confessions through torture has not been entirely eradicated,
- and is very serious in the case of a minority of officials."
- ("Paper decries use of torture," South China Morning Post, July
- 29, 1991.) In September, the same newspaper indulgently
- attributing the problem to police officers' "hazy knowledge of
- the law"--reported the recent case of a peasant who had been
- wrongfully executed after officers beat him into falsely
- confessing that he had mugged and raped a woman. ("Force used
- to get crime evidence," South China Morning Post, September 12,
- 1991.) Finally, in November, the newspaper complained: "Some
- Chinese policemen take their power so much for granted that they
- routinely torture suspects to extract confessions." (People's
- Public Security News, November 15, 1991, as reported in
- "Policemen take torture for granted", South China Morning Post,
- November 19, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> In this and other human rights matters, the central
- government proved itself either unwilling or unable to control
- events in the provinces. When two escaped dissidents, worker-activist Li Lin and his musician brother Li Zhi, returned to
- their home in Hunan Province in February 1991 after public
- assurances had been given by top leaders, including Party
- General Secretary Jiang Zemin, that overseas dissidents who
- ceased "illegal activities" would not be punished if they
- returned to China the brothers were seized and imprisoned
- almost immediately. Their main inquisitor, bureau chief Deng
- of the Hengyang state security bureau, told one of the brothers:
- "Jiang Zemin's statements do not amount to much. He is only
- speaking for himself, not the Communist Party or the
- country.... I am the law, I do whatever I like." ("Stay away,
- say brothers," South China Morning Post, September 15, 1991;
- and "China's 'Iron Fist' may be losing its grip," Asian Wall
- Street Journal, September 27 1991.) Following a successful
- international campaign to secure the Lis' release, they told
- The New York Times of their five months of ill-treatment:
- </p>
- <p> "The brothers were placed in separate jails, crammed in
- cells with common criminals, and the authorities urged the
- other inmates to beat them up. In fact, many of the criminals
- were far more humane than the guards.... Life in prison was
- scarcely endurable. Li Lin had not been allowed to take warm
- clothes and nearly froze in the drafty, unheated cells. Meals
- consisted of a potato or part of a squash, and inmates were
- constantly hungry and malnourished. Lice and vermin and disease
- were part of life, and medical care was denied even to prisoners
- who seemed near to death.... Beatings were frequent, and Li Lin
- said that four or five times he was tortured with an electric
- cattle prod until he was writhing on the ground." ("China
- Dissident, Freed After West's Pressure, Still Speaks Out Despite
- Risk," The New York Times, September 22, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> Such ill-treatment is not confined to the pretrial,
- interrogative phase of detention. Particularly in the case of
- political prisoners who "stubbornly" refuse to admit guilt and
- abandon their dissident ways, such treatment often continues
- beyond the trial, sometimes even throughout the term of
- imprisonment. A particularly disturbing case in 1991 concerned
- Zhou Zhirong, a thirty-year-old middle school teacher from
- Xiangtan, Hunan Province, who was sentenced to five years'
- imprisonment for "counterrevolution" after making pro-democracy
- speeches during the 1989 demonstrations. Zhou was consigned to
- Longxi Prison and subjected, along with other political
- prisoners, to the notorious "strict regime" (yanguandui)
- treatment. (The existence of these "strict regime" units is
- acknowledged by the authorities only in classified, internally
- circulated publications. One such publication, a penal
- officials' journal entitled Theoretical Studies in Labor Reform
- and Labor Reeducation, stated in its April 1989 issue that
- prisoners assigned to "strict regime" treatment receive only
- basic foodstuffs, may not receive visitors or letters, are
- subjected to physical and "disguised" physical punishment, and
- are forced to perform excess manual labor and receive
- insufficient sleeping time. In fact, conditions are far worse
- even than this.) Zhou tried to organize the other political
- prisoners by convening secret discussions among them. On
- February 5, 1991, according to a recently escaped former
- prisoner familiar with the details of the case, all were
- consequently put in solitary confinement in the prison's "black
- rooms" windowless, pitch-dark boxes of less than two square
- meters, where the floor was awash with fetid water and the only
- "bed" was a low, one-foot wide concrete platform.
- </p>
- <p> But for Zhou Zhirong, the torment had scarcely begun. On
- February 12, he was secretly transferred to a solitary
- confinement unit in Provincial No. 3 Prison at Lingling, and
- secured hand and foot to a punishment device called the
- "shackle board" (menbanliao) a raised, horizontal wooden
- structure the size of a door, equipped with shackles at the four
- corners and a hole at the lower end for bodily functions. He was
- held, without respite, on this revolting device for three full
- months. When he showed continued resistance by shouting at his
- jailers, a filthy rag was stuffed in his mouth, to be removed
- only at feeding times. According to Asia Watch's informant, Zhou
- had become severely psychiatrically disturbed by the time he was
- removed from the "shackle board" in May 1991.
- </p>
- <p> Another example of severe prisoner abuse came to light one
- week before U.S. Secretary of State James Baker's visit to
- Beijing in November, when six prominent dissidents in Liaoning
- Province, currently serving sentences ranging form four to
- twenty years on account of "counterrevolutionary" involvement
- in the 1989 pro-democracy movement, announced their intention
- to begin a hunger strike on November 15, declaring that they
- could "no longer bear the Chinese Communists' persecution and
- torture." (The six dissidents (and their prison sentences) are:
- Beijing student leaders Liu Gang (six years) and Zhang Ming
- (four years); and independent labor activists Tang Yuanjuan
- (twenty years), Li Wei (thirteen years), Leng Wanbao (eight
- years) and Kong Xianfeng (three years). See "Hunger Strike by
- activists for Baker visit," South China Morning Post, November
- 7, 1991. Quoted extracts above are from a copy of the full
- hunger-strike appeal obtained by Asia Watch.) In a statement
- issued by friends and relatives in Beijing, the condition of the
- six dissidents all of whom were undergoing "strict regime"
- treatment in a labor camp known outwardly as the Lingyuan
- General Car Factory Disciplinary Brigade was described as
- follows:
- </p>
- <p> "Every day they are forced to work for fourteen hours. The
- prison authorities assigned them extremely heavy work quotas,
- and they are viciously beaten if they fail to meet these. The
- same happens if they refuse to say things contrary to their
- consciences during 'political examination' sessions. In fact,
- the prison wardens beat and curse them at will punching and
- kicking them or assaulting them with electric batons and leather
- belts. Many prisoners have already suffered injuries in this
- way. Prison warden Yang Guoping, his assistant Kiao Lie and
- other Communist Party thugs and henchmen subject them to
- degrading treatment and instigate the 'convict heads and cell
- bosses' [i.e., other prisoners] to persecute them. Sanitation
- and medical facilities in the prison are utterly foul and
- deficient, and inmates are never given proper medical treatment
- when they fall ill. More than forty prisoners at a time are
- crammed into cells measuring just over twenty square meters."
- </p>
- <p> "After a whole day's exhausting labor, all that they are
- given to keep themselves alive is a corn-flour bun and some
- vegetable soup. Needless to say, they are not allowed to read
- anything or do any writing, and the guards strip them of their
- right to receive letters on the slightest of pretexts. The
- authorities are pursuing a 'total assault' policy against these
- political prisoners, aimed deliberately at breaking them
- physically, spiritually and morally."
- </p>
- <p> After news of the impending hunger strike was reported
- internationally, the authorities issued angry denials and
- closed off all channels of further information on the condition
- of the six dissidents held at Lingyuan. But in December, Asia
- Watch learned that Liu Gang, one of the student leaders serving
- a six-year sentence at Lingyuan, refused to submit to forced
- feeding and was beaten so badly his arm was broken. No further
- details were available on his condition or that of the other
- hunger-strikers.
- </p>
- <p>Persecution and harassment of released dissidents
- </p>
- <p> Pro-democracy activists released from prison in the course
- of 1991 continued, like their counterparts of the year before,
- to suffer a wide range of government-imposed punishments,
- restrictions and petty harassments. These may include:loss of
- employment, income and housing; surveillance by public security
- authorities; expulsion from school or college; restrictions on
- traveling (including being forbidden to leave China for study
- in the United States); frequent mandatory reporting to security
- officials; and compulsory transfer of household registration
- (hukou) to a small town or the countryside.
- </p>
- <p> In addition, many released dissidents return home in poor or
- broken health, typically suffering from tuberculosis, skin
- diseases, malnutrition and, in some cases, damaged organs from
- beatings received in prison. Medical treatment in the cases
- known to Asia Watch was poor or nonexistent. When
- hospitalization was required, families themselves had to bear
- the costs sometimes while their relatives were still imprisoned,
- and always after they were released even if their medical
- condition was directly related to their imprisonment.
- </p>
- <p>Repression of religious dissidents
- </p>
- <p> In the course of the Party's intensified drive in 1991 to
- muzzle and intimidate all alternative sources of authority in
- society, several dozen more Catholic priests and believers who
- refused to renounce their allegiance to the Vatican, together
- with an unknown number of unofficial Protestant and Buddhist
- worshippers, were rounded up and imprisoned.
- </p>
- <p> This latest crackdown against unofficial religious groups
- was first announced by the authorities in a directive in
- February. According to the document: "The public security
- department at all levels...must resolutely attack those
- counterrevolutionaries and others who make use of religion to
- carry out destructive activities." Moreover, the security forces
- were urged "to firmly resist the infiltration of foreign
- religious inimical forces." The message was reinforced in
- November, when Tao Siju, minister of public security, stated
- that the security forces would make the crushing of illegal
- underground organizations, including religious units, their
- priority. (Associated Press, November 12, 1991; see also
- "Crackdown on 'illegal churches,'" South China Morning Post,
- November 13, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> In mid-September, two-thousand Protestants worshipping in a
- "house church" on the outskirts of Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province,
- were reportedly dispersed by a large contingent of police, some
- of whom fired shots into the air. Several preachers were beaten
- and detained, though later released. In subsequent weeks,
- missionary sources in Hong Kong reported that large-scale
- arrests of activists of underground churches had taken place in
- the provinces of Zhejiang, Anhui, Jiangsu and Henan and in the
- cities of Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen. ("Crackdown on
- 'illegal churches,'" South China Morning Post, November 13,
- 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> On June 11, Bishop Joseph Fan Zhongliang, 75, was arrested
- and held for five weeks, apparently in an act of official
- retaliation for Pope John Paul II's appointment shortly before
- of another dissident Catholic leader, Ignatius Gong Pinmei, now
- 90, to the level of cardinal. Bishop Fan had earlier spent
- fifteen years (1967-1982) in a forced labor camp in Qinghai
- Province. ("Bishop, 75, arrested in retaliation against Pope,"
- Hong Kong Standard, June 21, 1991. Gong Pinmei had spent thirty
- years in prison, from 1955 onward, but in 1988 was allowed to
- move to the United States, where he now lives.) In July 1991,
- an Italian priest, Father Ciro Biondi, was expelled from China,
- also in apparent retaliation for the appointment of Cardinal
- Gong. ("Priest expelled as protest," Hong Kong Standard, July
- 5, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> In September, the Rome-based church publication Asia News
- reported that eight bishops in Hebei Province had been detained
- in the previous seven months and sent to political reeducation
- camps, and the authorities had opened another such camp for
- bishops and priests in Shaanxi Province. In addition, the
- journal reported, fifteen more priests had been arrested in July
- in Fujian Province. ("Catholic repression worsening: claim,"
- South China Morning Post, September 14, 1991.) In December, a
- spokesman for the official Chinese Catholic Patriotic
- Association accused underground priests and bishops appointed
- by the Pope of "spreading heresy" and confirmed that a number
- of them had been arrested after holding a secret episcopal
- conference in northwest China in November 1990. The spokesman
- added that those arrested were "guilty of founding an illegal
- organization," but denied any connection between this and the
- detainees' religious beliefs. ("Catholic priests accused of
- heresy," South China Morning Post, December 17, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> In October, public security authorities in Shanghai arrested
- at least five Chinese Jehovah's Witnesses, and expelled an
- Australian businessman who had been holding secret
- Bible-reading sessions with them. The authorities told the
- businessman that other foreigners involved in religious
- activities would also be expelled soon. ("Jehovah's Witnesses
- held," South China Morning Post, November 8, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p>Repression of ethnic minorities
- </p>
- <p> Repression continued in Tibet with more arrests of Tibetans
- for participating in peaceful demonstrations both in the
- Tibetan Autonomous Region (TAR) and the Tibetan regions of Gansu
- and Qinghai provinces. New information emerged about trials of
- Tibetan dissidents which were notable chiefly for their lack of
- fairness and for the heavy sentences handed down for nonviolent
- political activities. Prison conditions were harsh, and efforts
- by prisoners to protest those conditions led to severe
- punishment. The Chinese government permitted several
- international delegations to have access to Tibet to discuss
- human rights, among other issues, but the visits took place
- under tightly controlled conditions.
- </p>
- <p> Numerous demonstrations in support of independence took
- place in Lhasa, the capital of the Tibetan Autonomous Region,
- and in a Tibetan region of Qinghai. On March 17, at least five
- monks from Dhing-gar, a monastery in the Toelung area of Lhasa,
- were detained for taking part in a pro-independence
- demonstration in the Barkhor, the square in front of the
- Jokhang, Lhasa's most important temple. Also in March, four
- monks from Drepung, the largest monastery in Tibet, were
- detained for political activities that included putting up
- pro-independence posters on the monastery walls. Dozens of small
- demonstrations took place in Tibet after the Chinese
- government's commemoration on May 23 of the fortieth anniversary
- of Tibet's "liberation" in 1951. In August, a monk and a nun
- were detained for peacefully demonstrating in the Barkhor. On
- September 14, six people, including five monks, were taken into
- custody for unfurling the Tibetan flag in the Barkhor. One of
- the six died three days later, of head injuries. Lhasa sources
- said they were promised an investigation by local authorities.
- </p>
- <p> New information surfaced about trials, both those that took
- place in 1991 and one in 1990. In July 1991, documents
- concerning the December 24, 1990 trial of a human rights
- activist were smuggled out of Tibet. Jampa Ngodrup, 45, a doctor
- in Chengguan Qu Municipal Clinic in Lhasa, was detained on
- October 20, 1989 and formally arrested on August 13, 1990. He
- was accused of having, at the end of 1988, arranged for a
- colleague to collect a list of all those arrested during the
- March 5, 1988 demonstrations in Lhasa. He then allegedly passed
- the list to a Tibetan woman whom the trial documents describe
- as a "foreign resident." The woman, in turn, gave Jampa Ngodrup
- a list of those injured and arrested in the December 10, 1988
- protests, which he copied. He was accused of being a foreign
- agent and sentenced to thirteen years in prison.
- </p>
- <p> On February 8, two men named Tseten Norgye and Thubten
- Tsering, and a woman named Sonam Choedron were tried on charges
- of spreading counterrevolutionary propaganda. Tseten Norgye had
- been detained on April 20, 1989 for distributing a document
- calling on Tibetans to support independence and the Five Point
- Proposal of the Dalai Lama. He was formally arrested on
- November 10, 1989 and, after a one-day trial, was sentenced to
- four years in prison. Thubten Tsering, a member of the Communist
- Party, was sentenced to five years in prison, and Sonam Choedron
- to two. She was released in April. There were reports from
- Tibetan sources in early November 1989 that Tseten Norgye had
- been tortured.
- </p>
- <p> The most telling evidence of poor conditions in prisons came
- on March 31, when two prisoners in TAR Prison No. 1, in
- Drapchi, Lhasa, tried to hand visiting U.S. Ambassador James
- Lilley a petition about mistreatment and torture of prisoners.
- Prison officials grabbed the petition out of Lilley's hand and
- refused to give it back. The two prisoners, Lobsang Tenzin and
- Tenpa Wangdrak, together with three other men, were put in
- solitary confinement in Drapchi, then transferred on April 27
- to a labor reform camp in Nyingtri, three hundred kilometers
- east of Lhasa, and the next day reportedly transferred again to
- a small prison in Damchu. Tibetan sources say they were moved
- back to Lhasa on July 27; Asia Watch was told by officers of the
- Bureau of Labor Reform in the Tibetan Autonomous Region in early
- August that they were still in Nyingtri.
- </p>
- <p> A series of protests over the transfers held by other
- political prisoners in Drapchi resulted in widespread beatings
- of the protestors and other punishments.
- </p>
- <p> In December 1991, Tibetan sources reported that Sonam
- Wangdu, a thirty-six-year-old prisoner arrested for involvement
- in the killing of a policeman during the demonstrations in Lhasa
- on March 5, 1988, was near death, without medical treatment, in
- Drapchi prison.
- </p>
- <p> At least three international delegations visited Tibet
- during the year to discuss the human rights situation. An
- Australian government delegation ended a thirteen-day visit to
- China and Tibet on July 26; despite repeated requests, it was
- not able to get access to Drapchi prison, although it was given
- specific information about a dozen Tibetan prisoners. A
- delegation under the auspices of the National Committee on
- U.S.-China Relations, in which Asia Watch took part, visited
- Tibet between July 31 and August 8. The group did gain access
- to Drapchi, but virtually all male prisoners had been removed
- from their cells before the visit. Two women prisoners with whom
- members of the group had a chance to speak briefly--in the
- company of prison officials--were both nuns, serving time for
- taking part in political demonstrations.
- </p>
- <p> In recognition of continuing human rights abuses in Tibet,
- the first U.N. resolution on Tibet in twenty-five years was
- passed on August 23 by the U.N. Subcommission on the Prevention
- of Discrimination and the Protection of Minorities. It said
- that human rights violations "threaten the distinct cultural,
- religious and national identity of the Tibetan people."
- </p>
- <p> Unrest continued in Xinjiang, the northwestern frontier
- province inhabited mainly by Muslim ethnic groups, following
- the April 1990 Baren uprising. The protest was suppressed by the
- PLA with the loss of several dozen Muslim lives.
- </p>
- <p> In July 1991, the Hong Kong magazine Zheng Ming (Contention)
- reported that during the previous two months a series of armed
- rebellions seeking independence, the localization of military
- forces and the right to organize political parties had broken
- out in remote areas of Xinjiang bordering the Soviet Union. The
- magazine stated that for thirty-six hours in mid-May,
- government buildings in Tacheng city were occupied by armed
- crowds and demands were made for a transfer of power; official
- reports were cited to say that 140 "armed bandits" had been
- killed, wounded or arrested in the subsequent army crackdown.
- In addition, Zheng Ming reported that on June 11, three
- thousands demonstrators gathered before the government
- headquarters in Bole city demanding the democratic election of
- city leaders; when violence erupted the next day, locally
- stationed troops were sent in and up to five hundred
- demonstrators were reportedly killed or wounded. Both areas were
- subsequently closed off to foreigners, and martial law was
- imposed in the Bole area. ("Xingjiang fasheng wuzhuang baodong,"
- Zheng Ming, July 1991, as reported in Federal Broadcast
- Information Service, July 3, 1991.) Asia Watch is concerned that
- the authorities appear to have used grossly excessive force in
- dealing with these incidents of ethnic unrest and that a
- considerable number of those killed or injured may actually have
- been peaceful demonstrators.
- </p>
- <p> In November, the official Xinjiang Daily reported that five
- local men had been sentenced to between one and three years'
- imprisonment for organizing a protest demonstration by taxi
- drivers in Urumqi, the regional capital. The newspaper said
- that the demonstration had begun over a dispute about how much
- of their fares the drivers should be required to hand over to
- the city authorities, but this was just "an excuse," it claimed.
- The report contained no allegations of violence by the
- demonstrators, and it appears that the five were imprisoned
- solely for exercising their right to freedom of expression and
- assembly. (Reuters, "Sentence of hard labor for protest," South
- China Morning Post, November 6, 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> The year 1991 also saw a severe new round of repression in
- China's third major ethnic region, Inner Mongolia. The central
- authorities in 1981 officially designated the region as having
- suffered among the heaviest fatalities and worst persecution of
- any part of the country during the Cultural Revolution.
- </p>
- <p> On May 11, the Party Committee of the Inner Mongolian
- Autonomous Region issued top-secret "Document No. 13" banning
- and ordering a major crackdown on two small unofficial
- organizations which had been recently formed by ethnic Mongol
- intellectuals and cadres in the region. The organizations were
- called the Ih Ju League National Culture Society and the
- Bayannur League National Modernization Society. On May 15,
- Huchuntegus and Wang Manlai, two leaders of the Ih Ju League,
- were arrested, and twenty-six other members of the society's
- provisional council were placed under house arrest. According
- to an appeal issued on June 30 by an underground dissident group
- called the Inner Mongolian League for the Defense of Human
- Rights, the authorities later moved the two to a secret prison
- facility in Hohhot, the regional capital, used to hold important
- political prisoners and administered by Section No. 5 of the
- provincial Public Security Department. The men's wives
- reportedly have been subjected to regular harassment, and have
- not been allowed to visit their husbands or informed of their
- place of detention. Before their arrest, Wang Manglai and
- Huchuntegus were employed as officials at the Ih Ju League's
- Office of Education.
- </p>
- <p> The dissident appeal said that another leader of the
- unofficial association, Sechinbayar, a research fellow at the
- Ih Ju League's Ghengis Khan Research Center, and others from
- the group of twenty-six placed under house arrest had been
- summoned frequently for interrogation and subjected to
- intimidation, insults and corporal punishment to force them to
- confess. The authorities reportedly indicated that some of the
- twenty-six would later be formally arrested, probably eight of
- the more active ones including Sechinbayar.
- </p>
- <p> Fewer details have emerged of the crackdown against the
- Bayannur League National Modernization Society, probably
- because it was based in a more remote and inaccessible part of
- the region, bordering the Soviet Union. However, the June 30
- appeal reported that the society's leader, Baoyintaoktao, had
- been secretly tried (the length of the sentence given is not
- known) and incarcerated in the same secret prison in Hohhot as
- the two leaders of the Ih Ju society. It added that seven other
- members of the Bayannur dissident group had been escorted by
- public security authorities to a detention facility in the
- league's Linhe municipality, and that nothing further had been
- heard of them. Moreover, the appeal stated that following
- protests held in Hohhot and other parts of Inner Mongolia to
- commemorate the second anniversary of the June 4, 1989 massacre
- in Beijing, a journalism sophomore at the University of Inner
- Mongolia, an ethnic Mongol named Zhang Haiquan, had been
- arrested and was being held incommunicado in an unknown
- location.
- </p>
- <p> In October, Radio France Internationale reported that Ulan
- Chovo (Wulan Sabu in Chinese), a thirty-seven-year-old
- professor of history at the University of Inner Mongolia, had
- been arrested on July 11 on charges of giving documents
- concerning human rights violations in the region to a foreigner.
- Ulan Chovo is thought to have been one of the leaders of the Ih
- Ju League National Culture Society; according to an Asia Watch
- source, he too has been incarcerated in a secret prison in
- Hohhot. The allegations of passing documents to a foreigner may
- well refer to the above-cited top-secret Party Document No. 13
- and the June 30 appeal by the Inner Mongolian League for the
- Defense for Human Rights. In August, a Beijing-based journalist
- for The Independent of London, Andrew Higgins, was expelled from
- China, having earlier been caught in possession of these
- documents. In July, the full text of the documents was published
- in English translation by Asia Watch. (However, neither Higgins
- nor Asia Watch had obtained the documents directly or indirectly
- from Ulan Chovo.)
- </p>
- <p> Two other ethnic Mongol dissidents known to be imprisoned in
- Inner Mongolia on account of their peaceful exercise of the
- right to free expression are Bater, 35, formerly an official in
- the government planning commission of Xilingol league, (A league
- is an administrative district in Inner Mongolia.) and Bao
- Hongguang, also 35, an engineer. Both men were leaders of a
- large student protest movement in 1981 against Han domination
- of the Inner Mongolian Region. In the summer of 1987, the two
- escaped across the border to the Mongolian People's Republic and
- sought political asylum there, but were later extradited to
- China and each sentenced to eight years in prison. (For more
- details, see Asia Watch, "Crackdown in Inner Mongolia," July
- 1991, and Asia Watch, "Crackdown in Inner Mongolia, (Update No.
- 1)," December 1991.)
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>