Preparing for the 2008 Olympic Games, China's Authorities
Go After Human-Rights Advocats
By
PAUL MOONEY
BEIJING—Qianci may well be the youngest political prisoner in
the world. The 3-month-old girl and her 24-year-old mother are
surrounded 24 hours a day, seven days a week by some two dozen members
of China's state security apparatus. Since December 27, they have not
been permitted to leave their small apartment in eastern Beijing, and
visitors are brusquely turned away by the plainclothes police who guard
the building. Connections to the outside world—mobile phones and the
Internet—have been cut off.
The young mother and daughter hardly seem like a threat to the state.
Their offense? Qianci and Zeng Jinyan are daughter and wife of Hu Jia,
a leading activist on behalf of dissidents, human-rights lawyers, and
abused farmers. He was dragged from his home by police on December 27
and subsequently charged with "inciting subversion of state power." His
real crime, say analysts, is making Beijing lose face by reporting
human-rights abuses in the run-up to the 2008 Summer Olympics, which
will be held in August. "These things exceeded what the government was
willing to accept," says Teng Biao, one of Hu's legal advisers.
The Beijing games are being presented as a great coming-out party for
China, a chance to showcase its remarkable economic strides and to
claim its place as a 21st-century world power. International attention
will be focused on China, and many human-rights activists here and
abroad hoped that China's eagerness to shine in the spotlight would
prompt its Communist Party leaders to ease repression and provide a
modest opening for political liberalization. On this, they had some
reason for optimism. In 2001, in order to win the right to host the
games, Liu Jingmin, a Beijing Olympics official, promised that the
games would be "an opportunity to foster democracy, improve human
rights, and integrate China with the rest of the world."
Ironically, just the opposite is happening, at least on human rights.
That situation is worsening as the authorities seek to ensure no one
will spoil the party's coming out. Hu provides a case in point. The
bespectacled activist is something of a one-man human-rights band,
maintaining close contacts with dissidents and their families,
tirelessly gathering information, and sending it out on the Web for the
world to see. "The action taken against Hu Jia cannot escape being
connected to the Olympics," says the San Francisco-based Dui Hua
Foundation, which has successfully intervened with the Chinese
government on behalf of dissidents.
Image building. Teng, who is
professor of law at the China University of Political Science and Law,
says Beijing's efforts to rein in criticism comes as no surprise.
"China wants to show its political strength to the world, not improve
the human rights or the political situation," he says. Chine Chan, with
Amnesty International in Hong Kong, says China's domestic human-rights
record "is an obstacle to its international-image building."
China's leaders see the Olympic Games as an opportunity to dazzle the
world and to demonstrate that they have a mandate to continue to rule
China. Beijing's harshest critics, though, draw comparisons to the 1936
Olympics, when the Nazis used the athletic event as a showcase for a
new Germany and to mark its return to the world community following its
isolation after its defeat in World War I.
Many Chinese thought that with the world's eyes turned to China for
this year's Olympic Games, whose slogan is "One World, One Dream," they
had a rare chance to pressure the government. Disgruntled
Chinese—dissidents, farmers, factory workers, the displaced—saw a
moment when authorities might hesitate to use their usual practices to
silence them. They were wrong. A spate of detentions and arrests
related to the Olympics over the past two years has been met with near
silence from foreign countries.
Hu Jia is one of those who paid a price for miscalculating. Charged
with subverting state security, which allegedly involves state secrets,
he has been denied access to his lawyers. Police have attempted to
strong-arm Zeng into making statements about her husband, reportedly
threatening to take their baby away from her during parts of the day.
Zeng, a prominent blogger and human-rights activist in her own right,
has refused to cooperate.
Countless other Chinese have also found themselves at odds with the
government over the Olympics. Hundreds of thousands of Beijing
residents have been displaced as large swaths of the city—many
historically significant neighborhoods—have been razed to make way for
Olympic venues and related development projects. Liu Jie, a well-known
petitioner, was sentenced to a Re-education Through Labor Camp last
year after protesting the destruction of houses. Yang Chunlin, who
fought against illegal seizures of land, was also arrested after
starting a campaign dubbed, "We want human rights, not the Olympics."
The most vulnerable victims are the "undesirables," members of the
lower rungs of society, who are nameless and faceless to the outside
world, and so least protected. Li Xiaorong, professor of political
philosophy at the University of Maryland, describes a systematic
rounding up of petitioners, the homeless, street vendors, and beggars
from the streets of the capital. These people risk being forcibly sent
home to rural areas, sentenced to re-education camps and detention
centers, and even being confined to mental hospitals and psychiatric
wards. "The government doesn't want these poor and downtrodden coming
onto the streets of Beijing in the run-up to the Olympics," says Li.
"It wouldn't look good for the image of China as a powerful and wealthy
country."
Beatings. The small number of
brave lawyers who dare to accept sensitive cases face beatings,
detentions, imprisonment, and the loss of their licenses to practice
law. Some have been brutally attacked by hei shehui, or black society,
thugs used by the police to hand out extralegal punishments. Li Heping,
a lawyer who has defended environmental activists, Christians, and
other lawyers, was attacked last year in his office park by 10 men. Li
told associates that the unidentified men threw a bag over his head,
pushed him into the back seat of a car, and took him to the basement of
a house, where he was beaten and shocked with electric batons for four
hours. He was later driven into the woods and thrown out of the car.
One of the most prominent cases is that of Chen Guangcheng, a blind,
self-trained lawyer and activist, who helped farmers in Shandong
province fight forced sterilization and late-term abortions. Chen was
sentenced in late 2006 to four years and three months in prison on what
many say were trumped-up charges, after a trial marked by harassment of
witnesses and detention of his lawyers, who were prevented from
appearing in court.
Chinese leaders show no sign of letting up. And human-rights activists
complain that there has been little meaningful pressure from the
International Olympic Committee or participating countries. For its
part, the U.S. State Department says it is "following closely" the
"disturbing" detention of Hu and has raised his case with Chinese
authorities. And the European Parliament last month passed a resolution
calling for Hu's release and urging China "not to use the Olympic Games
as a pretext to arrest and illegally detain and imprison dissidents,
journalists, and human-rights activists."
"Futile." Beijing's official
stance on its human-rights record has been to slap away any public
criticisms as attempts to politicize the Olympics. On January 31, the
state-run People's Daily defiantly stated: "Those who want to use the
Olympics to discredit China, and those who think the Olympics will
promote China to change in the way they 'hope', are doomed to be
disappointed. Their efforts will be futile."
To the contrary, critics say that pressure can work, pointing to recent
instances of China being influenced to get involved in diplomatic
efforts concerning North Korea's nuclear programs and the conflict in
Sudan's Darfur region. Earlier this month, U.S. film director Steven
Spielberg quit as an artistic adviser to the Beijing Olympics,
responding to criticism from activists such as actress Mia Farrow over
China's continuing support for the government of Sudan. Farrow has
called for an Olympics boycott and has said that Spielberg's promotion
of the games in Beijing could make him a latter-day Leni Riefenstahl,
who became known as Hitler's filmmaker for her glowing depiction of the
1936 Berlin games.
Just a few months before police burst into his home to take him away,
Hu Jia predicted that the Communist Party would succeed in wiping out
all dissent before the August 8 opening ceremony for the Beijing games.
"By the time that day comes," he said, "there will be no sound at all."
No sound, that is, other than the cheering crowds of Olympics
spectators.