SHOES IVANKA: THE 3 ACTIVISTS ARRESTED IN CHINA RELEASED ON BAIL

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Originally published by The Sherbrooke Times on June 28, 2017 Three chinese activists arrested in may as they were investigating the working conditions in factories producing shoes for the line Ivanka Trump have been released on bail, announced on Wednesday that the association China Labor Watch. The three men – Hua Haifeng, (read more…)

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Communiqué Alleging Torture of Chinese lawyer Li Heping – July 2017

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Submission to: Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment Working Group on Arbitrary Detention Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders I. Identity of the person(s) subjected to torture 1. Family Name: Li (李) 2. First and other names: Heping (和平) 3. (read more…)

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Wang Shurong (王淑蓉)

Wang Shurong (王淑蓉)

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Wang Shurong 王淑蓉 Crimes: Using dangerous methods to undermine public security & Picking quarrels and provoking trouble Length of Punishment: 6 years Court: Yingjing County People’s Court, Ya’an City, Sichuan Province Trial Date: April 21, 2017 Sentencing Date: April 21, 2017 Dates of Detention/Arrest: February 18, 2016 (criminally detained); March 23, 2016 (formally arrested) (read more…)

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End 2-Year Crackdown on Lawyers, Hold Chinese Government Accountable

End 2-Year Crackdown on Lawyers, Hold Chinese Government Accountable

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The ongoing persecution of Chinese human rights lawyers, seen most explicitly in the “709 Crackdown,” testifies to the government’s defiance of international human rights standards and its disregard for its own Constitution and laws.

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China activists fear increased surveillance with new security law

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Originally published by Reuters on June 5, 2017 (Refiles this May 25 story to add “Chinese” to advocacy group’s name in paragraph 13.) By Christian Shepherd Chinese activists say they fear intensified state surveillance after a draft law seeking to legitimize monitoring of suspects and raid premises was announced last (read more…)

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Hong Kong activists seek to heal generational divide

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Originally published by Nikkei Asian Review on June 5, 2017 HONG KONG — Although under the sovereignty of China, Hong Kong continues to keep the light burning in commemorating the Communist government’s brutal crackdown against pro-democracy protesters on June 4, 1989, when hundreds were killed in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. The (read more…)

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China’s claims of human rights progress in Xinjiang ‘flimsy propaganda’, say pressure groups

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Originally published by SCMP on June 2, 2017 “Great progress” has been achieved in promoting human rights in Xinjiang under Communist Party rule, the Chinese government said in a white paper issued on Thursday, despite growing criticism among rights and exile groups who accuse Beijing of enforcing sweeping social control (read more…)

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Ethnic Mongolian Activist Lodges Formal Complaint Over ‘Tiger Bench’ Torture, Interrogation

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Originally published by Radio Free Asia on June 22, 2017 Yangjindolma, an ethnic Mongolian woman from China’s northern region of Inner Mongolia, has lodged a complaint against the local government after she was tortured and held in manacles during a 15-day detention by Chinese police. Yangjindolma said she was detained May (read more…)

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More Than 20 Veterans Behind Bars, 28 Years After Tiananmen Massacre

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Originally published by Radio Free Asia on May 31, 2017 Twenty-eight years after People’s Liberation Army (PLA) troops put an end to weeks of student-led pro-democracy protests on Tiananmen Square with tanks and machine guns, more than 20 dissidents remain in jail for campaigning over the massacre, rights activists said (read more…)

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Jailed Chinese lawyer force-fed medication, wife says

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Originally published by AFP on May 24, 2017 When human rights lawyer Li Heping returned to his home in Beijing after a two-year incarceration, his wife did not recognise the frail white-haired man standing in her hallway. “He is only 46 years old, but I thought he was an old man,” (read more…)

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Chinese Rights Lawyer’s Wife Says Xie Yang Released but Under Heavy Surveillance

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Originally published by VOA  on May 12, 2017 Chinese rights lawyer Xie Yang has been released on bail after recanting accusations of police torture during his trial on Monday. But he is still under tight surveillance by secret police, according to his wife. A court in the central Chinese city (read more…)

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CHRD Demands Accountability & Justice for Victims of Torture

CHRD Demands Accountability & Justice for Victims of Torture

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For International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, CHRD demands that China live up to its obligations contained in the UN Convention against Torture, including to investigate allegations of torture by state agents and provide compensation, rehabilitation, and redress to victims.

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