Awaiting a Democratic Hong Kong
18 February 2005
Why does my government do this? Why??? Why can’t they let people just think and act as they want? Have a civil society. Haung is the same age as me and I received it on my birthday. It really brought home the fact across the border in China instead of the Special adminstrative region of the country anyone who attempts to create an equivilant of Glutter, would end up in jail for a decade or more.
CHINA
Cyber-dissident tortured to stop him appealing against 12-year prison sentence
As a Chinese delegation was attending a preparatory meeting in Geneva for the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), Reporters Without Borders said today it has obtained new information about the torture of Chinese cyber-dissident Huang Jinqiu, who is serving a 12-year prison sentence for "subversion."
The press freedom organization said it was shocked by the torture and beating of this young, pro-democracy activist in prison and by an attempt to put him in a psychiatric institute against his will. And it said it was outraged that Chinese diplomats were able to strut around at the WSIS meeting while this was going on.
According to the information obtained by Reporters Without Borders, the prison authorities got tough with Huang after he began preparing to file a new appeal against his conviction. The original appeal, filed on his behalf by his lawyer, was rejected by a court in Nanjing (in Jiangsu province) without a hearing being held.
The authorities have done everything possible to break him physically and psychologically in an attempt to dissuade him from taking the case to the supreme court. In mid-December, they tried to commit him to a psychiatric hospital but the hospital’s doctors refused to play along.
The prison authorities then assigned him to a "severe restriction" regime in Pukou prison in Nanjing. He has been put in a cell with non-political prisoners where he has often been beaten by his cellmates on the orders of the guards. He has also been forced to run more than 20 km each day in the prison yard and is beaten if he stops before completing the distance.
He has also been deprived of reading material for several weeks and his lawyer’s letters are often intercepted.
His lawyer, Thomas Guo, confirmed that during a visit on January 17 Huang showed the marks of torture and was very demoralized. He broke into tears twice during their interview, which was monitored by guards. A few days later, Guoting received a letter from his client asking him not to go ahead with the appeal to the supreme court.
Huang Jinqiu, a regular contributor to the website Boxun, was arrested on 13 September 2003 in Lianyungang, Jiangsu province in the east of the country. His family had no news of him for several months and only learned in January 2004 that he was being held in Changzhou jail. He was sentenced to 12 years in jail for "subversion" on 27 September.
Born in 1974, Huang worked as a journalist for several newspapers of which the best known was Yangcheng Wanbao. It was while continuing his journalism studies in Malaysia that he became well known for his uncompromising political articles carried by Boxun, under the pseudonym of Qing Shuijun.
The Chinese authorities began to keep a closer eye on the cyberdissident’s activities since, in January 2003, he announced he intended to found a political party, the China Patriotic Democratic Party (CPDP). Huang was arrested a few days after his return to China.
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Lin in detention
Reporters Without Borders called today for the immediate release
of pro-democracy activist Zhang Lin, who was due to have been
freed on 13 February at the end of 15 days of "administrative
detention" but is now being held in what the Chinese authorities
call "criminal detention" on a charge of threatening state
security.
b"It is ridiculous to accuse an individual of threatening his
country’s security just because he posted articles on the Internet,"
the press freedom organization said.
Zhang was arrested on 29 January at the station of the city of Bengbu
(in Anhui province), on his return from Beijing. The local police had
indicated at the time that he would spend 15 days in administrative
detention.
But instead of releasing him when the two weeks were up, the police
have now told his wife, Fang Cao, that he is in "criminal detention"
in Bengbu’s main prison. In China, a person can be held in criminal
detention for 37 days before being formally charged.
"My husband is now in the hands of the security services," Fang
told Reporters Without Borders. "The authorities have not told me
what laws he is supposed to have broken."
The day before his arrest, Zhang went to the Beijing home of the
ousted former prime minister, Zhao Ziyang, in order to present his
condolences for Zhao’s recent death, but the police prevented him
from entering the Zhao residence. In an interview a few days before
for the magazine Epoch Times, which was also posted on the
Internet, Zhang called Zhao a "sincere man" and "unique Chinese
leader."
Zhang often posts his articles on websites linked to the Falun Gong
spiritual movement such as Dajiyuan.com and
Epochtimes.com, as well as Boxun.com, a website about human
rights in China.
He was imprisoned from 1989 to 1991, and again from 1995 to 1998, when
he was sentenced to hard labour. He then left for the United States to
pursue his political activities, but reentered China illegally a few
months later and was rearrested a third time, at which point he was
sent to a labour camp until 2001. In all, he has spent eight years in
detention.
currently detained in China.