http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2009/eap/135989.htm |
Marcg
10, 2010 |
|
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and
Labor
(The section for
Tibet,
the report for
Hong Kong,
and the report for
Macau
are appended below.)
The
People's Republic of China (PRC), with a population of
approximately 1.3 billion, is an authoritarian state in
which the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) constitutionally is
the paramount source of power. Party members hold almost all
top government, police, and military positions. Ultimate
authority rests with the 25-member political bureau
(Politburo) of the CCP and its nine-member standing
committee. Hu Jintao holds the three most powerful positions
as CCP general secretary, president, and chairman of the
Central Military Commission. Civilian authorities generally
maintained effective control of the security forces.
The government's human rights record remained poor and
worsened in some areas. During the year the government
increased the severe cultural and religious repression of
ethnic minorities in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR).Tibetan
areas remained under tight government controls. The
detention and harassment of human rights activists
increased, and public interest lawyers and law firms that
took on cases deemed sensitive by the government faced
harassment, disbarment and closure. The government limited
freedom of speech and controlled the Internet and Internet
access. Abuses peaked around high-profile events, such as
the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square uprising, the
50th anniversary of the Tibetan uprising, and the 60th
anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of
China.
As in previous years, citizens did not have the right to
change their government. Other serious human rights abuses
included extrajudicial killings, executions without due
process, torture and coerced confessions of prisoners, and
the use of forced labor, including prison labor. The
government continued to monitor, harass, detain, arrest, and
imprison journalists, writers, dissidents, activists,
petitioners, and defense lawyers and their families, many of
whom sought to exercise their rights under the law. A lack
of due process and restrictions on lawyers, particularly
human rights and public interest lawyers, had serious
consequences for defendants who were imprisoned or executed
following proceedings that fell short of international
standards. The party and state exercised strict political
control of courts and judges, conducted closed trials, and
continued the use of administrative detention. Prolonged
illegal detentions at unofficial holding facilities, known
as black jails, were widespread.
Individuals and groups, especially those deemed politically
sensitive by the government, continued to face tight
restrictions on their freedom to assemble, practice
religion, and travel. The government failed to protect
refugees and asylum-seekers adequately, and the detention
and forced repatriation of North Koreans continued. The
government increased pressure on other countries to
repatriate citizens back to China, including citizens who
were being processed by UNHCR as political refugees.
Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), both local and
international, continued to face intense scrutiny and
restrictions. The government failed to address serious
social conditions that affected human rights, including
endemic corruption, trafficking in persons, and
discrimination against women, minorities, and persons with
disabilities. The government continued its coercive birth
limitation policy, in some cases resulting in forced
abortion or forced sterilization. Workers cannot choose an
independent union to represent them in the workplace, and
the law does not protect workers' right to strike.
In April the government unveiled its first National Human
Rights Action Plan. The 54-page document outlined human
rights goals to be achieved over the next two years and
addressed issues such as prisoners' rights and the role of
religion in society. However, the plan has not yet been
implemented.
On July 5, riots broke out in Urumqi, the provincial capital
of Xinjiang, after police used force to break up a
demonstration reportedly composed mostly of Uighur
university students who protested the killing of Uighur
migrant workers by Han co-workers in Guangdong Province.
Violence erupted leaving approximately 200 people dead and
1,700 injured. According to official sources, most of the
dead were Han Chinese. On July 7 and September 4, groups of
Han Chinese engaged in retaliatory violence, resulting in
more deaths. At year's end Urumqi remained under a heavy
police presence and most Internet and international phone
communication remained cut off.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including
Freedom From:
a.
Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
During
the year security forces reportedly committed arbitrary or
unlawful killings. No official statistics on deaths in
custody were available.
In
January Lin Guoqiang died suddenly while in custody at the
Fuqing Detention Center in Fujian Province. His family
claimed that his body was swollen and covered with bruises.
At year's end there was no official investigation into the
case.
On
February 8, Li Qiaoming was reportedly beaten to death in a
detention center in Jinning County, Yunnan Province. Prison
officials initially claimed he died after accidentally
running into a wall during a game of "hide and seek."
However, Li's father, who viewed the corpse, reported Li's
head was swollen and his body covered with purple abrasions.
Following Li's death, public security officials launched a
campaign to eliminate "unnatural deaths" in prisons. An
investigation determined three inmates were responsible for
the death. The inmates, along with two prison guards, were
sentenced to prison.
In
March Li Wenyan died while in custody in Jiujiang, Jiangxi
Province. The Xinhua official press quoted a senior prison
official as stating that Li died while having a "nightmare."
Official press reports also stated that an autopsy performed
by the Jiangxi Provincial Public Security Department in May
showed that Li died of various diseases, including an ulcer,
an abscess, and heart disease, none of which were discovered
until after his death. The same press report stated that an
injury on the body was caused by electric shock administered
during resuscitation attempts.
Also
in March Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported that a Tibetan monk,
Phuntsok Rabten, was beaten to death by police in Sichuan
Province after urging Tibetans to boycott farming to protest
a massive security clampdown.
In
April the Supreme People's Procuratorate (SPP)
disclosed that at least 15 prisoners died in "unnatural
deaths" under unusual circumstances during the year.
According to a Chinese press report, seven of the prisoners
died of beatings, three were classified as suicides, two
were described as accidents, and three remained under
investigation.
According to official media reports, 197 persons died and
1,700 were injured during the July 5 rioting in Urumqi. A
second wave of riots, on a smaller scale, occurred on July
7. On September 25, charges were brought against 21 of the
more than 200 persons facing prosecution in connection with
the riots. On November 9, eight Uighurs and one Han were
executed without due process for crimes committed during
July riots. At year's end 22 persons had been sentenced to
death; five others reportedly received suspended death
sentences. Of these, one was reported to be ethnically Han
Chinese and the rest were Uighurs.
According to RFA reports, police detained Uighur Shohret
Tursun in Urumqi during the July 5 riots. In September
police returned his disfigured body to family members and
ordered them to bury him; the family refused to do so
without an explanation of his death from the police. On
September 20, the police surrounded the family home and
forced the family to bury the body without an autopsy.
During the reporting period no new information became
available regarding the deaths of Falun Gong practitioner Yu
Zhou, who was arrested in Beijing in January 2008 and died
in February 2008; Tibetan protester Paltsal Kyab, detained
in April 2008 in Sichuan Province and who died in police
custody in May 2008; or a motorcyclist surnamed Ouyang, who
died in July 2008 and was allegedly killed by security
guards in Guangdong Province.
During the year no new information was available regarding a
2007 incident in which 18 persons were killed and 17 were
arrested during a raid at a location in the XUAR that
officials called a terrorist training camp.
Defendants in criminal proceedings were executed following
convictions that sometimes took place under circumstances
involving severe lack of due process and inadequate channels
for appeal.
b.
Disappearance
On
February 4, authorities detained human rights lawyer Gao
Zhisheng, who had represented Chinese Christians and Falun
Gong practitioners. At year's end his whereabouts remained
unconfirmed, although according to NGO reports, in August he
reportedly was seen in his hometown under heavy police
escort. Before his arrest Gao published a letter detailing
his torture during a previous period of detention.
On
March 30, underground Catholic bishop Julius Jia Zhiguo of
Zhengding, Hebei Province, was arrested; at year's end his
whereabouts were unknown. The whereabouts of underground
Catholic priests Zhang Li and Zhang Jianlin, from near
Zhangjiakou city in Hebei Province, whom authorities
detained in May 2008, and Wu Qinjing, the bishop of Zhouzhi,
Shaanxi Province, who was detained in 2007, also remained
unknown.
In an
October report, the NGO Human Rights Watch documented the
disappearances of hundreds of Uighur men and boys following
the July protests in Urumqi.
At
year's end the government had not provided a comprehensive,
credible accounting of all those killed, missing, or
detained in connection with the violent suppression of the
1989 Tiananmen demonstrations. In October the Dui Hua
Foundation estimated that approximately 20 individuals
continued to serve sentences for offenses committed during
the demonstration.
c.
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment
The
law prohibits the physical abuse of detainees and forbids
prison guards from extracting confessions by torture,
insulting prisoners' dignity, and beating or encouraging
others to beat prisoners. However, during the year there
were reports that officials used electric shocks, beatings,
shackles, and other forms of abuse.
According to a November Human Rights Watch report, on March
6, An Weifeng was released on bail from Bancheng prison in
Chengde City, Henan Province, for medical treatment. His
father claimed that An Weifeng's body was swollen and
scarred as a result of beatings and the administration of
electric shocks.
In
2007, 30 farmers from Chengdu, Sichuan Province, who
traveled to Beijing seeking resolution of a land dispute
were abducted and taken to a military base, where they were
tortured, threatened, and starved. One of them allegedly
attempted suicide, "because (the guards) didn't allow me to
sleep or eat in order to force me to write self-criticisms."
According to the same report, a 15-year-old girl who
traveled to Beijing to get help for her disabled father was
kidnapped and taken back to Gansu Province, where she was
beaten and held incommunicado for nearly two months. There
were no new developments in this case during the year.
In November 2008 the UN Committee Against Torture (UNCAT)
stated its deep concern about the routine and widespread use
of torture and mistreatment of suspects in police custody,
especially to extract confessions or information used in
criminal proceedings. However, UNCAT acknowledged government
efforts to address the practice of torture and related
problems in the criminal justice system. Many alleged acts
of torture occurred in pretrial criminal detention centers
or Reeducation Through Labor (RTL) centers. Sexual and
physical abuse and extortion occurred in some detention
centers.
According to China News Weekly, the country had 22 "ankang"
institutions (high-security psychiatric hospitals for the
criminally insane) directly administered by the Ministry of
Public Security (MPS). Political activists, underground
religious believers, persons who repeatedly petitioned the
government, members of the banned Chinese Democracy Party (CDP),
and Falun Gong adherents were among those housed with
mentally ill patients in these institutions. The regulations
for committing a person to an ankang facility were not
clear, and detainees had no mechanism for objecting to
public security officials' determinations of mental illness.
Patients in these hospitals reportedly were given medicine
against their will and forcibly subjected to electric shock
treatment. Activists sentenced to administrative detention
also reported they were strapped to beds or other devices
for days at a time, beaten, forcibly injected or fed
medications, and denied food and use of toilet facilities.
Prison
and Detention Center Conditions
Conditions in penal institutions for both political
prisoners and common criminals generally were harsh and
often degrading. Prisoners and detainees often were kept in
overcrowded conditions with poor sanitation. Inadequate
prison capacity remained a problem in some areas. Food often
was inadequate and of poor quality, and many detainees
relied on supplemental food and medicines provided by
relatives; some prominent dissidents were not allowed to
receive such goods.
On
March 2, an inmate at the Danzhou First Detention Center in
Hainan was beaten to death by inmates while guards looked
on.
Forced
labor remained a serious problem in penal institutions. Many
prisoners and detainees in penal and RTL facilities were
required to work, often with no remuneration. Information
about prisons, including associated labor camps and
factories, was considered a state secret and was tightly
controlled.
In
August Vice Minister of Health Huang Jiefu stated that
inmates were not a proper source for organ transplants, that
prisoners must give written consent for their organs to be
taken, and that their rights were protected. In a 2007
interview, Ministry of Health spokesman Mao Qunan stated
that most transplanted organs were from executed prisoners.
Adequate, timely medical care for prisoners remained a
serious problem, despite official assurances that prisoners
have the right to prompt medical treatment. Prison officials
often denied privileges, including the ability to purchase
outside food, make telephone calls, and receive family
visits to those who refused to acknowledge guilt.
Conditions in administrative detention facilities, such as
RTL camps, were similar to those in prisons. Beating deaths
occurred in administrative detention and RTL facilities.
According to NGO reports, conditions in these facilities
were similar to those in prisons, with detainees reporting
beatings, sexual assaults, lack of proper food, and no
access to medical care.
The
law requires juveniles to be held separately from adults,
unless facilities are insufficient. In practice children
sometimes were held with adult prisoners and required to
work. Political prisoners were segregated from each other
and placed with common criminals, who sometimes beat
political prisoners at the instigation of guards. Newly
arrived prisoners or those who refused to acknowledge
committing crimes were particularly vulnerable to beatings.
The
government generally did not permit independent monitoring
of prisons or RTL camps, and prisoners remained inaccessible
to local and international human rights organizations, media
groups, and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
d.
Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
Arbitrary arrest and detention remained serious problems.
The law permits police and security authorities to detain
persons without arresting or charging them. Because the
government tightly controlled information, it was impossible
to determine accurately the total number of persons
subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention.
Role
of the Police and Security Apparatus
The
security apparatus is made up of the Ministries of State
Security and Public Security, the People's Armed Police, the
People's Liberation Army (PLA), and the state judicial,
procuratorial, and penal systems. The Ministries of State
Security and Public Security and the People's Armed Police
were responsible for internal security. SPP and Supreme
People's Court (SPC) officials admitted that courts and
prosecutors often deferred to the security ministries on
policy matters and individual cases. The SPP was responsible
for the investigation of corruption and duty crimes (crimes
committed by public officials or state functionaries,
including corruption, crimes of dereliction of duty, and
crimes involving violations of a citizen's personal rights).
The PLA was responsible for external security but also had
some domestic security responsibilities.
The
MPS coordinates the country's law enforcement, which is
administratively organized into local, county, provincial,
and specialized police agencies. Some efforts were made to
strengthen historically weak regulation and management of
law enforcement agencies; however, judicial oversight was
limited, and checks and balances were absent. Corruption at
the local level was widespread. Security officials,
including "urban management" officials, reportedly took
individuals into custody without just cause, arbitrarily
collected fees from individuals charged with crimes, and
mentally and physically abused victims and perpetrators.
The
SPP acknowledged continuing widespread abuse in law
enforcement. Domestic news media reported the convictions of
public security officials who had beaten to death suspects
or prisoners in their custody. On August 12, Deng Hongfei, a
police officer in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province, was sentenced
to 12 years in prison, and fellow officer Xia Xiangdong was
sentenced to one year in prison for beating to death suspect
Wang Jianguo during an interrogation in 2006.
Arrest
Procedures and Treatment While in Detention
Public
security organs do not require court-approved warrants to
detain suspects under their administrative detention powers.
After detention the procuracy can approve formal arrest
without court approval. According to the law, in routine
criminal cases police can unilaterally detain persons for up
to 37 days before releasing them or formally placing them
under arrest. After a suspect is arrested, the law allows
police and prosecutors to detain a person for up to seven
months while public security organs further investigate the
case. Another 45 days of detention are allowed where public
security organs refer a case to the procuratorate to decide
whether to file charges. If charges are filed, authorities
can detain a suspect for an additional 45 days between
filing and trial. In practice the police sometimes detained
persons beyond the time limits stipulated by law. In some
cases investigating security agents or prosecutors sought
repeated extensions, resulting in pretrial detention of a
year or longer. The criminal procedure law allows detainees
access to lawyers before formal charges are filed, although
police often limited such access.
The
criminal procedure law requires a court to provide a lawyer
to a defendant who has not already retained a lawyer; who is
blind, deaf, mute, a minor; or who may be sentenced to
death. This law applies whether or not the defendant is
indigent. Courts may also provide lawyers to other criminal
defendants who cannot afford them, although courts often did
not appoint counsel in such circumstances.
Detained criminal suspects, defendants, their legal
representatives, and close relatives are entitled to apply
for bail; however, in practice few suspects were released on
bail pending trial.
The
government used incommunicado detention. The law requires
notification of family members within 24 hours of detention,
but individuals often were held without notification for
significantly longer periods, especially in politically
sensitive cases. Under a sweeping exception, officials were
not required to provide notification if doing so would
"hinder the investigation" of a case. In some cases police
treated those with no immediate family more severely.
There
were numerous reports of citizens who were detained with no
or severely delayed notice. On July 27, Noor-Ul-Islam
Sherbaz, a Uighur minor, was detained and accused of
participating in the July 5 riot. In contravention of law on
the detention of juveniles, Sherbaz's parents had no contact
with him after his arrest and were not allowed to be present
during police interrogations.
Authorities advised a number of activists in Shanghai and
Beijing to remain at home in the days prior to and during
U.S. President Obama's November visit to China. Some
activists in provinces outside these two cities were told
not to travel outside their province.
Citizens who traveled to Beijing to petition the central
government for redress of a grievance were frequently
subjected to arbitrary detention, often by police from the
petitioner's hometown. Some provincial governments operated
detention centers in Beijing or in other localities to hold
such petitioners without official procedures or right to
appeal. The law protects the right to petition the
government for resolution of grievances.
In
August a guard raped a 20-year-old petitioner at a detention
facility operated at a Beijing hotel by officials from
Tonbai County in Henan Province. In November the guard pled
guilty to raping the woman and in December was convicted and
sentenced to eight years in prison. Petitioners frequently
were forcibly returned to their hometowns after stays in
detention facilities lasting several days to several weeks.
According to an International Herald Tribune report,
Huang Liuhong, a woman from Guizhou Province, was held in a
Beijing detention facility for nearly a year.
The
law permits nonjudicial panels, called labor reeducation
panels, to sentence persons without trial to three years in
RTL camps or other administrative detention programs. The
labor reeducation committee is authorized to extend a
sentence up to one year. Defendants could challenge RTL
sentences under the administrative litigation law and appeal
for a reduction in, or suspension of, their sentences.
However, appeals rarely succeeded. Many other persons were
detained in similar forms of administrative detention, known
as "custody and education" (for women engaged in
prostitution and those soliciting prostitution) and "custody
and training" (for minors who committed crimes).
Administrative detention was used to intimidate political
activists and prevent public demonstrations.
On
February 1, Zhu Lijin was arrested for distributing Falun
Gong pamphlets. She was sentenced to 15 months in RTL
without a trial. Authorities used special reeducation
centers to prolong detention of Falun Gong practitioners who
had completed terms in RTL.
Authorities arrested persons on allegations of revealing
state secrets, subversion, and other crimes as a means to
suppress political dissent and social advocacy. Citizens
also were also detained under broad and ambiguous state
secrets laws for, among other actions, disclosing
information on criminal trials, meetings, and government
activity.
Human
rights activists, journalists, unregistered religious
figures, and former political prisoners and their family
members were among those targeted for arbitrary detention or
arrest.
The
government continued to use house arrest as a nonjudicial
punishment and control measure against dissidents, former
political prisoners, family members of political prisoners,
petitioners, underground religious figures, and others it
deemed politically sensitive. Numerous dissidents,
activists, and petitioners were placed under house arrest
during the October 1 National Day holiday period. House
arrest encompassed varying degrees of stringency but
sometimes included complete isolation in one's home or
another location under lock and guard. In some cases house
arrest involved constant monitoring, but persons under house
arrest were occasionally permitted to leave the home to work
or run errands. Sometimes such persons were required to ride
in the vehicles of their police monitors when venturing
outside. When outside the home, subjects of house arrest
were usually, but not always, under surveillance. In some
instances security officials assumed invasive positions
within the family home rather than monitor from the outside.
On May
31, police at Guiyang Airport apprehended human rights
activist Chen Xi as he was attempting to fly to Beijing to
commemorate the Tiananmen uprising. He was detained for nine
hours without explanation and then sent home, where he
remained under house arrest. Chen was again detained on
December 7, presumably to prevent him from attending the
Guizhou Human Rights Symposium, which he helped organize. In
February Shanghai activist Dai Xuezhong was prohibited from
leaving his home for approximately one week by local police
to prevent a planned meeting with fellow activist Deng
Yongliang. In August authorities placed writer Zhao
Hun, who blogs under the name of Mo
Zhixu, under house arrest for several days.
At
year's end Yuan Weijing, wife of imprisoned family-planning
activist lawyer Chen Guangcheng, remained under virtual
house arrest. According to Reporters Without Borders, when
journalism professor Wang Keqin and a student tried to visit
Yuan in March in Linyi County, Shandong Province, both were
physically and verbally assaulted by five or six
plainclothes individuals, who Wang reportedly claimed were
hired by the local government to prevent visitors to Chen's
family.
Police
continued the practice of placing under surveillance,
harassing, and detaining citizens around politically
sensitive events, including the plenary sessions of the
National People's Congress (NPC) and the Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the 60th
anniversary of the founding of the PRC and the 20th
anniversary of the Tiananmen Square student uprising. In
early June authorities in Hangzhou placed several
dissidents, including Charter 08 signatories Wen Kejian and
Zou Wei and CDP activist Zhu Yufu, under house arrest for
several days. Published in December 2008, Charter 08 calls
for free elections and greater freedom of speech. Coauthored
by Liu Xiaobo, who was later imprisoned, the document,
originally signed by more than 300 Chinese activists and
intellectuals, received more than 7,000 signatories online.
Many dissidents in Beijing reported that police prevented
them from leaving their houses on June 4, the anniversary of
the Tiananmen Square Massacre. Authorities in the XUAR used
house arrest and other forms of arbitrary detention against
those accused of subscribing to the "three evils" of
religious extremism, "splittism," and terrorism. Raids,
detentions, arrests, and judicial punishments
indiscriminately affected not only those suspected of
supporting terrorism but also those who peacefully sought to
pursue political goals or worship.
e.
Denial of Fair Public Trial
The
law states that the courts shall exercise judicial power
independently, without interference from administrative
organs, social organizations, and individuals. However, in
practice the judiciary was not independent. It received
policy guidance from both the government and the CCP, whose
leaders used a variety of means to direct courts on verdicts
and sentences, particularly in politically sensitive cases.
At both the central and local levels, the government and CCP
frequently interfered in the judicial system and dictated
court decisions. Trial judges decided individual cases under
the direction of the adjudication committee in each court.
In addition, the CCP's law and politics committee, which
includes representatives of the police, security services,
procuratorate, and courts, had the authority to review and
influence court operations at all levels of the judiciary.
People's congresses also had authority to alter court
decisions, but this happened rarely.
Corruption often influenced judicial decision making, and
safeguards against corruption were vague and poorly
enforced. Local governments appointed judges at the
corresponding level of the judicial structure. Judges
received their court finances and salaries from these
government bodies and could be replaced by them. Local
authorities often exerted undue influence over the judges
they appointed and financed. Several high-profile corruption
cases involved procuracy officials.
Courts
lacked the independence and authority to rule on the
constitutionality of laws. The law permits organizations or
individuals to question laws and regulations they believe
contradict the constitution, but a constitutional challenge
first requires consultation with the body drafting the
questioned regulation and can be appealed only to the NPC.
Accordingly, lawyers had little or no opportunity to use the
constitution in litigation.
The
SPC is followed in descending order by the higher,
intermediate, and basic people's courts. These courts handle
criminal, civil, and administrative cases, including appeals
of decisions by police and security officials to use RTL and
other forms of administrative detention. There were special
courts for handling military, maritime, and railway
transport cases.
The
CCP used a form of discipline known as "shuang gui" for
violations of party discipline, but there were reports of
its use against nonparty members. Shuang gui is similar to
house arrest, can be authorized without judicial involvement
or oversight, and requires the CCP member under
investigation to submit to questioning at a designated place
and time. According to regulations of the Central Discipline
Inspection Commission governing shuang gui, corporal
punishment is banned, the member's dignity must be
respected, and he or she is regarded as a comrade unless
violations are proved. Absent any legal oversight, it is
unclear how these regulations were enforced in practice.
On
August 12, authorities in Chengdu closed the trial of Tan
Zuoren, charged with defaming the CCP, from the public (see
Political Prisoners section). Tan attempted to collect the
names of students who died in the May 2008 Sichuan
earthquake. Police blocked persons who tried to attend the
proceedings at the courthouse. When contemporary artist and
civil society activist Ai Weiwei traveled to Chengdu to
participate in the trial and testify on Tan's behalf,
security forces beat him and prevented him from leaving his
hotel room until the trial had adjourned.
On
November 6, 70-year-old Lin Dagang was sentenced to two
years in prison for illegally possessing state secrets.
According to an NGO report, his wife and son were not
allowed to attend his two-hour trial.
On
December 25, Liu Xiaobo, a well-known dissident and coauthor
of Charter 08, which called for increased political freedoms
and human rights in China, was found guilty of the crime of
inciting subversion of state power and sentenced to 11 years
in prison and two years' deprivation of political rights, in
a trial that was believed to contain serious due process
violations. At year's end Liu's case was on appeal.
Trial Procedures
Trials
took place before a judge, who often was accompanied by
"people's assessors," laypersons hired by the court to
assist in decision making. According to law, people's
assessors had authority similar to judges, but in practice
they often deferred to judges and did not exercise an
independent jury-like function.
There
was no presumption of innocence, and the criminal justice
system was biased toward a presumption of guilt, especially
in high-profile or politically sensitive cases. The combined
conviction rate for first- and second-instance criminal
trials was more than 99 percent in 2008; 1,008,677
defendants were tried, and 1,373 were found not guilty. In
many politically sensitive trials, which rarely lasted more
than several hours, the courts handed down guilty verdicts
immediately following proceedings. Courts often punished
defendants who refused to acknowledge guilt with harsher
sentences than those who confessed. There was an appeals
process, but appeals rarely resulted in reversed verdicts.
Appeals processes failed to provide sufficient avenues for
review, and there were inadequate remedies for violations of
defendants' rights.
SPC
regulations require all trials to be open to the public,
with certain exceptions, such as cases involving state
secrets, privacy, and minors. Authorities used the legal
exception for cases involving state secrets to keep
politically sensitive proceedings closed to the public and
sometimes even to family members, and to withhold access to
defense counsel. Under the regulations, foreigners with
valid identification are allowed the same access to trials
as citizens, but in practice foreigners were permitted to
attend court proceedings by invitation only. As in past
years, foreign diplomats and journalists sought permission
to attend a number of trials only to have court officials
reclassify them as "state secret" cases, fill all available
seats with security officials, or otherwise close them to
the public. For example, foreign diplomats requested but
were denied permission to attend human rights advocate Huang
Qi's February trial on charges of illegally possessing state
secrets. Huang's trial was adjourned without a verdict. Some
trials were broadcast, and court proceedings were a regular
television feature. A few courts published their verdicts on
the Internet.
The
law gives most suspects the right to seek legal counsel
shortly after their initial detention and interrogation,
although police frequently interfered with this right.
Individuals who face administrative detention do not have
the right to seek legal counsel. Human rights lawyers
reported that they were denied the ability to defend certain
clients or threatened with punishment if they did.
Both
criminal and administrative cases remained eligible for
legal aid, although 70 percent or more of criminal
defendants went to trial without a lawyer. According to the
Ministry of Justice, the number of legal-aid cases reached
546,859 in 2008. The country had 12,778 full-time legal aid
personnel, although the number of legal-aid personnel
remained inadequate to meet demand. Nonattorney legal
advisors provided the only legal-aid options in many areas.
Lawyers often refused to represent defendants in politically
sensitive cases, and defendants frequently found it
difficult to find an attorney. The government took steps to
discourage lawyers from taking sensitive cases. For example,
following the July unrest in the XUAR, the Beijing Municipal
Judicial Bureau posted a note on its Web site urging justice
bureaus, the Beijing Municipal Lawyers Association, and law
firms in Beijing to "exercise caution" in representing cases
related to the riots. Similar measures were taken with
respect to Tibetan defendants. In some cases Beijing-based
rights lawyers were told they could not represent jailed
Tibetans. Local governments in the XUAR and Tibetan areas
imposed arbitrary rules that defendants could be represented
only by locally registered attorneys.
When
defendants were able to retain counsel in politically
sensitive cases, government officials sometimes prevented
effective representation of counsel. Officials deployed a
wide range of tactics to obstruct the work of lawyers
representing sensitive clients, including unlawful
detentions, disbarment, intimidation, refusal to allow a
case to be tried before a court, and physical abuse. For
example, in April Beijing lawyer Cheng Hai was attacked and
beaten while on his way to meet with a Falun Gong client in
Chengdu. According to Cheng, those responsible for the
attack were officials from the Jinyang General Management
Office, Wuhou District, Chengdu. In May police officers in
Chongqing arrested and beat lawyers Zhang Kai and Li Chunfu
when they interviewed the family of a Falun Gong
practitioner who allegedly died in police custody.
During
its yearly professional evaluation procedures for Beijing
attorneys, the Beijing Lawyers Association did not renew the
professional licenses of a number of human rights lawyers,
effectively barring them from practicing law, including Li
Heping, Cheng Hai, Jiang Tianyong, Li Xiongbing, Li Chunfu,
Wang Yajun, Tang Jitian, Yang Huimin, Xie Yanyi, Li Dunyong,
Wen Haibo, Liu Wei, Zhang Lihui, Peng Jian, Li Jinglin, Lan
Zhixue, Zhang Kai, and Liu Xiaoyuan. Two lawyers who
practiced outside of Beijing, Wei Liangyue and Yang Zaixin,
reported that authorities warned them that their licenses
were in jeopardy. Shanghai lawyers Zheng Enchong and Guo
Guoting lost their licenses in 2008 in a similar decision
and, as a result, were barred from practicing law.
According to the law, defense attorneys can be held
responsible if their client commits perjury, and prosecutors
and judges have wide discretion to decide what constitutes
perjury. In some sensitive cases, lawyers had no pretrial
access to their clients, and defendants and lawyers were not
allowed to speak during trials. In practice criminal
defendants often were not assigned an attorney until a case
was brought to court. Even in nonsensitive criminal trials,
only one in seven defendants reportedly had legal
representation.
The
mechanism that allows defendants to confront their accusers
was inadequate; the percentage of witnesses who came to
court in criminal cases was less than 10 percent and as low
as 1 percent in some courts. According to one expert, only 1
to 5 percent of trials involved witnesses. In most criminal
trials, prosecutors read witness statements, which neither
the defendants nor their lawyers had an opportunity to
question. Approximately 95 percent of witnesses in criminal
cases did not appear in court to testify, sometimes due to
hardship or fear of reprisals. Although the criminal
procedure law states that pretrial witness statements cannot
serve as the sole basis for conviction, officials relied
heavily on such statements to support their cases. Defense
attorneys had no authority to compel witnesses to testify or
to mandate discovery, although they could apply for access
to government-held evidence relevant to their case. In
practice pretrial access to information was minimal, and the
defense often lacked adequate opportunity to prepare for
trial.
Police
and prosecutorial officials often ignored the due process
provisions of the law, which led to particularly egregious
consequences in death penalty cases. By law there are at
least 68 capital offenses, including nonviolent financial
crimes such as counterfeiting currency, embezzlement, and
corruption.
In
2007 the SPC reassumed jurisdiction to conduct final review
of death penalty cases handed down for immediate execution
(but not death sentences handed down with a two-year
reprieve). In most cases the SPC does not have authority to
issue a new decision or declare a defendant innocent if it
discovers errors in the original judgment; it can only
approve or disapprove lower-court decisions. SPC spokesman
Ni Shouming stated that since reassuming the death penalty
review power in 2007, the SPC had rejected 15 percent of the
cases it reviewed due to unclear facts, insufficient
evidence, inappropriateness of the death sentence in some
cases, and inadequate trial procedures. The SPC remanded
these cases to lower courts for further proceedings,
although it did not provide underlying statistics or
figures. Because official statistics remained a state
secret, it was not possible to evaluate independently the
implementation and effects of the procedures.
Following the SPC's resumption of death penalty review
power, executions were not to be carried out on the date of
conviction, but only after final review by the SPC was
completed. The government continued to apply the death
penalty in a range of cases, including cases of economic
crimes. In April a Beijing court upheld the death sentence
of Yang Yanming, who was convicted of embezzlement. Yang was
executed on December 8. On August 7, Li Peiying, former
chairman of the Beijing Capital International Airport, was
executed for bribery. On December 29, British citizen Akmal
Shaikh was executed for drug-trafficking crimes.
The
foreign-based Dui Hua Foundation estimated that
approximately 5,000 persons were executed during the year.
Political Prisoners and Detainees
Government officials continued to deny holding any political
prisoners, asserting that authorities detained persons not
for their political or religious views but because they
violated the law; however, the authorities continued to
confine citizens for reasons related to politics and
religion. Tens of thousands of political prisoners remained
incarcerated, some in prisons and others in RTL camps or
administrative detention. The government did not grant
international humanitarian organizations access to political
prisoners.
Foreign NGOs estimated that several hundred persons remained
in prison for the crime of "counterrevolution," repealed in
1997, and thousands of others were serving sentences under
the state security law, which authorities stated covers
crimes similar to counterrevolution. Foreign governments
urged the government to review the cases of those charged
before 1997 with counterrevolution and to release those who
had been jailed for nonviolent offenses under provisions of
the criminal law, which were eliminated when the law was
revised. At year's end no systematic review had occurred.
The government maintained that prisoners serving sentences
for counterrevolution and endangering state security were
eligible on an equal basis for sentence reduction and
parole, but political prisoners benefited from early release
at lower rates than those enjoyed by other prisoners. Dozens
of persons were believed to remain in prison in connection
with their involvement in the 1989 Tiananmen prodemocracy
movement. International organizations estimated that at
least 10 and as many as 200 Tiananmen activists remained in
prison. The exact number was unknown because official
statistics have never been made public.
On
March 4, labor activist and lawyer Yuan Xianchen was found
guilty of "inciting subversion of state power" and sentenced
to four years in prison and five years' deprivation of
political rights. Yuan was detained in May 2008 after
publishing an article in Beijing Spring, a New
York-based human rights journal. He was formally arrested in
June 2008.
Activist Huang Qi, a long-time campaigner for public
recognition of Tiananmen victims, was arrested in June 2008
for possessing state secrets. On August 5, Huang was tried
in Sichuan Province on charges of "illegal possession of
state secrets," and on November 24, he was sentenced to
three years' imprisonment. Also in August activist Tan
Zuoren went on trial for defaming the CCP, a charge
allegedly linked to his work on social issues perceived by
the government as sensitive. At year's end no verdict had
been issued in his case.
Zhou
Yongjun, a former Tiananmen Square student leader and
foreign resident, was detained in September 2008 in Hong
Kong while attempting to enter the country on a forged
Malaysian passport in order to visit his ailing father.
Although cleared by Hong Kong authorities of involvement in
bank fraud, he was transferred to mainland authorities,
detained in Shenzhen, and transferred to his hometown in
Sichuan Province on the same financial charges. Zhou's trial
was held November 19, and at year's end the case was
awaiting a verdict.
Many
political prisoners remained in prison or under other forms
of detention at year's end, including rights activists Hu
Jia and Wang Bingzhang; Alim and Ablikim Abdureyim, sons of
Uighur activist Rebiya Kadeer; journalist Shi Tao; dissident
Wang Xiaoning; lawyer and activist Yang Maodong (also known
as Guo Feixiong); land-rights activist Yang Chunlin;
Internet writer Xu Wei; labor activists Hu Mingjun, Huang
Xiangwei, Kong Youping, Ning Xianhua, Li Jianfeng, Li Xintao,
Lin Shun'an, Li Wangyang, and She Wanbao; CDP cofounder Qin
Yongmin; family-planning whistleblower Chen Guangcheng;
Catholic bishop Su Zhimin; Christian activist Zhang
Rongliang; Inner Mongolian activist Hada; Uighur activist
Dilkex Tilivaldi; and Tibetan Tenzin Deleg.
Political prisoners obtained parole and sentence reduction
much less frequently than ordinary prisoners. In January
labor activist Yue Tianxiang was released from prison; he
was convicted and sentenced to 10 years in 1999. On February
10, Uighur Tohti Tunyaz was released from prison after
serving 11 years. Internet writer Yang Zili and labor
activist Yao Fuxin were released from prison in March; both
served their full sentences. On March 16, labor activist Yao
Fuxin was released after serving his seven-year prison term
on a conviction of "subversion of state power." According to
Human Rights in China, at year's end Yao was under three
years of deprivation of political rights, including the
freedoms of speech, assembly, and association. On April 22,
Tibetan Jigme Gyatso was released from detention.
Criminal punishments continued to include "deprivation of
political rights" for a fixed period after release from
prison, during which time the individual is denied rights of
free speech and association. Former prisoners sometimes
found their status in society, ability to find employment,
freedom to travel, and access to residence permits and
social services severely restricted. Former political
prisoners and their families frequently were subjected to
police surveillance, telephone wiretaps, searches, and other
forms of harassment, and some encountered difficulty
obtaining or keeping employment, education, and housing.
Civil
Judicial Procedures and Remedies
Courts deciding civil matters suffered from internal and
external limitations on judicial independence. The State
Compensation Law provides administrative and judicial
remedies for deprivations of criminal rights, such as
wrongful arrest or conviction, extortion of confession by
torture, or unlawful use of force resulting in bodily
injury. In civil matters prevailing parties often found it
difficult to enforce court orders, and resistance to the
enforcement sometimes extended to forcible resistance to
court police.
f.
Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or
Correspondence
The
law states that the "freedom and privacy of correspondence
of citizens are protected by law"; however, in practice
authorities often did not respect the privacy of citizens.
Although the law requires warrants before law enforcement
officials can search premises, this provision frequently was
ignored; moreover, the Public Security Bureau (PSB) and
prosecutors can issue search warrants on their own authority
without judicial consent, review, or consideration. Cases of
forced entry by police officers continued to be reported.
Authorities monitored telephone conversations, fax
transmissions, e-mail, text messaging, and Internet
communications. Authorities also opened and censored
domestic and international mail. Security services routinely
monitored and entered residences and offices to gain access
to computers, telephones, and fax machines. All major hotels
had a sizable internal security presence, and hotel
guestrooms sometimes had concealed listening devices and
were searched for sensitive or proprietary materials.
Some
citizens were under heavy surveillance and routinely had
their telephone calls monitored or telephone service
disrupted, particularly in the XUAR and Tibetan areas. The
authorities frequently warned dissidents and activists,
underground religious figures, former political prisoners,
and others whom the government considered to be
troublemakers not to meet with foreign journalists or
diplomats, especially before sensitive anniversaries, at the
time of important government or party meetings, and during
the visits of high-level foreign officials. Security
personnel also harassed and detained the family members of
political prisoners, including following them to meetings
with foreign reporters and diplomats and urging them to
remain silent about the cases of their relatives.
Family
members of activists, dissidents, Falun Gong practitioners,
journalists, unregistered religious figures, and former
political prisoners were targeted for arbitrary arrest,
detention, and harassment (see section 1.d.).
Forced
relocation because of urban development continued and in
some locations increased during the year. Protests over
relocation terms or compensation were common, and some
protest leaders were prosecuted. In rural areas relocation
for infrastructure and commercial development projects
resulted in the forced relocation of millions of persons.
The
law prohibits the use of physical coercion to compel persons
to submit to abortion or sterilization. However, intense
pressure to meet birth limitation targets set by government
regulations resulted in instances of local birth-planning
officials using physical coercion to meet government goals.
Such practices required the use of birth-control methods
(particularly intrauterine devices and female sterilization,
which according to government statistics accounted for more
than 80 percent of birth-control methods employed) and the
abortion of certain pregnancies.
In
February, according to international media reports, three
women who were acting as surrogate mothers were reportedly
forced to undergo abortions in a hospital in Guangzhou.
In the
case of families that already had two children, one parent
was often pressured to undergo sterilization. The penalties
sometimes left women with little practical choice but to
undergo abortion or sterilization.
Laws
and regulations forbid the termination of pregnancies based
on the sex of the fetus, but because of the intersection of
birth limitations with the traditional preference for male
children, particularly in rural areas, many families used
ultrasound technology to identify female fetuses and
terminate these pregnancies. National Population and
Family-planning Commission regulations ban nonmedically
necessary determinations of the sex of the fetus and
sex-selective abortions, but some experts believed that the
penalties for violating the regulations were not severe
enough to deter unlawful behavior. According to government
estimates released in February 2008, the male-female sex
ratio at birth was 120 to 100 at the end of 2007 (compared
with norms elsewhere of between 103 and 107 to 100).
Several provinces--Anhui, Hebei, Heilongjiang, Hubei, Hunan,
Jilin, Liaoning, and Ningxia--require "termination of
pregnancy" if the pregnancy violates provincial
family-planning regulations. An additional 10
provinces--Fujian, Guizhou, Guangdong, Gansu, Jiangxi,
Qinghai, Sichuan, Shanxi, Shaanxi, and Yunnan--require
unspecified "remedial measures" to deal with unauthorized
pregnancies.
In
July the Shanghai Population and Family-planning Commission
announced plans to encourage couples to have a second child
if both parents grew up as "only children."
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a.
Freedom of Speech and Press
The
law provides for freedom of speech and of the press,
although the government generally did not respect these
rights in practice. The government interpreted the CCP's
"leading role," as mandated in the constitution, as
superseding and circumscribing these rights. The government
continued to control print, broadcast, and electronic media
tightly and used them to propagate government views and CCP
ideology. During the year the government increased
censorship and manipulation of the press and the Internet
during sensitive anniversaries.
Foreign journalists were largely prevented from obtaining
permits to travel to Tibet except for highly controlled
press visits. While foreign journalists were allowed access
to Urumqi during and after the July riots, authorities
forced foreign journalists to leave other cities in the XUAR.
Media
outlets received regular guidance from the Central
Propaganda Department (CPC), which listed topics that should
not be covered, including politically sensitive topics.
After events such as the July riots or the Sichuan
earthquake, media outlets were told to cover the stories
using content carried by government-controlled Xinhua and
China Central Television. In the period preceding the
October celebration of the 60th anniversary of the founding
of the PRC, authorities mandated that newspapers, magazines,
and other news outlets minimize the reporting of negative
stories.
The
General Administration of Press and Publication; the State
Administration of Radio, Film, and Television, and the CPC
remained active in issuing restrictive regulations and
decisions constraining the content of broadcast media.
As
long as the speaker did not publish views that challenged
the CCP or disseminate such views to overseas audiences, the
range of permissible topics for private speech continued to
expand. Political topics could be discussed privately and in
small groups without punishment, and criticisms of the
government were common topics of daily speech. However,
public speeches, academic discussions, and speeches at
meetings or in public forums covered by the media remained
circumscribed, as did speeches pertaining to sensitive
social topics. On May 10, 19 scholars held an unauthorized
academic conference in Beijing to discuss the 1989 Tiananmen
crackdown. Some participants later received warnings from
their employers to cease their participation in such events.
Authorities also frequently intervened to halt public
speeches and lectures on sensitive political topics.
In
March police detained Zhang Shijun, a former soldier who
publicly expressed regret over his involvement in the
Tiananmen uprising, for publishing an open letter to
President Hu Jintao urging the CCP to reconsider its
condemnation of the 1989 demonstrations. At year's end his
whereabouts remained unknown.
In
March and May, police interrogated and searched the home of
Jiang Qisheng, Chinese PEN center vice president, author of
a widely cited report on the Tiananmen uprising and an
original signer of Charter 08.
The
government also frequently monitored gatherings of
intellectuals, scholars, and dissidents where political or
sensitive issues were discussed. Those who aired views that
disagreed with the government's position on controversial
topics or disseminated such views to domestic and overseas
audiences risked punishment ranging from disciplinary action
at government work units to police interrogation and
detention. In December 2008, to commemorate human rights
day, a group of 303 intellectuals and activists released a
petition entitled Charter 08, calling for human rights and
democracy. Within one month more than 7,300 persons signed
the petition, of whom police questioned at least 100. Many
Charter 08 signers reported experiencing harassment during
the year, especially around the time of sensitive
anniversaries, trials, or official visits.
The
CPC continued to list subjects that were off limits to the
domestic media, and the government maintained authority to
approve all programming. Nearly all print media, broadcast
media, and book publishers were owned by, or affiliated
with, the CCP or a government agency. There were a small
number of privately owned print publications but no
privately owned television or radio stations.
International media were not allowed to operate freely and
faced heavy restrictions. In February two New York Times
reporters were detained for 20 hours after police stopped
their car in a Tibetan area of Gansu Province. Authorities
made the two spend the night in Lanzhou, the provincial
capital, and eventually forced them to return to Beijing. In
April reporters with the Voice of America (VOA) were
detained for two hours in Sichuan Province before being told
that they could not proceed farther. Local authorities first
told them that it was illegal for tourists to visit the area
and later told them they could not proceed because of
"hazardous road conditions."
In May
a Financial Times correspondent reporting in Mianzhu
on families who lost children during the Sichuan earthquake
was followed to an interview and attacked by unknown
assailants who tried to take his camera. When police
arrived, they also tried to take his video camera by force.
Also in May on three separate occasions, foreign reporters
were attacked while filming in Sichuan.
Authorities barred foreign journalists from filming in, or
entering, Tiananmen Square during the 20th anniversary of
the crackdown on prodemocracy demonstrations. On July 10,
police detained and deported an Associated Press
photographer for taking pictures in Kashgar. In September
police broke into the hotel room of three journalists from
Kyodo News covering a National Day parade rehearsal,
beat them, and destroyed their computers. On September 4,
antiriot police beat three Hong Kong reporters in Urumqi.
Five other Hong Kong reporters were briefly detained the
same day in Urumqi to prevent them from filming protests.
In
July the Foreign Correspondent's Club of China (FCCC) polled
its members about reporting conditions following the 2008
Olympics. FCCC members reported 23 incidents of violence
against reporters, sources, or assistants, along with
multiple incidents of destruction of photographs or
reporting materials, intimidation, and summoning for
questioning by authorities. They also reported 100 incidents
of being denied access to public spaces by authorities.
The
government refused to grant a visa to a foreign journalist
who was planning to serve as the newspapers' new bureau
chief in Beijing.
Authorities tightened restrictions on citizens working as
assistants for foreign news bureaus. In February the
government issued a code of conduct for news assistants of
foreign correspondents. The code threatens dismissal and
loss of accreditation if news assistants engage in
"independent reporting" and instructs them to provide their
employers with information that projects a good image of the
country. The FCCC denounced the code of conduct as part of a
government effort to intimidate news assistants.
Officials can be punished for unauthorized contact with
journalists. Editors and journalists continued to practice
self-censorship as the primary means for the party to limit
freedom of the press on a day-to-day basis. Official
guidance on permitted speech was often vague, subject to
change at the whim of propaganda officials, and
retroactively enforced. Propaganda authorities can force
newspapers to fire editors and journalists who print
articles that conflict with official views and can suspend
or close publications. The system of postpublication
punishment encourages editors to take a conservative
approach, since a publication could face enormous business
losses if it were suspended for inadvertently printing
forbidden content.
Government officials used criminal prosecution, civil
lawsuits, and other punishments, including violence,
detention, and other forms of harassment, to intimidate
authors and domestic journalists and block controversial
writings. In June police arrested writer, former Tiananmen
prisoner, and dissident Wu Gaoxing for publishing a letter
asserting that former Tiananmen prisoners were facing
economic hardships because of their past political troubles.
A
domestic journalist can face demotion or job loss for
publishing views that challenge the government.
Journalists who remained in prison included Lu Gengsong, Lu
Jianhua, Huang Jinqiu, Cheng Yizhong, and Shi Tao. On
February 10, Yu Huafeng was released from prison.
Journalists and editors who exposed corruption scandals
frequently faced problems with the authorities. In May
officials in Hubei physically assaulted two reporters, Kong
Pu from the Beijing Times and Wei Yi from the
Nangfang People's Weekly, as they researched a story of
a waitress who killed a party official when he attempted to
assault her.
According to an official report, during the year authorities
confiscated more than 65 million copies of pornographic,
pirated, and unauthorized publications. Officials continued
to censor, ban, and sanction reporting on labor, health,
environmental crises, and industrial accidents. Authorities
restricted reporting on stories such as the melamine milk
scandal, schools destroyed during the Sichuan earthquake,
and the July riots in Urumqi. Authorities also continued to
ban books with content they deemed controversial.
The
law permits only government-approved publishing houses to
print books. The State Press and Publications Administration
(PPA) controlled all licenses to publish. No newspaper,
periodical, book, audio, video, or electronic publication
may be printed or distributed without the PPA and relevant
provincial publishing authorities' approval of both the
printer and distributor. Individuals who attempted to
publish without government approval faced imprisonment,
fines, confiscation of their books, and other sanctions. The
CCP exerted control over the publishing industry by
preemptively classifying certain topics as off limits.
Many
intellectuals and scholars exercised self-censorship,
anticipating that books or papers on political topics would
be deemed too sensitive to be published. The censorship
process for private and government media also increasingly
relied on self-censorship and, in a few cases,
postpublication sanctions.
According to the PEN American Center, Korash Huseyin, former
editor of the Uighur-language Kashgar Literature Journal,
was released in 2008, but his whereabouts were unknown.
Korash Huseyin, who was sentenced in 2004 to three years in
prison for publishing a short story that authorities
considered critical of CCP rule of Xinjiang, remained in
prison serving a 10-year sentence.
The
authorities continued to jam, with varying degrees of
success, Chinese-, Uighur-, and Tibetan-language broadcasts
of the VOA, BBC, and RFA. English-language broadcasts on VOA
generally were not jammed. Government jamming of RFA and BBC
appeared to be more frequent and effective. Internet
distribution of streaming radio news and podcasts from these
sources often was blocked. Despite jamming overseas
broadcasts, VOA, BBC, RFA, Deutsche Welle, and Radio France
International had large audiences, including human rights
advocates, ordinary citizens, and government officials.
Television broadcasts of foreign news, which were largely
restricted to hotels and foreign residence compounds, were
occasionally subject to censorship. Such censorship of
foreign broadcasts also occurred around the anniversary of
the 1989 crackdown in Tiananmen Square. Individual issues of
foreign newspapers and magazines were occasionally banned
when they contained articles deemed too sensitive.
Politically sensitive coverage in Chinese, and to a lesser
extent in English, was censored more than coverage in other
languages. The government prohibited some foreign and
domestic films deemed too sensitive.
Internet Freedom
During
the year the China Internet Network Information Center
reported that the number of Internet users increased to 338
million, 94 percent of whom had broadband access. The
government increased its efforts to monitor Internet use,
control content, restrict information, block access to
foreign and domestic Web sites, encourage self-censorship,
and punish those who violated regulations, but these
measures were not universally effective.
The
MPS, which monitors the Internet under guidance from the
CPC, employed thousands of persons at the national,
provincial, and local levels to monitor electronic
communications. Xinhua News Agency reported that in 2008,
authorities closed 14,000 illegal Web sites and deleted more
than 490,000 items of "harmful" content from the Internet.
In January the government began an "antivulgarity" campaign
aimed at cracking down on "unhealthy information" on the
Internet. In January official media claimed that the
campaign had resulted in the closure of 1,250 Web sites and
the deletion of more than 3.2 million items of information.
Many Web sites included images of cartoon police officers
that warn users to stay away from forbidden content.
Operators of Web portals, blog-hosting services, and other
content providers engaged in self-censorship to ensure their
servers were free from politically sensitive content.
Domestic Web sites that refused to self-censor political
content were shut down, and many foreign Web sites were
blocked.
During
the year major news portals, which reportedly were complying
with secret government orders, began requiring users to
register using their real names and identification numbers
to comment on news articles. Individuals using the Internet
in public libraries were required to register using their
national identity card. Internet usage reportedly was
monitored at all terminals in public libraries. Internet
cafes were required to install software that allows
government officials to monitor customers' Internet usage.
Internet users at cafes were often subject to surveillance.
Many cafes sporadically enforced regulations requiring
patrons to provide identification. In June the Ministry of
Industry and Information Technology issued a directive
instructing Internet cafes and schools to install "Green
Dam" software designed to censor objectionable Internet
content based on an updatable central database. The software
had been intended for installation in all computers sold in
the country; however, objections from industry groups,
Internet users, and foreign governments appeared to
contribute to the indefinite postponement of enforcement of
the directive.
The
government consistently blocked access to Web sites it
deemed controversial, especially those discussing Taiwan and
Tibetan independence, underground religious and spiritual
organizations, democracy activists, and the 1989 Tiananmen
crackdown. The government also at times blocked access to
selected sites operated by major foreign news outlets,
health organizations, foreign governments, educational
institutions, and social networking sites, as well as search
engines, that allow rapid communication or organization of
users.
During
the year, particularly during periods around sensitive
events, authorities maintained tight control over Internet
news and information. Access to foreign and domestic social
networking sites was limited around the 20th anniversary of
the Tiananmen crackdown and immediately following the July
unrest in the XUAR, and many sites remained blocked during
other major events. In the wake of the deadly July riots in
Urumqi, the government asserted that information spread on
the Internet contributed to the violence, resulting in the
complete shutdown of all Internet access, text messaging,
and international telephone calls from the region. At the
end of the year, international calls, full Internet access,
and text messaging capabilities remained limited.
Authorities employed an array of technical measures to block
sensitive Web sites based in foreign countries. The ability
of users to access such sensitive sites varied from city to
city. The government also automatically censored e-mail and
Web chats based on an ever-changing list of sensitive key
words, such as "Falun Gong" and "Tibetan independence."
While such censorship was effective in keeping casual users
away from sensitive content, it was defeated easily through
the use of various technologies. Software for defeating
official censorship was readily available inside the
country. Despite official monitoring and censorship, during
the year dissidents and political activists continued to use
the Internet to advocate and call attention to political
causes such as prisoner advocacy, political reform, ethnic
discrimination, corruption, and foreign policy concerns. Web
users spanning the political spectrum complained of
censorship. The blogs of a number of prominent activists,
artists, scholars, and university professors were
periodically blocked during the year.
Given
the limitations of technical censorship, self-censorship by
Internet companies remained the primary means for
authorities to restrict speech online. All Web sites are
required to be licensed by, or registered with, the Ministry
of Industry and Information Technology, and all Internet
content providers faced potential suspension of their
licenses for failing to adequately monitor users of e-mail,
chat rooms, and instant messaging services. The Internet
Society of China, a group composed of private and state-run
Internet companies, government offices, and academic
institutions, cosponsored a Web site, China Internet Illegal
Information Reporting Centre, which invited members of the
public to report illegal online activity. Users were able to
use the site to report not only crimes such as pornography,
fraud, and gambling but also "attacks on the party and
government." Self-censorship by blog-hosting services
intensified prior to sensitive events.
Authorities continued to jail numerous Internet writers for
peaceful expression of political views. In July Wu Baoquan
was sentenced to 18 months in prison for posting articles
critical of the local government of the northern region of
Inner Mongolia. In September the court convicted Wu of libel
for publicizing the efforts of farmers who fought local
officials over land rights.
Also
in July three bloggers--Fan Yanqiong, Wu Huaying, and You
Jingyou--were charged with "false allegations with intent to
harm" for reporting that a young woman was raped and killed
by a group of men that included local officials.
On
November 12, authorities sentenced Kunchok Tsephel, literary
Web site editor and founder of Chodme (tibetcm.com), to 15
years in prison on a charge of "divulging state secrets" in
connection with some of the Web site's content. On November
14, a court in Gansu Province sentenced Kunga Tseyang to
five years in prison. Police arrested Tseyang (pen name Snow
Sun) on March 17 for articles he posted on a Tibetan Web
site.
In
November 2008 Chen Daojun, an Internet writer and
environmental activist, was sentenced to three years in
prison for "inciting subversion of state power." Chen was
arrested after he participated in an environmental protest
and posted articles online supportive of Tibetan
demonstrators. According to Chen's lawyer, three of his
articles were submitted as evidence that he had attacked the
CCP.
In
January blogger Jia Xiaoyin was released from prison after
six months in detention. On April 18, authorities released
Internet writer Zhu Yufu from prison. In August blogger Guo
Baofeng, known online as Amoiist, was released from prison
after his announcement of his own arrest on the social
networking site Twitter sparked a letter-writing campaign
calling for his release.
According to Reporters Without Borders, at year's end there
were 30 reporters and 68 cyberdissidents in prison.
Regulations prohibit a broad range of activities that
authorities interpret as subversive or slanderous to the
state. Internet service providers were instructed to use
only domestic media-news postings, to record information
useful for tracking users and their viewing habits, to
install software capable of copying e-mails, and to end
immediately transmission of "subversive material."
Academic Freedom and Cultural Events
The
government continued its restrictions on academic or
artistic freedom and political and social discourse at
colleges, universities, and research institutes.
Authorities canceled university conferences and speaking
events involving foreign and domestic academics on short
notice when they deemed the topics too sensitive or the
timing too close to a sensitive date. Information outreach,
educational exchanges, and other cultural and public
diplomacy programs organized by foreign governments
occasionally were subject to government interference.
Foreign experts invited to participate in
foreign-government-sponsored programs on certain topics were
denied visas. Central or provincial authorities disciplined
university administrators for showing the film Please
Vote for Me by Chen Weijun in May, a film on student
elections in a third-grade class in Wuhan.
In
September the government denied visa applications from two
foreign filmmakers, preventing them from participating in
panels and attending the screening of their documentary
about the Sichuan earthquake at the Beijing Independent Film
Festival. Festival organizers invited the pair as headliners
for the festival but delayed publication of the exact
location of the screening until only hours before the event
in an effort to minimize the possibility of interference
from security officials.
During
the year the government imposed new restrictions on cultural
expression and banned artists it deemed controversial. The
government continued to use political attitudes and
affiliations as criteria for selecting persons for the few
government-sponsored study-abroad programs but did not
impose such restrictions on privately sponsored students.
The government and the party controlled the appointment of
high-level officials at universities. While party membership
was not always a requirement to obtain a tenured faculty
position, scholars without party affiliation often had fewer
chances for promotion.
Researchers residing abroad were subject to sanctions,
including denial of visas, when their work did not meet with
official approval.
b.
Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
Freedom of Assembly
The
law provides for freedom of peaceful assembly; however, the
government severely restricted this right in practice. The
law stipulates that such activities may not challenge "party
leadership" or infringe upon the "interests of the state."
Protests against the political system or national leaders
were prohibited. Authorities denied permits and quickly
suppressed demonstrations involving expression of dissenting
political views.
In May
parents of Sichuan earthquake victims were told not to
gather at the sites of destroyed schools for a memorial
service. Those who planned to mark the anniversary of the
earthquake were reportedly detained or threatened with
detention. In June authorities prevented several Tiananmen
mothers, including Ding Zilin, from joining memorial
services or otherwise marking the date when their children
died; plainclothes officers reportedly followed Ding and her
husband to ensure compliance. In September there were
several reports of parents being detained or otherwise
prevented from gathering to commemorate the anniversary of
the melamine milk scandal.
All
concerts, sports events, exercise classes, or other meetings
of more than 200 persons require approval from public
security authorities. Although peaceful protests are legal,
in practice police rarely granted approval. Despite
restrictions, there were many demonstrations, but those with
political or social themes were broken up quickly, sometimes
with excessive force. The number of "mass incidents" or
violent protests against local government increased during
the year. As in past years, the vast majority of
demonstrations concerned land disputes; housing issues;
industrial, environmental, and labor matters; government
corruption; taxation; and other economic and social
concerns. Others were provoked by accidents or related to
personal petition, administrative litigation, and other
legal processes.
The
ability of an individual to petition the government is
protected by law; however, persons petitioning the
government continued to face restrictions on their rights to
assemble and raise grievances. Most petitions addressed
grievances about land, housing, entitlements, the
environment, or corruption. Most petitioners sought to
present their complaints at national and provincial "letters
and visits" offices. In September three dozen parents
reportedly gathered in Beijing to draw attention to their
belief that unsafe vaccines sickened their children. Local
officials forcibly returned them to their hometowns.
Although regulations banned retaliation against petitioners,
reports of retaliation continued. This was partly due to
incentives provided to local officials by the central
government to prevent petitioners in their regions from
raising complaints to higher levels. Incentives included
provincial cadre evaluations based in part on the number of
petitions from their provinces. This initiative aimed to
encourage local and provincial officials to resolve
legitimate complaints but also resulted in local officials
sending security personnel to Beijing and forcibly returning
the petitioners to their home provinces. Such detentions
occurred before and after the enactment of the new
regulations and often went unrecorded. In August the General
Office of the State Council issued new guidelines for
handling petitioners. According to the new rules, officials
are to be sent from Beijing to the provinces to resolve
petition issues locally, thereby reducing the number of
petitioners entering Beijing. Other new rules include a
mandated 60-day response time for petitions and a regulation
instituting a single appeal in each case.
Freedom of Association
The law provides for freedom of association, but the
government restricted this right in practice. CCP policy and
government regulations require that all professional,
social, and economic organizations officially register with,
and be approved by, the government. In practice these
regulations prevented the formation of truly autonomous
political, human rights, religious, spiritual, labor, and
other organizations that might challenge government
authority.
The government maintained tight controls over civil society
organizations. Legal and surveillance efforts aimed at
controlling them increased. There were reports that the
government maintained a task force aimed at blocking
political change advocated by NGOs involved in social,
political, and charitable activities, and also by groups
dedicated to combating discrimination against women, persons
with disabilities, and minorities.
To
register, an NGO must find a government agency to serve as
its organizational sponsor, have a registered office, and
hold a minimum amount of funds. Some organizations with
social or educational purposes that previously had been
registered as private or for-profit businesses reportedly
were requested to find a government sponsor and reregister
as NGOs during the year. Although registered organizations
all came under some degree of government control, some NGOs
were able to operate with some degree of independence.
The
number of NGOs continued to grow, despite tight restrictions
and regulations. According to the World Bank, at year's end
there were more than 415,000 officially registered civil
society organizations. NGOs existed under a variety of
formal and informal guises, including national mass
organizations created and funded by the CCP.
The
lack of legal registration created numerous logistical
challenges for NGOs, including difficulty opening bank
accounts, hiring workers, and renting office space. NGOs
that opted not to partner with government agencies could
register as commercial consulting companies, which allowed
them to obtain legal recognition at the cost of forgoing
tax-free status. Security authorities routinely warned
domestic NGOs, regardless of their registration status, not
to accept donations from the National Endowment for
Democracy and other international organizations deemed
sensitive by the government. Authorities supported the
growth of some NGOs that focused on social problems, such as
poverty alleviation and disaster relief but remained
concerned that these organizations might emerge as a source
of political opposition. Many NGOs working in the Tibet
Autonomous Region (TAR) were forced to leave because their
project agreements were not renewed by their local partners
following unrest in Lhasa and other Tibetan communities in
March 2008.
On
July 29, officials arrested Xu Zhiyong, cofounder of the
Open Constitution Initiative (OCI, or Gongmeng), a civil
society organization and legal research center, on
accusations of tax evasion. Media reports suggested he was
arrested because of his legal work on behalf of families
affected by the melamine-tainted milk scandal. Officials
also raided the OCI's offices, seized equipment, and ordered
the OCI to close. On August 23, after a public outcry, Xu
and an OCI office assistant were released from jail on bail.
No
laws or regulations specifically govern the formation of
political parties. However, the CDP remained banned, and the
government continued to monitor, detain, and imprison
current and former CDP members.
c.
Freedom of Religion
The
constitution and laws provide for freedom of religious
belief and the freedom not to believe. The constitution
limits protection of religious activities to those the
government defined as "normal." The constitution states that
religious bodies and affairs are not to be "subject to any
foreign domination" and that the individual exercise of
rights "may not infringe upon the interests of the state."
The
government continued to strictly control religious practice
and repress religious activity outside government-sanctioned
organizations and registered places of worship. The
government controlled the growth and scope of the activity
of both registered and unregistered religious groups,
including house churches. Government authorities limited
proselytizing, particularly by foreigners and unregistered
religious groups, but permitted proselytizing in
state-approved religious venues and private settings.
Throughout the country foreign citizens' participation in
religious activities was viewed by the government as highly
suspect and, in some cases, led to repercussions against
both Chinese citizens and foreign citizens.
Religious groups are regulated by the 2005 Regulations on
Religious Affairs, which indicate that the State
Administration for Religious Affairs (SARA) or the religious
affairs bureaus (RABs) supervise all religious activities.
To be considered legal, religious groups must register with
a government-affiliated patriotic religious association
(PRA) associated with one of the five recognized religions:
Buddhism, Taoism, Islam, Protestantism, and Catholicism.
Religious groups must register according to the Regulations
on Social Organizations (RSO), which specifies that
organizations must find a supervisory unit to sponsor their
application. Religious groups that register under the RSO
need to obtain the sponsorship of SARA or the RABs. The PRAs
supervised activities of each religious group and liaised
with government religious affairs authorities charged with
monitoring religious activity. Government efforts to control
and regulate religious groups, particularly unregistered
groups, continued. Nonetheless, freedom to participate in
religious activities continued to increase in many areas.
Religious participation grew not only among the five main
religions but also among the Eastern Orthodox Church and
folk religions. Because the RSO states no organization may
be registered in the same area if another organization is
already performing similar work, no religious groups other
than the five PRAs have registered at the national level.
Unregistered groups reported that local RABs also would not
approve registration applications without support from the
relevant PRA.
Several large house churches reported increased government
interference with their activities in periods preceding
sensitive anniversaries. In Beijing the government
reportedly pressured landlords to stop renting space to
house church groups. During an outdoor worship service,
authorities reportedly conducted surveillance, used
loudspeakers to warn against unauthorized public gatherings,
detained church leaders to prevent them from attending
services, and closed public parks to dissuade the groups
from gathering.
In
September in Shanxi Province, members of the Linfen house
church and police were involved in a confrontation over the
demolition of a church building. Five church leaders were
charged with "disrupting public order" and sentenced to
between two and three years of RTL.
On
March 5, Premier Wen Jiabao delivered a government report
stating, "We will fully implement the party's basic
principles on work related to religions and enable religious
figures and people with religious belief to play a positive
role in promoting economic and social development." The work
of faith-based organizations became more visible during and
after the Sichuan earthquake of May 2008. Nevertheless,
leaders of such organizations reported that, due to the
continued lack of official registration, they were not
allowed to fundraise publicly, hire employees, or open bank
accounts.
The
government's repression of religious freedom continued in
Tibetan areas and intensified in the XUAR. Followers of
Tibetan Buddhism, including those in the Inner Mongolian
Autonomous Region and most Tibetan autonomous areas, faced
more restrictions on their religious practice and ability to
organize than Buddhists in other parts of the country.
However, Buddhist communities outside of Tibet also faced
continued government controls, and unregistered Buddhist
temples remained subject to closure or demolition. The
Tibetan Buddhist Labrang Monastery, in Gansu Province, was
closed to foreign visitors for several months following 2008
unrest in and around the monastery. A heavy security
presence remained in this and other Tibetan Buddhist
monastery areas.
In the
XUAR the government often conflated peaceful religious and
political expression with the "three evils" of religious
extremism, terrorism, and separatism. Government policies
that repressed religious activities included surveillance in
mosques, regulation of sermons, and public admonishments
against and punishment of individuals engaging in "illegal
religious activities."
In
August 2008 authorities in Kashgar reportedly issued
accountability measures to local officials who were
responsible for high-level surveillance of religious
activity in the XUAR. Also in August 2008 in Kashgar
District, authorities called for "enhancing management" of
groups that included religious figures, as part of broader
measures of "prevention" and "attack." On December 29, the
official XUAR government Web site announced that a new law
on "education for ethnic unity in Xinjiang" had been adopted
at a local legislature session. The law reportedly bars
individuals and organizations from spreading opinions deemed
not conducive to national unity and also from gathering,
producing, and spreading information to that effect.
XUAR
authorities maintained the most severe legal restrictions in
the country on children's right to practice religion.
Authorities continued to prohibit the teaching of Islam
outside the home to elementary- and middle-school-age
children in some areas, and children under the age of 18
were prohibited from entering mosques in some areas.
Authorities reserved the right to censor imams' sermons, and
imams were urged to emphasize the damage caused to Islam by
terrorist acts in the name of the religion. Certain Muslim
leaders received particularly harsh treatment. Authorities
in some areas conducted monthly political study sessions for
religious personnel, which, according to one CCP official
who took part in a study session, called for "creatively
interpreting and improving" religious doctrine. Authorities
also reportedly tried to restrict Muslims' opportunities to
study religion overseas. The China Islamic Conference
required religious personnel to study "new collected
sermons" compiled by the Muslim PRA, the Islamic Association
of China, including messages on patriotism and unity aimed
at building a "socialist harmonious society." In contrast to
the heavy-handed approach to Muslims in the XUAR, officials
in Ningxia, Gansu, Qinghai, and Yunnan provinces generally
did not interfere heavily in Muslims' activities.
On
October 27, a Xinjiang court sentenced Uighur Christian
house church leader Alimujiang Yimiti to 15 years in prison
on charges of "divulging state secrets." Yimiti was
originally accused of engaging in illegal religious
activities in the name of business and preaching
Christianity to ethnic Uighurs, according to an overseas
NGO. At year's end his case was on appeal. In 2008 the
Kashgar District Intermediate People's Court tried Yimiti on
the charge of endangering national security but eventually
returned his case to prosecutors due to insufficient
evidence. The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
declared Yimiti's arrest and detention arbitrary in 2008.
Harassment of unregistered Catholic bishops, priests, and
laypersons continued, including government surveillance and
detentions. On March 31, Bishop Jia Zhiguo was arrested
again. At year's end his whereabouts were unknown. There was
no new information about unregistered Bishop Su Zhimin, who
remained unaccounted for since his reported detention in
1997.
The
Catholic Patriotic Association (CPA) did not recognize the
authority of the Holy See to appoint bishops. However, it
allowed the Vatican's discreet input in selecting some
bishops.
The
distinction between the official Catholic Church, which the
government controlled politically, and the unregistered
Catholic Church was less distinct than in the past. In some
official Catholic churches, clerics led prayers for the
pope, and pictures of the pope were displayed. An estimated
90 percent of official Catholic bishops have reconciled with
the Vatican. Likewise, the large majority of Catholic
bishops appointed by the government have received official
approval from the Vatican through "apostolic mandates."
Authorities continued a general crackdown on groups
considered to be "cults." These "cults" included not only
Falun Gong and various traditional Chinese meditation and
exercise groups (known collectively as "qigong" groups) but
also religious groups that authorities accused of preaching
beliefs outside the bounds of officially approved doctrine.
Public
Falun Gong activity in the country remained negligible, and
practitioners based abroad reported that the government's
crackdown against the group continued. In the past the mere
belief in the discipline (even without any public practice
of its tenets) sometimes was sufficient grounds for
practitioners to receive punishments ranging from loss of
employment to imprisonment. Falun Gong sources estimated
that since 1999 at least 6,000 Falun Gong practitioners had
been sentenced to prison, more than 100,000 practitioners
had been sentenced to RTL, and almost 3,000 had died from
torture while in custody. Some foreign observers estimated
that Falun Gong adherents constituted at least half of the
250,000 officially recorded inmates in RTL camps, while
Falun Gong sources overseas placed the number even higher.
Falun
Gong members identified by the government as "core leaders"
were singled out for particularly harsh treatment. More than
a dozen Falun Gong members were sentenced to prison for the
crime of "endangering state security," but the great
majority of Falun Gong members convicted by the courts since
1999 were sentenced to prison for "organizing or using a
sect to undermine the implementation of the law," a less
serious offense. Most practitioners, however, were punished
administratively. Some practitioners were sentenced to RTL.
Others were sent to "legal education" centers specifically
established to "rehabilitate" practitioners who refused
voluntarily to recant their belief in public after their
release from RTL camps. Government officials denied the
existence of such "legal education" centers. In addition,
hundreds of Falun Gong practitioners were confined to mental
hospitals, according to overseas groups.
Police
continued to detain current and former Falun Gong
practitioners and used possession of Falun Gong material as
a pretext for arresting political activists. The government
continued its use of high-pressure tactics and mandatory
anti-Falun Gong study sessions to force practitioners to
renounce Falun Gong. Even practitioners who had not
protested or made other public demonstrations of belief
reportedly were forced to attend anti-Falun Gong classes or
were sent directly to RTL camps. These tactics reportedly
resulted in large numbers of practitioners signing pledges
to renounce the movement.
The
government supported atheism in schools. Authorities in many
regions barred school-age children from attending religious
services at mosques, temples, or churches and prevented them
from receiving religious education outside the home.
Official religious organizations administered local
religious schools, seminaries, and institutes to train
priests, ministers, imams, Islamic scholars, and Buddhist
monks. Students who attended these institutes had to
demonstrate "political reliability," and all graduates had
to pass an examination on their political, as well as
theological, knowledge to qualify for the clergy. The
government permitted registered religions to train clergy
and allowed an increasing number of Catholic and Protestant
seminarians, Muslim clerics, and Buddhist clergy to go
abroad for additional religious studies, but some religion
students had difficulty getting passports or obtaining
approval to study abroad. In most cases foreign
organizations provided funding for such training programs.
The
five PRAs published religious literature, and state-run
publishing houses published religious materials. However,
printing of the Bible was limited to Amity Press and to a
few presses affiliated with CPA dioceses that published the
Catholic Bible. Bibles produced through these means could be
purchased at Three-Self Patriotic Movement or CPA churches.
The government authorized publishers (other than Amity
Press) to publish at least a thousand other Christian
titles. Amity has published more than 50 million Bibles for
Chinese readership and distributed them through a network of
70 urban distribution points and a mobile distribution
network that traveled to rural areas. Increased demand for
Bibles and other Christian literature was noted by groups
that print, buy, and sell Bibles, and members of
unregistered churches reported that the supply and
distribution of Bibles was inadequate, particularly in rural
locations. Individuals could not order Bibles directly from
publishing houses. Customs officials continued to monitor
for the "smuggling" of religious materials into the country.
In recent years individuals were imprisoned for printing and
receiving unauthorized Bibles. Authorities in some areas
reportedly confiscated Bibles, Korans, and other religious
material. In June Shi Weihan was sentenced to three years in
prison for "illegal business practices" (printing Bibles).
The Xinjiang People's Publication House was the only
publisher officially permitted to print Muslim literature.
Societal Abuses and Discrimination
There
were no reports of societal abuses of religious
practitioners or anti-Semitic acts during the year. The
government does not recognize Judaism as an ethnicity or
religion.
For a more detailed discussion, see the 2009
International Religious Freedom Report at
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/.
d.
Freedom of Movement, Internally Displaced Persons,
Protection of Refugees, and Stateless Persons
The
law provides for freedom of movement within the country,
foreign travel, emigration, and repatriation; however, the
government generally did not respect these rights in
practice. The government sometimes cooperated with the UNHCR
in providing protection and assistance to refugees, asylum
seekers, and other persons of concern.
Authorities heightened restrictions on freedom of movement
periodically, particularly to curtail the movement of
individuals deemed politically sensitive before key
anniversaries and visits of foreign dignitaries and to
forestall demonstrations. Freedom of movement continued to
be extremely limited in the TAR and other Tibetan areas.
Police maintained checkpoints in most counties and on roads
leading into many towns, as well as within major cities such
as Lhasa.
Although the government maintained restrictions on the
freedom to change one's workplace or residence, the national
household registration system ("hukou") continued to change,
and the ability of most citizens to move within the country
to work and live continued to expand. Rural residents
continued to migrate to the cities, where the per capita
disposable income was more than four times the rural per
capita income, but many could not officially change their
residence or workplace within the country. Most cities had
annual quotas for the number of new temporary residence
permits that could be issued, and all workers, including
university graduates, had to compete for a limited number of
such permits. It was particularly difficult for rural
residents to obtain household registration in
more-economically developed urban areas.
The
household registration system added to the difficulties
rural residents faced even after they relocated to urban
areas and found employment. The National Bureau of
Statistics reported that there were 225 million migrant
workers at the end of 2008. These economic migrants lacked
official residence status in cities, and it was difficult
for them to gain full access to social services, including
education, despite laws, regulations, and programs meant to
address their needs. Migrant workers had little recourse
when subject to abuse by employers and officials. Some major
cities maintained programs to provide migrant workers and
their children access to public education and other social
services free of charge, but migrants in some locations
reported that it was difficult to qualify for these benefits
in practice.
Under
the "staying at prison employment" system applicable to
recidivists incarcerated in RTL camps, authorities denied
certain persons permission to return to their homes after
serving their sentences. Some released or paroled prisoners
returned home, but they were not permitted freedom of
movement.
The
government permitted legal emigration and foreign travel for
most citizens. There were reports that some academics and
activists continued to face travel restrictions around
sensitive anniversaries. Most citizens could obtain
passports, although those whom the government deemed
threats, including religious leaders, political dissidents,
and ethnic minorities, were refused passports or otherwise
prevented from traveling overseas. In July Tsering Woeser, a
well-known Tibetan writer, filed a lawsuit against the
government for denying her a passport for more than three
years. At year's end she had not received a passport. In
Tibetan regions of Qinghai, Gansu, and Sichuan provinces, in
addition to the TAR, ethnic Tibetans experienced great
difficult applying for passports. The unwillingness of the
PSB in Tibetan areas to issue or renew passports for ethnic
Tibetans created, in effect, a ban on foreign travel for a
large segment of the Tibetan population. Han residents of
Tibetan areas, however, did not experience the same
difficulties.
The
law neither provides for a citizen's right to repatriate nor
otherwise addresses exile. The government continued to
refuse reentry to numerous citizens who were considered
dissidents, Falun Gong activists, or troublemakers. Although
some dissidents living abroad were allowed to return,
dissidents released on medical parole and allowed to leave
the country often were effectively exiled. Activists
residing abroad were imprisoned upon their return to the
country.
On
December 19, the Royal Government of Cambodia, at the
request of PRC authorities, forcibly returned a group of 20
Uighur asylum seekers to the country.
The
government continued to try to prevent many Tibetans from
leaving and detained many who were apprehended in flight
(see Tibet Addendum). By year's end 838 Tibetans had arrived
at the UNHCR reception center in Kathmandu. The biggest
disparities in arrivals occurred during the heavily
trafficked fall and winter months when border security
historically was weak. Decreased flows were attributed to
tightened security across Tibet, along the border and
inland, in the wake of the Lhasa crackdown in March 2008.
Protection of Refugees
Although the country is a party to the 1951 Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 protocol,
the law does not provide for the granting of refugee or
asylum status. The government largely cooperated with the
UNHCR when dealing with the resettlement of ethnic Han
Chinese or ethnic minorities from Vietnam and Laos resident
in the country. During the year the government and the UNHCR
continued discussions concerning the granting of citizenship
to these residents.
While the government officially acknowledged that 37,000
residents of Kokang, in northeastern Burma, fled across the
border into Yunnan during the Burmese army crackdown in
August, they were not officially designated as refugees. The
government did not respond to a UNHCR request for access to
the border areas.
The
government continued to consider all North Koreans "economic
migrants" rather than refugees, and the UNHCR continued to
have limited access to North Korean refugees inside China.
The lack of access to UNHCR-supported durable solutions and
options, as well as constant fear of forced repatriation by
authorities, left North Korean refugees vulnerable to human
traffickers. Even refugees under UNCHR care were subjected
to harassment and restrictions by authorities. The
government continued to deny the UNHCR permission to operate
along its northeastern border with North Korea.
In
practice the government did not provide protection against
the expulsion or return of refugees to countries where their
lives or freedom would be threatened on account of their
race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular
social group, or political opinion. Some North Koreans were
permitted to travel to third countries after they entered
diplomatic compounds in the country. The intensified
crackdown begun in 2008 against North Korean refugees
reportedly extended to harassment of religious communities
along the border. The undocumented children of some North
Korean asylum seekers and of mixed couples (i.e., one
Chinese parent and one North Korean parent) reportedly did
not have access to health care, public education, or other
social services. The government also arrested and detained
individuals who provided food, shelter, transportation, and
other assistance to North Koreans. According to reports,
some activists or brokers detained for assisting North
Koreans were charged with human smuggling, and in some cases
the North Koreans were forcibly returned to North Korea.
There were also reports that North Korean agents operated
clandestinely within the country to forcibly repatriate
North Korean citizens.
The
government does not grant refugee or asylum status to
refugees in China, although it allows the UNHCR more
latitude in assisting non-North Korean refugees. At year's
end UNHCR Beijing had processed refugee claims for
approximately 100 non-North Korean refugees in China (from
Pakistan, Iraq, Somalia, and Eritrea). However, because
these individuals were not officially recognized refugees,
they remained in the country as illegal immigrants unable to
work, with no access to education, and deportable by the
host government at anytime.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of
Citizens to Change Their Government
The
constitution states that "all power in the People's Republic
of China belongs to the people" and that the organs through
which the people exercise state power are the NPC and the
people's congresses at provincial, district, and local
levels. However, the law does not provide citizens with the
right to change their government peacefully, and citizens
cannot freely choose or change the laws and officials that
govern them. The CCP continued to control appointments to
positions of political power.
Elections and Political Participation
According to the law, the NPC is the highest organ of state
power. Formally, the NPC, composed of 2,987 deputies, elects
the president and vice president, the premier and vice
premiers, and the chairman of the State Central Military
Commission. In practice the NPC Standing Committee, which is
composed of 175 members, oversaw these elections and
determined the agenda and procedure for the NPC.
The
NPC Standing Committee remained under the direct authority
of the party, and most legislative decisions require the
concurrence of the CCP's nine-member Politburo Standing
Committee. Despite its broad authority under the state
constitution, the NPC does not set policy independently or
remove political leaders without the party's approval.
According to statistics from the Ministry of Civil Affairs,
almost all of the country's more than 600,000 villages had
implemented direct elections for members of local
subgovernment organizations known as village committees. The
direct election of officials by ordinary citizens remained
narrow in scope and strictly confined to the local level.
The government estimated that one-third of all elections had
serious procedural flaws. Corruption, vote buying, and
interference by township-level and party officials continued
to be problems. The law permits each voter to cast proxy
votes for up to three other voters.
The
election law governs legislative bodies at all levels. Under
this law citizens have the opportunity to vote for local
people's congress representatives at the county level and
below, although in most cases the nomination of candidates
in those elections was controlled by higher-level government
officials or party cadres. At higher levels legislators
selected people's congress delegates from among their ranks.
For example, provincial-level people's congresses selected
delegates to the NPC. Local CCP secretaries generally served
concurrently as the head of the local people's congress,
thus strengthening party control over legislatures.
Official statements asserted that "the political party
system [that] China has adopted is multiparty cooperation
and political consultation under" the CCP leadership.
However, the CCP retained a monopoly on political power, and
the government forbade the creation of new political
parties. The government recognized nine parties founded
prior to 1949, and 30 percent of NPC seats were held by
parties other than the CCP. The establishment of new parties
is functionally prohibited, and activists attempting to
support unofficial parties have been arrested, detained, or
confined.
On
September 15, in Hunan Province, dissident Xie Changfa, who
tried to organize a national meeting of the banned China
Democratic Party, was sentenced to 13 years in prison. On
October 16, after spending nine months in prison, Guo Quan
was sentenced to 10 years in prison and 3 years of
deprivation of political rights for "subversion of state
power." Guo, a former Nanjing University professor and
founder of the China New Democracy Party, published articles
criticizing the country's one-party system. One of the CDP's
founders, Qin Yongmin, who was imprisoned in 1998, remained
in prison, as did others connected with a 2002 open letter
calling for political reform and reappraisal of the 1989
Tiananmen uprising. More than 30 current or former CDP
members reportedly remained imprisoned or held in RTL camps,
including Chen Shuqing, Sang Jiancheng, He Depu, Yang
Tianshui, and Jiang Lijun. In January CDP member Wang
Rongqing was sentenced to six years' imprisonment for
"subversion against the state" after publishing articles
critical of the political system. In August CDP member Zhang
Lin was released from prison.
The
government placed no special restrictions on the
participation of women or minority groups in the political
process. However, women held few positions of significant
influence in the CCP or government structure. There was one
female member of the CCP's 25-member Politburo, who also
concurrently served as one of five state councilors. Women
headed three of the country's 27 ministries.
The
government encouraged women to exercise their right to vote
in village committee elections and to run in those
elections, although only a small fraction of elected members
were women. In many locations a seat on the village
committee was reserved for a woman, usually given
responsibility for family planning.
Minorities, who made up approximately 8.4 percent of the
population, constituted 13.9 percent of the 10th NPC. All of
the country's officially recognized minority groups were
represented in the NPC membership. The 17th Communist Party
Congress elected 40 members of ethnic minority groups as
members or alternates on the Central Committee. The only
ministerial-level post held by an ethnic minority member was
in the Commission of Ethnic Affairs, headed by Yang Jing, a
Mongol from Inner Mongolia. In addition, there was one
ethnic minority member, Vice Premier Hui Liangyu, of the Hui
ethnic group, on the Politburo. Minorities held few senior
party or government positions of significant influence.
Section 4 Official Corruption and Government Transparency
The
law provides criminal penalties for official corruption;
however, the government did not implement the law
effectively, and officials frequently engaged in corrupt
practices with impunity. Many cases of corruption involved
areas that were heavily regulated by the government and
therefore susceptible to fraud, bribery, and kickbacks, such
as land usage rights, real estate, and infrastructure
development.
In the
first six months of the year, the SPP reported that 9,158
corrupt officials were found guilty of offenses including
embezzlement, bribery, dereliction of duty, and rights
violations. The party's Central Commission for Discipline
Inspection (CCDI) reported that 106,000 members had been
found guilty of corruption during the year, an increase of
2.5 percent over 2008. Of these, 85,353 received "party
discipline" punishment and 29,718 received "administrative
punishment."
Party
leaders announced new measures to combat corruption at key
meetings, such as CCDI's annual conference on corruption in
January and the State Council's Second Work Conference on
Building a Clean Government in March. In addition,
countering corruption, especially monitoring funds spent on
earthquake relief and in the massive stimulus package, was a
key theme during the NPC's March session. In April the party
began running 45 new anticorruption public service
announcements in print, radio, and television outlets across
the country. For the first time ever, in May more than 2,000
secretaries of county-level discipline organs were summoned
to Beijing for a "focused training course" run by the CDIC.
The government also set up a Web site to allow the central
government to directly receive accounts of corrupt
officials.
Numerous leaders of state owned enterprises, who generally
also hold high party rank, were investigated for corruption
during the year, including China National Nuclear
Corporation General Manager Kang Rixin; China Development
Bank Vice President Wang Yi, who was expelled from the
party; China Mobile Vice Chairman Zhang Chunjiang; and
Sinopec former Vice Chairman Chen Tonghai, who was sentenced
to death--with a two-year suspension--for corruption. In
November 2008 Huang Guangyu, the founder of Gome Electrical
Appliance Holding and the country's richest man, was
detained on unspecified charges of "economic crimes," along
with numerous government officials, including the following:
Chen Shaoji, the chairman of the CPPCC's Guangdong
Provincial Committee; Wang Huayuan, who was the
highest-ranking anticorruption official in Zhejiang
Province; Zheng Shaodong, the assistant minister of public
security of Guangdong and head of that ministry's economic
crimes investigation bureau; and his chief deputy, Xiang
Huaizhu. Shenzhen mayor Xu Zongheng was dismissed in
relation to this case and remained under investigation.
The
Ministry of Supervision and the CCDI are responsible for
combating government corruption.
Section 5 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human
Rights
The
government sought to maintain control over civil society
groups, halt the emergence of independent NGOs, hinder the
activities of civil society and rights' activist groups, and
prevent what it has called the "westernization" of the
country. The government did not permit independent domestic
NGOs to monitor openly or to comment on human rights
conditions; in addition, domestic NGOs were harassed. The
government tended to be suspicious of independent
organizations and increased scrutiny of NGOs with financial
and other links overseas. Most large NGOs were
quasigovernmental, and all official NGOs had to be sponsored
by government agencies. Some grassroots NGOs registered as
companies to avoid regulations requiring NGOs to have a
sponsoring government agency.
An
informal network of activists around the country continued
to serve as a credible source of information about human
rights violations. The information was disseminated through
organizations such as the Hong Kong-based Information Center
for Human Rights and Democracy, the foreign-based Human
Rights in China, and via the Internet.
The government remained reluctant to accept criticism of its
human rights record by other nations or international
organizations. It criticized reports by international human
rights monitoring groups, claiming that such reports were
inaccurate and interfered with the country's internal
affairs. Representatives of some international human rights
organizations reported that authorities denied their visa
requests or restricted the length of visas issued to them.
The government did not have a human rights ombudsman or
commission. The government-established China Society for
Human Rights is an NGO whose mandate is to defend the
government's human rights record. The government maintained
that each country's economic, social, cultural, and
historical conditions influence its approach to human
rights.
The
ICRC operated an office in Beijing, but the government did
not authorize the ICRC to visit prisons. The government
continued unofficial discussions on human rights and
prisoner issues with a foreign-based human rights group,
although the government's cooperation with the group was not
as extensive as in previous years.
The
government continued to participate in official diplomatic
human-rights dialogues with foreign governments.
Section 6 Discrimination, Societal Abuse, and Trafficking in
Persons
There
were laws designed to protect women, children, persons with
disabilities, and minorities. However, some discrimination
based on ethnicity, gender, and disability persisted.
Women
Rape
is illegal, and some persons convicted of rape were
executed. The law does not recognize expressly or exclude
spousal rape. The government has not made available official
statistics on rape or sexual assault, leaving the scale of
sexual violence difficult to determine. Migrant female
workers were particularly vulnerable to sexual violence.
Deng Yujiao was found "guilty of intent to harm" but was not
sentenced to prison after she stabbed a local official to
death when he reportedly attempted to sexually assault her.
The All-China Women's Federation (ACWF) advocated for "fair
treatment" of Deng during the trials. Deng Yujiao was
released after her trial on June 17.
Violence against women remained a significant problem.
According to a 2008 survey by the ACWF, domestic violence
affected one-third of China's 267 million families. The
government supported shelters for victims of domestic
violence, and some courts were beginning to provide
protections to victims. However, official assistance did not
always reach such victims, and public security forces often
ignored situations of domestic violence. According to
reports, 30 to 37 percent of families suffered from domestic
violence, and more than 90 percent of the victims were
women. The ACWF reported that it received 50,000 domestic
violence complaints annually. Spousal abuse typically went
unreported; an ACWF study found that only 7 percent of rural
women who suffered domestic violence sought help from
police. While domestic violence tended to be more prevalent
in rural areas, it also took place among the highly educated
urban population. The ACWF reported that approximately
one-quarter of the 400,000 divorces registered each year
were the result of family violence.
The
number of victims' shelters grew. According to ACWF
statistics, in 2008 there were 27,000 legal-aid service
centers, 12,000 special police booths for domestic violence
complaints, 400 shelters for victims of domestic violence,
and 350 examination centers for women claiming to be injured
by domestic violence nationwide. Most shelters were operated
by the government, some with NGO participation.
Both
the Marriage Law and the Law on the Protection of Women's
Rights and Interests have stipulations that directly
prohibit domestic violence; however, some experts complained
that the stipulations are too general, fail to define
domestic violence, and are difficult to implement. Because
of the judicial standard of ruling out "all unreasonable
doubt," even if a judge was certain that domestic violence
was occurring, he or she could not rule against the abuser
without the abuser's confession. Only 10 percent of accused
abusers confessed to violent behavior in the family,
according to 2009 data from the Institute of Applied Laws, a
think tank associated with the court system. Collecting
evidence in domestic violence cases remained difficult: the
institute reported that 40 to 60 percent of marriage and
family cases involved domestic violence; however, less than
30 percent were able to supply indirect evidence, including
photographs, hospital records, police records, or children's
testimony. Witnesses seldom testified in court.
In
April the Hunan High People's Court reportedly issued the
first provincial-level guiding opinion concerning domestic
violence cases, which was aimed at strengthening protections
for female victims during judicial proceedings related to
such abuse. In June a district court in Zhejiang Province
granted the province's first antidomestic-violence court
order to a female victim. Following similar 2008 orders in
Jiangsu and Hunan, the order prohibits the abuser from
intimidating or beating the spouse and opens the way for
security forces to intervene to protect the victim's safety.
Although prostitution is illegal, experts estimated that
between 1.7 million and 6 million women were involved in
prostitution in the country. According to MPS statistics,
police investigated approximately 140,000 cases of
prostitution annually. During the year the MPS launched a
three-month crackdown on organized prostitution targeting
individuals or groups who force, tempt, permit, or introduce
women to prostitution; operators of entertainment venues
that permit or introduce prostitution; and anyone who
conducts illegal activities with minors. July MPS statistics
reported that police arrested 3,311 suspects who allegedly
forced, abetted, harbored, or introduced women to
prostitution and solved 2,503 cases related to prostitution,
including 363 cases involving minors. A total of 457
criminal gangs were broken, and another 40 suspects were
arrested for underage sex offenses.
Despite official accounts of efforts to crack down on the
sex trade, media reports claimed that some local officials
were complicit in prostitution, owned prostitution venues,
or received proceeds from such businesses. Media reports
also claimed prostitution involved organized crime groups
and businesspersons as well as the police and military.
Social workers reported that high-profile entertainment
centers that had powerful, behind-the-scenes supporters were
beyond the reach of public security bureaus.
After
the Law on the Protection of Women's Rights was amended in
2005 to include a ban on sexual harassment, the number of
sexual harassment complaints increased significantly.
The
government restricted the rights of parents to choose the
number of children they have. The national family-planning
authorities shifted their emphasis from lowering fertility
rates to maintaining low fertility rates and emphasized
quality of care in family-planning practices; however, the
country's birth limitation policies retained harshly
coercive elements in law and practice. The financial and
administrative penalties for unauthorized births are strict.
Although some officials suggested that adjustments to the
policy were needed to address the problem of an unequal sex
ratio at birth, the government continued to affirm the
orientation of its family-planning policy at the highest
levels. There was no information on whether women and men
had equal access to diagnosis and treatment for sexually
transmitted infections, including HIV.
The
2002 National Population and Family-planning Law
standardizes the implementation of the government's birth
limitation policies; however, enforcement varied
significantly. The law grants married couples the right to
have one birth and allows eligible couples to apply for
permission to have a second child if they meet conditions
stipulated in local and provincial regulations. The
one-child limit was more strictly applied in urban areas,
where only couples meeting certain conditions are permitted
to have a second child. In most rural areas, the policy was
more relaxed, with couples permitted to have a second child
in cases where the first child was a girl. Countrywide, 35
percent of families fell under the one-child restrictions,
and more than 60 percent of families were eligible to have a
second child, either outright or if they met certain
criteria. The remaining 5 percent were eligible to have more
than two children.
While
all provinces eliminated the birth-approval process for a
first child, thus allowing parents to choose when to start
having children, some provinces continued to regulate the
period of time required between births.
The
law requires each person in a couple that has an unapproved
child to pay a "social compensation fee," which can reach 10
times a person's annual disposable income. The law grants
preferential treatment to couples who abide by the birth
limits.
Social
compensation fees were set and assessed at the local level.
The law requires family-planning officials to obtain court
approval before taking "forcible" action, such as detaining
family members or confiscating and destroying property of
families who refuse to pay social compensation fees.
However, in practice this requirement was not always
followed, and national authorities remained ineffective at
reducing abuses by local officials.
The
population control policy relied on education, propaganda,
and economic incentives, as well as on more-coercive
measures. Those who violated the child limit policy by
having an unapproved child or helping another do so faced
disciplinary measures such as social compensation fees, job
loss or demotion, loss of promotion opportunity, expulsion
from the party (membership is an unofficial requirement for
certain jobs), and other administrative punishments,
including in some cases the destruction of private property.
In
order to delay childbearing, the law sets the minimum
marriage age for women at 20 years and for men at 22 years.
It continued to be illegal in almost all provinces for a
single woman to have a child. Hunan Province required
individuals conceiving children out of wedlock to pay 6 to 8
percent of their income from the previous year in addition
to the standard social compensation fee. The law states that
family-planning bureaus will conduct pregnancy tests on
married women and provide them with unspecified "follow-up"
services. Some provinces fined women who did not undergo
periodic pregnancy tests. For example, in Hebei Province
fines ranged from RMB 200 to RMB 500 (approximately $30 to
$70), and in Henan Province fines ranged from RMB 50 to RMB
500 ($7 to $70).
Officials at all levels remained subject to rewards or
penalties based on meeting the population goals set by their
administrative region. Promotions for local officials
depended in part on meeting population targets. Linking job
promotion with an official's ability to meet or exceed such
targets provided a powerful structural incentive for
officials to employ coercive measures to meet population
goals.
Although the family-planning law states that officials
should not violate citizens' rights in the enforcement of
family-planning policy, these rights, as well as penalties
for violating them, are not clearly defined. By law citizens
may sue officials who exceed their authority in implementing
birth-planning policy. However, there exist few protections
for whistleblowers against retaliation from local officials.
The law provides significant and detailed sanctions for
officials who help persons evade the birth limitations.
On
October 1, a new set of national family-planning regulations
for the migrant population became effective. The new
regulations make family-planning services, including
reproductive health information and services, contraception
devices, and family-planning technical services, available
and free to migrants in their temporary residences.
Previously, migrants were often forced to return to the
place of their legal household registrations to receive
services.
The
constitution states that "women enjoy equal rights with men
in all spheres of life." The Law on the Protection of
Women's Rights and Interests provides for equality in
ownership of property, inheritance rights, and access to
education. The ACWF was the leading implementer of women's
policy for the government, and the State Council's National
Working Committee on Children and Women coordinated women's
policy. Nonetheless, many activists and observers were
concerned that the progress made by women over the past 50
years was eroding. They asserted that the government
appeared to have made the pursuit of gender equality a
secondary priority as it focused on economic reform and
political stability. Women continued to report that
discrimination, sexual harassment, unfair dismissal,
demotion, and wage discrepancies were significant problems.
Authorities often did not enforce laws protecting the rights
of women. According to legal experts, it was difficult to
litigate a sex discrimination suit because the vague legal
definition made it difficult to quantify damages, so very
few cases were brought to court. Some observers noted that
the agencies tasked with protecting women's rights tended to
focus on maternity-related benefits and wrongful termination
during maternity leave rather than on sex discrimination,
violence against women, and sexual harassment. Women's
rights advocates indicated that in rural areas women often
forfeited land and property rights to their husbands in
divorce proceedings. In principle rural contract law and
laws protecting women's rights stipulate that women enjoy
equal rights in cases of land management, but experts argued
that in practice this was rarely the case, due to the
complexity of the law and difficulties in its
implementation.
Many
employers preferred to hire men to avoid the expense of
maternity leave and child care, and some lowered the
effective retirement age for female workers to 40 (the
official retirement age for men was 60 and for women 55,
with the exception of men and women involved in physically
demanding jobs, for which the retirement age was 55 and 45,
respectively). In addition, work units were allowed to
impose an earlier mandatory retirement age for women than
for men. Lower retirement ages also reduced pensions, which
generally were based on the number of years worked. Job
advertisements sometimes specified height and age
requirements for women.
Women
had less earning power than men, despite government policies
mandating nondiscrimination in employment and occupation.
The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security and the
local labor bureaus were responsible for ensuring that
enterprises complied with the labor law and the employment
promotion law, each of which contains antidiscrimination
provisions.
A high
female suicide rate continued to be a serious problem.
According to the World Bank and the World Health
Organization, there were approximately 500 female suicides
per day. The Beijing Psychological Crisis Study and
Prevention Center reported that the suicide rate for females
was three times higher than for males. Many observers
believed that violence against women and girls,
discrimination in education and employment, the traditional
preference for male children, birth-limitation policies, and
other societal factors contributed to the high female
suicide rate. Women in rural areas, where the suicide rate
for women was three to four times higher than for men, were
especially vulnerable.
The
Law on the Protection of Juveniles forbids infanticide;
however, there was evidence that the practice continued.
According to the National Population and Family-planning
Commission, a handful of doctors have been charged with
infanticide under this law. Female infanticide,
sex-selective abortions, and the abandonment and neglect of
baby girls remained problems due to the traditional
preference for sons and the coercive birth limitation
policy.
The UN
Economic and Social Council reported that less than 2
percent of women between the ages of 15 and 24 were
illiterate. According to 2008 official government
statistics, women comprised more than 70 percent of all
illiterate persons above the age of 15. In some
underdeveloped regions, the female literacy rate lagged
behind the male literacy rate by 15 percent or more.
While
the gap in the education levels of men and women narrowed,
differences in educational attainment remained a problem.
Men continued to be overrepresented among the relatively
small number of persons who received a university-level
education. According to Ministry of Education statistics, in
2008 women accounted for 50 percent of undergraduate and
college students, 46 percent of postgraduate students, and
nearly 35 percent of doctoral students Women with advanced
degrees reported discrimination in the hiring process as the
job distribution system became more competitive and
market-driven.
Children
Citizenship is derived from the parents. Parents must
register their children in compliance with the national
household registration system within one month of birth.
Children not registered cannot access public services. No
data was available on the number of unregistered births.
The
law provides for nine years of compulsory education for
children. However, in economically disadvantaged rural
areas, many children did not attend school for the required
period and some never attended at all. Public schools were
not allowed to charge tuition; however, faced with
insufficient local and central government funding, many
schools continued to charge miscellaneous fees. Such fees
and other school-related expenses made it difficult for
poorer families and some migrant workers to send their
children to school.
The
proportion of girls attending school in rural and minority
areas was reportedly smaller than in cities; in rural areas
61 percent of boys and 43 percent of girls completed
education higher than lower middle school. The government
reported that nearly 20 million children of migrant laborers
followed their parents to urban areas. Most children of
migrant workers who attended school did so at schools that
were unlicensed and poorly equipped.
Female
babies suffered from a higher mortality rate than male
babies, contrary to the worldwide norm. State media reported
that infant mortality rates in rural areas were 27 percent
higher for girls than boys and that neglect was one factor
in their lower survival rate.
Kidnapping and buying and selling children for adoption
increased over the past several years, particularly in poor
rural areas. There were no reliable estimates of the number
of children trafficked; however, according to media reports,
as many as 20,000 children were kidnapped every year for
illegal adoption. Most children trafficked internally were
sold to couples unable to have children, particularly sons.
Those convicted of buying an abducted child may be sentenced
to three years' imprisonment. In the past most children
rescued were boys, but increased demand for children
reportedly drove traffickers to focus on girls as well.
By law
those who force young girls (under age 14) into prostitution
may be sentenced to 10 years or more in prison or given a
life sentence, in addition to a fine or confiscation of
property. If the case is especially serious, they are to be
given a life sentence or sentenced to death, in addition to
confiscation of property. Those inducing young girls (under
age 14) into prostitution are to be sentenced to five years
or more in prison in addition to a fine. Those who visit
young girl prostitutes (under age 14) are to be sentenced to
five years or more in prison in addition to paying a fine.
According to the law, the minimum age of consensual sex is
14.
Pornography of any kind is illegal, including child
pornography. Under the criminal code, those producing,
reproducing, publishing, selling, or disseminating obscene
materials with the purpose of making a profit may be
sentenced up to three years in prison or put under criminal
detention or surveillance, in addition to paying a fine. If
the case is serious, they are to be sentenced from three to
10 years in prison, in addition to paying a fine. If the
case is especially serious, they are to be sentenced to 10
years or more in prison or given a life sentence, in
addition to a fine or confiscation of property. Persons
found disseminating obscene books, magazines, films, audio
or video products, pictures, or other kinds of obscene
materials, if the case is serious, may be sentenced up to
two years in prison or put under criminal detention or
surveillance. Persons organizing the broadcast of obscene
motion pictures or other audio or video products may be
sentenced up to three years in prison or put under criminal
detention or surveillance, in addition to paying a fine. If
the case if serious, they are to be sentenced to three to 10
years in prison in addition to paying a fine.
Those
broadcasting or showing obscene materials to minors less
than 18 years of age are to be severely punished.
There
were more than 150,000 urban street children, according to
state-run media and the Ministry of Civil Affairs. This
number was even higher if the children of migrant workers
who spend the day on the streets were included. In August
2008 state media reported that the number of children in
rural areas left behind by their migrant worker parents
totaled 5.8 million.
The
law forbids the mistreatment or abandonment of children. The
vast majority of children in orphanages were girls, many of
whom were abandoned. Boys in orphanages were usually
disabled or in poor health. Medical professionals sometimes
advised parents of children with disabilities to put the
children into orphanages.
The
government denied that children in orphanages were
mistreated or refused medical care but acknowledged that the
system often was unable to provide adequately for some
children, particularly those with serious medical problems.
Adopted children were counted under the birth limitation
regulations in most locations. As a result, couples that
adopted abandoned infant girls were sometimes barred from
having additional children.
Trafficking in Persons
The
law prohibits trafficking in women and children; however,
there were reports that men, women, and children were
trafficked to, from, through, and within the country for
sexual exploitation and forced labor. Criminal law defines
trafficking as purposefully selling women or children to
make a profit, through abduction, kidnapping, buying,
trading, or transporting.
The
government built on past efforts to combat trafficking,
modifying countertrafficking regulations to strengthen the
government's response to sex and labor trafficking, and
conducting significant and new campaigns to prosecute
traffickers and rescue trafficking victims. The MPS and 30
other government departments and agencies jointly issued
National Plan of Action (NPA) implementation guidelines to
restructure government antitrafficking work processes,
assign responsibilities, and coordinate intragovernment
cooperation. The SPP issued guidelines for prosecuting human
trafficking cases. The central government changed local
security officials' promotion criteria to include
countertrafficking work and instructed public security
bureaus nationwide to immediately investigate missing person
or trafficking cases as criminal cases.
In
April the MPS initiated a new campaign to combat trafficking
in women and children. From April to December, the MPS
reported rescuing nearly 3,500 children and 7,400 women
trafficking victims, breaking up 1,684 criminal gangs in the
process. Through the use of a DNA matching database, the
identities of 298 trafficked persons have been confirmed.
During the year prosecution and conviction of trafficking
offenders increased, mostly focused on those trafficking
women and children. Authorities investigated and dismantled
criminal networks and organized crime syndicates involved in
trafficking and by December had arrested 19 of the country's
20 most-wanted human traffickers; they were awaiting
prosecution at year's end. The government recognized the
need to do more to provide services to trafficking victims.
The government increased antitrafficking cooperation with
other countries and international organizations and worked
to raise public awareness on trafficking in persons.
However, the country's capacity to effectively protect
victims and prevent trafficking in persons did not reach
international standards.
The
country was a source, transit point, and destination for
trafficking in persons. The vast majority of trafficking was
internal for the purposes of sexual exploitation, forced
labor and begging, and forced marriage. Women and children,
who made up 90 percent of reported trafficking cases, were
often trafficked from poorer, rural areas where they were
abducted or lured to urban centers with false promises of
employment and then trafficked into prostitution or forced
labor. The media and NGOs estimated that between 10,000 and
20,000 were trafficked internally annually.
Domestic and cross-border trafficking continued to be
significant problems, although the exact number of persons
involved could only be estimated, due in part to an
itinerant population of approximately 150 million. The MPS
reported 2,500 cross-border trafficking cases in 2008,
although experts claimed the number was much higher.
The
government reported strengthening its prosecution of
trafficking. In April Hebei Provincial Higher People's Court
sentenced two persons to death and nine others to various
sentences, ranging from four years in prison to the death
penalty with a reprieve, for a series of child-trafficking
cases involving seven children across Henan, Hebei, and
Shandong provinces. Also in April police detained two
persons suspected of trying to traffic 300 youths to Costa
Rica.
In May
Guizhou authorities launched a campaign to crack down on the
forced prostitution of girls following a scandal in which 11
Xishui County schoolgirls were forced into the sex trade.
The campaign, which lasted until the end of the year, also
targeted those who force minors to beg or commit crimes. In
June state media reported that police rescued 23 children
during a crackdown on child trafficking. State media
reported the Wuhan Rail Bureau apprehended 18 suspects in an
eight-day campaign targeting trains arriving from Kunming,
Yunnan Province. In August the government repatriated six
trafficked Burmese women following a joint operation by
Chinese and Burmese security forces.
Some
experts and NGOs suggested that trafficking of persons was
fueled by economic disparity and the effects of
population-planning policies and that a shortage of
marriageable women increased the demand for abducted women,
especially in rural areas. The serious imbalance in the
male-female ratio at birth, the tendency for women to leave
rural areas to seek employment, and the cost of traditional
betrothal gifts all made purchasing a wife attractive to
some poor rural men. Some men recruited women from poorer
regions, while others sought help from criminal gangs. UN
research indicated most women trafficked internally were
taken from areas with a very low GDP to areas with a very
high GDP. Once in their new "families," these women were
"married" and sometimes became victims of forced labor or
rape. Some joined their new communities, others struggled
and were punished, and a few escaped. Some former
trafficking victims became traffickers themselves, lured by
the prospect of financial gain.
Most
cross-border trafficked women and girls came from Vietnam,
Burma, North Korea, Mongolia, and Russia. Others came from
Laos and Ukraine. All were trafficked into the country for
sexual exploitation, forced marriage, and indentured
servitude in domestic service or businesses. Many North
Korean women and girls were trafficked into the country to
work in the sex industry and for forced marriages and other
purposes, including forced labor. Because the government
continued to classify all North Korean trafficking victims
as economic migrants, they were routinely deported. North
Korean women reportedly were sold for RMB 2,900 to RMB
9,700(approximately $425 to $1,420). The UN reported that
Chinese citizens were most often trafficked to Malaysia,
Thailand, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Second-tier destinations included Australia, European
countries, Canada, Japan, Burma, Singapore, South Africa,
and Taiwan.
Trafficked persons sometimes became entangled with alien
smuggling rings, which often had ties to organized crime and
were international in scope. Persons trafficked by alien
smugglers paid high prices for their passage to other
countries, where they hoped their economic prospects would
improve. Some reportedly promised to pay RMB 231,000 to RMB
385,000 (approximately $33,790 to $56,320) for passage. Upon
arrival many reportedly were forced to repay traffickers for
the smuggling charges or a larger amount at high interest
rates, and in some cases in addition to their living
expenses by working for a set period of time. Living and
working conditions for trafficked persons were poor.
Traffickers restricted their victims' movements and
confiscated their travel documents. Threats to report
trafficking victims to authorities or to retaliate against
families made trafficked persons even more vulnerable.
Criminal law prohibited trafficking, kidnapping, and sexual
exploitation of minors. Persons convicted of engendering
forced prostitution, abduction, or commercial exploitation
face criminal sanctions; convictions for trafficking minors
carry heavier sentences, such as a death sentence. Victims
and their families can bring civil suits against offenders,
but few civil suits made it beyond initial stages. Those
that did encountered obstacles claiming compensation.
In
April more than 100 parents in Guangdong Province protested
the authorities' poor response to the alleged abduction of
more than 1,000 children from the area over the past two
years. During the year the government began to address child
abduction and trafficking through stepped-up investigations
and informational campaigns, sponsoring workshops for
migrant worker parents on the dangers of child trafficking,
meeting with parent and civic groups, and establishing a
nation-wide DNA database to reunite rescued children with
their families.
NGOs
reported an increase in child trafficking and children
forced to work as beggars, petty thieves, and prostitutes,
especially in rural areas. Some children, including Uighurs,
worked in factories, but many ended up under the control of
local gangs. Five ministries on the State Council issued
regulations during the year imposing obligations on
government officials to combat child trafficking,
particularly for purposes of forced begging; nevertheless,
experts noted that forced child labor and sexual
exploitation continued to be serious problems in many
cities.
MPS
officials stated that repatriated victims of trafficking no
longer faced fines or other punishment upon their return.
However, authorities acknowledged that some victims
continued to be sentenced or fined because of corruption
among police, the difficulty in identifying trafficked
victims, and provisions allowing for the imposition of fines
on persons traveling without proper documentation.
Trafficking victims often lacked proper identification,
which made it difficult to distinguish them from persons who
illegally crossed borders. The MPS trained border officials
to spot potential victims of trafficking, and it opened
seven border liaison offices on the Burma, Laos, and Vietnam
borders to process victims. However, the ACWF reported that
ongoing problems required intervention to protect
trafficking victims from unjust punishment.
Trafficking victims often were returned to their homes
without access to counseling or psychological care; however,
in areas where trafficking in persons was prevalent, there
was evidence that local and security officials worked with
NGOs to provide victims access to medical services and
counseling. Some NGOs provided victims with counseling or
psychological care. The government's victim assistance
efforts across the country remained uncoordinated,
underdeveloped, and insufficient, although it took steps to
rectify this problem through training and capacity-building
programs in conjunction with international NGOs. Trafficking
victims returning to China from abroad, for example, rarely
received assistance from authorities, who largely were
unaware of the victims and their plight. The government did
not provide any assistance to Chinese sex-trafficking
victims identified in Ghana, who faced threats and
retaliation from their traffickers.
The
law criminalizing the purchase of women makes abduction and
sale separate offenses. There were reports of local
officials' complicity in both alien smuggling and in
prostitution, which sometimes involved trafficked women. In
some cases village leaders sought to prevent police from
rescuing women who had been sold to villagers. Authorities
did not take sufficient steps to deter or prevent
trafficking-related corruption in the country.
The
government continued to centralize and institutionalize its
antitrafficking work. The 2007 NPA on Combating Trafficking
of Women and Children formalized cooperation among
government agencies and established a national information
and reporting system. However, there were no measures for
resources to be allocated to local and provincial
governments for implementation. Additionally, the NPA
covered only trafficking of female and minor victims and did
not address labor trafficking or male victims of sex
trafficking. During the year implementation procedures and
regulations were formulated by 30 ministries and government
entities. While all provinces under the NPA are required to
create provincial-level plans to combat trafficking, by the
end of the year only a handful of provinces had created and
were actively implementing such plans. The government
continued to make some progress in strengthening its
antitrafficking legal framework; the highest court issued
instructions on prosecuting traffickers.
The MPS reported that its primary focus in implementing the
NPA was to guarantee that provincial government and local
public security bureaus took on antitrafficking work and
that the local antitrafficking procedures were correct. The
MPS issued regulations to standardize local public security
officials' antitrafficking methods and for the first time
tied security official's professional advancement to their
efforts to assist antitrafficking work. The MPS also
launched its sixth special campaign to combat trafficking in
women and children. The campaign's mandate was to reduce
trafficking in women and children by solving a large number
of trafficking cases, rescuing victims, eliminating a large
number of trafficking gangs, and apprehending a large number
of traffickers.
Principal government agencies responsible for combating
trafficking or assisting its victims were the MPS, the State
Council's Work Committee for Women and Children, the
Ministry of Civil Affairs (MCA), and the ACWF. While the
government made increased efforts to assist victims of
trafficking, the protection, return, and reintegration of
trafficking victims needed greater improvement. Central
government policy allows for provision of funds to
provincial governments and local police to house victims and
return them to their homes, although it remained unknown
whether this resource was used. Government-funded women's
federation offices and other women's organizations provided
some counseling on legal rights, rehabilitation, and other
assistance to trafficking victims, although lack of funding
reportedly limited services in many areas.
The
ACWF assisted some victims in obtaining medical and
psychological treatment. Overseas NGOs provided treatment to
trafficking victims and conducted educational outreach
programs to educate rural youth about the dangers of
trafficking. The government and NGOs also supported centers
in communities with large numbers of migrant laborers to
train members of at-risk groups to avoid being trafficked
and to get out of trafficking situations. The MCA began
training staff at the 1,351 MCA relief centers for
disadvantaged persons nationwide in identifying and
providing services to trafficking victims. However, the
country continued to lack comprehensive, countrywide victim
protection services. Anecdotal evidence suggested that
trafficking victims residing in provinces that lacked a
large trafficking problem--and therefore a robust
antitrafficking program--had difficulty accessing assistance
and services.
The Department of State's annual Trafficking in Persons
Report can be found at
www.state.gov/g/tip.
Persons with Disabilities
The
law protects the rights of persons with disabilities and
prohibits discrimination; however, conditions for such
persons lagged far behind legal dictates, failing to provide
persons with disabilities access to programs designed to
assist them.
The
MCA and the China Disabled Persons Federation, a
government-organized civil association, were the main
entities responsible for persons with disabilities. In
September government officials confirmed that there were 83
million persons with disabilities living in the country.
According to government statistics, in 2008 there were 3,731
vocational education and training facilities, which provided
training and job-placement services for 774,000 persons with
disabilities. More than 4.5 million persons with
disabilities were employed in cities and towns; 17.2 million
were employed in rural areas. Government statistics stated
that 7.4 million persons with disabilities enjoyed the
minimum life guarantee; nearly three million had social
insurance.
The
law prohibits discrimination against minors with
disabilities and codifies a variety of judicial protections
for juvenile offenders. In 2007 the Ministry of Education
reported that nationwide there were 1,618 schools for
children with disabilities. According to NGOs, there were
approximately 20 million children with disabilities, only 2
percent of whom had access to special education that could
meet their needs. In 2008 there were 63,400 new enrollments,
bringing the total number of children with disabilities at
school to 419,000. NGOs claimed that while the overall
school enrollment rate was 99 percent, only 75 percent of
children with disabilities were enrolled in school.
Nationwide 243,000 school-age children with disabilities did
not attend school. Nearly 100,000 organizations existed,
mostly in urban areas, to serve those with disabilities and
protect their legal rights. The government, at times in
conjunction with NGOs, sponsored programs to integrate
persons with disabilities into society.
The
physical abuse of children can be grounds for criminal
prosecution. However, misdiagnosis, inadequate medical care,
stigmatization, and abandonment remained common problems.
According to reports, doctors frequently persuaded parents
of children with disabilities to place their children in
large government-run institutions, where care was often
inadequate. Those parents who chose to keep children with
disabilities at home generally faced difficulty finding
adequate medical care, day care, and education for their
children. Government statistics showed that almost
one-quarter of persons with disabilities lived in extreme
poverty.
Unemployment among adults with disabilities remained a
serious problem. Under the Employment Promotion Law, local
governments were required to offer incentives to enterprises
that hired persons with disabilities. Regulations in some
parts of the country also required employers to pay into a
national fund for the disabled when the employees with
disabilities did not make up the statutory minimum
percentage of the total workforce.
Standards adopted for making roads and buildings accessible
to persons with disabilities were subject to the Law on the
Handicapped, which calls for their "gradual" implementation;
however, compliance with the law was lax. Students with
disabilities were discriminated against in access to
education. The law permits universities legally to exclude
otherwise qualified candidates from higher education.
The
law forbids the marriage of persons with certain acute
mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia. If doctors find
that a couple is at risk of transmitting disabling
congenital defects to their children, the couple may marry
only if they agree to use birth control or undergo
sterilization. The law stipulates that local governments
must employ such practices to raise the percentage of
healthy births.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Most
minority groups resided in areas they traditionally
inhabited. Government policy calls for members of recognized
minorities to receive preferential treatment in birth
planning, university admission, access to loans, and
employment. However, the substance and implementation of
ethnic minority policies remained poor, and discrimination
against minorities remained widespread.
Minority groups in border and other regions had less access
to education than their Han counterparts, faced job
discrimination in favor of Han migrants, and earned incomes
well below those in other parts of the country. Government
development programs often disrupted traditional living
patterns of minority groups and included, in some cases, the
forced relocation of persons. Han Chinese benefited
disproportionately from government programs and economic
growth. As part of its emphasis on building a "harmonious
society," the government downplayed racism against
minorities, which remained the source of deep resentment in
the XUAR, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, and Tibetan
areas. In September the State Council issued a white paper
on ethnic policy, common prosperity, and development of all
ethnic groups. The report stated that the country's ethnic
policy ensured the equality among all ethnic groups.
According to 2007 government statistics, 36.3 percent of
Guangxi Province's cadres were ethnic minorities. In 2008
all five of the country's ethnic minority autonomous regions
had governors from minority groups for the first time in
history. However, the Communist Party secretaries of these
five autonomous regions were all Han. Han officials
continued to hold the majority of the most powerful party
and government positions in minority autonomous regions,
particularly the XUAR.
The
government's policy to encourage Han Chinese migration to
move into minority areas significantly increased the
population of Han in the XUAR. In recent decades the
Han-Uighur ratio in the capital of Urumqi has shifted from
20 to 80 to 80 to 20 and continued to be a deep source of
Uighur resentment. Discriminatory hiring practices gave
preference to Han and discouraged job prospects for ethnic
minorities. According to 2005 statistics published by XUAR
officials, eight million of the XUAR's 20 million official
residents were Han. Hui, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Uighur, and other
ethnic minorities comprised approximately 12 million XUAR
residents. Official statistics understated the Han
population, because they did not count the tens of thousands
of Han Chinese who were long-term "temporary workers." While
the government continued to promote Han migration into the
XUAR and fill local jobs with migrant labor, overseas human
rights organizations reported that local officials under
direction from higher levels of government deceived and
pressured young Uighur women to participate in a
government-sponsored labor transfer program.
The
XUAR government took measures to dilute expressions of
Uighur identity, including measures to reduce education in
ethnic minority languages in XUAR schools and to institute
language requirements that disadvantaged ethnic minority
teachers. The government continued to apply policies that
prioritized Mandarin Chinese for instruction in school,
thereby reducing or eliminating ethnic-language instruction.
Graduates of minority language schools typically needed
intensive Chinese study before they could handle
Chinese-language course work at a university. The dominant
position of standard Chinese in government, commerce, and
academia put graduates of minority-language schools who
lacked standard Chinese proficiency at a disadvantage.
During
the year authorities increased repression in the XUAR and
targeted the region's ethnic Uighur population. On July 5, a
Uighur demonstration was forcefully suppressed by police,
and outbreaks in violence throughout the region following
the crackdown drew an international spotlight on
longstanding ethnic tensions in the XUAR and Uighurs'
grievances toward government policies that undermined the
protection of their rights. In late 2008 and during the
first half of the year, officials in XUAR reiterated a
pledge to crack down on the government-designated "three
forces" of religious extremism, "splittism," and terrorism
and outlined efforts to launch a concentrated antiseparatist
reeducation campaign.
It was
sometimes difficult to determine whether raids, detentions,
and judicial punishments directed at individuals or
organizations suspected of promoting the "three forces" were
instead actually used to target those peacefully seeking to
express their political or religious views. The government
continued to repress Uighurs expressing peaceful political
dissent and independent Muslim religious leaders, often
citing counterterrorism as the reason for taking action.
Uighurs were sentenced to long prison terms, and in some
cases executed, on charges of separatism. The government
reportedly sought the repatriation of Uighurs living outside
the country, where they faced the risk of persecution.
Freedom of assembly was severely limited during the year in
the XUAR. On September 8, the government announced it would
demolish three buildings owned by the family of exiled
Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer, president of the World Uighur
Conference. The government blamed Kadeer, a Uighur
businesswoman in exile, for orchestrating the July 5 riots
in Urumqi.
Possession of publications or audiovisual materials
discussing independence or other sensitive subjects was not
permitted. Uighurs who remained in prison at year's end for
their peaceful expression of ideas the government found
objectionable included Mehbube Ablesh, Abdulla Jamal,
Tohti Tunyaz, Adduhelil Zunun, Abdulghani Memetemin, and
Nurmuhemmet Yasin.
During
the year XUAR officials defended the campaign against
separatism and other emergency measures taken as necessary
to maintain public order and continued to use the threat of
violence as justification for extreme security measures
directed at the local population and visiting foreigners.
In
September state media reported that XUAR authorities
approved the Information Promotion Bill, making it a
criminal offense to discuss separatism on the Internet and
prohibiting use of the Internet in any way that undermines
national unity. The bill further bans inciting ethnic
separatism or harming social stability. The bill requires
Internet service providers and network operators to set up
monitoring systems or strengthen existing ones and report
transgressions of the law.
Han
control of the region's political and economic institutions
also contributed to heightened tension. Although government
policies brought economic improvements to the XUAR, Han
residents received a disproportionate share of the benefits.
(See
also the Tibet addendum.)
Societal Abuses, Discrimination, and Acts of Violence Based
on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
No
laws criminalize private homosexual activity between
consenting adults. Homosexuality was decriminalized in 1997
and removed from the official list of mental disorders in
2001. Due to societal discrimination and pressure to conform
to family expectations, most gay individuals refrained from
publicly discussing their sexual orientation.
On March 30 and April 3, approximately 50 gay men were
reportedly detained in Renmin Park in Guangzhou and
questioned by police. On August 25, police in Guangzhou
tried again to remove a group of gay men from Renmin Park.
The men refused, and after a nonviolent standoff, the police
desisted.
In
June the first gay pride festival took place in Shanghai.
Also in June the Beijing Queer Film Festival was held.
Police had blocked previous attempts to hold the festival.
Homosexual plotlines and scenes are not allowed on broadcast
television. While there is no legal prohibition against the
registration of lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender
student groups, none were allowed to register at any
universities.
In
July a group of lesbians organized an online petition
calling on the government to rescind a 1998 law banning gay
persons from donating blood.
Other
Societal Violence or Discrimination
The
Employment Promotion Law, which went into effect in 2008,
improves protection against discrimination in employment,
and local governments began modifying their regulations to
reflect the new law. Under the law and adopted regulations,
employment discrimination against persons carrying an
infectious disease is prohibited, and provisions allow such
persons to work as civil servants. While the law improves
protection against discrimination in employment, it does not
address some common types of discrimination in employment,
including discrimination based on height, physical
appearance, or place of origin.
Despite provisions in the new Employment Promotion Law,
discrimination against persons with HIV/AIDS and hepatitis B
carriers (including 20 million chronic carriers) remained
widespread in many areas. Persons with HIV/AIDS suffered
discrimination, and local governments sometimes tried to
suppress their activities. At the same time, international
involvement in HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and treatment, as
well as central government pressure on local governments to
respond appropriately, brought improvements in some
localities. Some hospitals that previously refused to treat
HIV/AIDS patients had active care and treatment programs
because domestic and international training programs
improved the understanding of local healthcare workers and
their managers. In Beijing dozens of local community centers
encouraged and facilitated HIV/AIDS support groups.
Some
NGOs working with HIV/AIDS patients and their family members
continued to report difficulties with local governments,
particularly in Henan Province. Henan authorities provided
free treatment to persons with HIV/AIDS, but foreign and
local observers noted that local governments were reluctant
or even hostile toward coordinating efforts with NGOs and
preferred to work independently.
Section 7 Worker Rights
a. The
Right of Association
The
law does not provide for freedom of association, as workers
were not free to organize or join unions of their own
choosing. Independent unions are illegal, and the right to
strike is not protected in law.
The All-China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU), which is
controlled by the CCP and chaired by a member of the
Politburo, is the sole legal workers' organization. The
trade union law gives the ACFTU control over all union
organizations and activities, including enterprise-level
unions, and requires the ACFTU to "uphold the leadership of
the Communist Party." While ACFTU constituent unions were
generally unassertive and ineffective in protecting the
rights and interests of members, the ACFTU successfully
advocated for and positively influenced the implementation
of government policies protecting rights and interests of
workers.
The
ACFTU and its provincial and local branches continued to
organize new unions at a rapid pace. According to the latest
available ACFTU data, as of September 2008 there were 212
million ACFTU members, a net increase of 72.1 percent from
2003. The ACFTU claimed that 73.7 percent of workers were
ACFTU members. The number of ACFTU-affiliated trade union
organizations increased to 1.7 million by September 2008, up
9.8 percent over 2007 and up 90.4 percent over 2003. A total
of 3.7 million enterprises established trade union
organizations, up 15.3 percent over 2007 and up 133.9
percent over 2003. Additionally, the ACFTU continued its
campaign to target foreign-invested enterprises and
announced that by the end of 2008, the number of trade union
members in foreign–invested enterprises across the country
(including Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan-invested
enterprises) had reached 15.9 million and the rate of
unionization in such transnational corporations had reached
83 percent.
Twelve
Taiwan employees in Xiamen became members of the Xiamen
General Labor Union, officially joining the mainland ACFTU-affiliated
labor union. This was the first time the ACFTU accepted
Taiwan employees.
Although the law states that trade union officers at each
level should be elected, most were appointed by ACFTU-affiliated
unions, often in coordination with employers, and were drawn
largely from the ranks of management. Direct election by
workers of union leaders continued to be rare, occurred only
at the enterprise level, and was subject to supervision by
higher levels of the union or Communist Party organization.
In enterprises where direct election of union officers took
place, regional ACFTU offices and local party authorities
retained control over the selection and approval of
candidates.
While
many labor rights NGOs and lawyers were able to operate
effectively, authorities continued to monitor labor rights
organizations closely. Labor rights organizations reported
close surveillance by government security agencies, and in
some cases they were warned to stop their activities in
support of worker rights. During the year many groups
reported an increase in monitoring in advance of sensitive
anniversaries.
In
some cases authorities interfered with the programs or
activities of labor organizations. For example, in June
trade union officials in Shaanxi Province reportedly
threatened founders of a new workers' rights group. More
than 380 workers from approximately 20 enterprises in
Shaanxi applied to the provincial party committee and trade
union federation to set up the Shaanxi Enterprise Union
Rights Defense Representative Congress to supervise existing
unions and resolve issues by creating more effective unions.
The municipal government of Xi'an formally banned the group,
and union officials threatened some of the application
signatories.
In
August local press reported that Zhao Dongming was arrested
for applying to establish a trade union in Xian. In
September, following the Tonghua Iron and Steel protests,
Ren Fengyu was sentenced to RTL for 18 months for posting a
notice at a factory demanding to select worker
representatives.
In
November labor NGOs reported that in Hubei Province, Yang
Huanqing, a laid-off community-operated school teachers'
representative, was sentenced to one year of RTL. The RTL
notice received by Yang's family claimed that Yang organized
teachers to petition, met with other teachers'
representatives, and petitioned with other representatives.
Labor
activists detained in previous years reportedly remained in
detention at year's end, including Wang Sen, Ni Xiafei, Li
Xintao, Hu Mingjun, Li Wangyang, Luo Huiquan, Kong Youping,
Ning Xianhua, Li Jianfeng, Lin Shun'an, Chen Wei, She Wanbao,
and Zhu Fangming.
The
right to strike is not protected in law. While work
stoppages are not expressly prohibited in law, article 53 of
the constitution has been interpreted as a ban on labor
strikes by obligating all citizens to "observe labor
discipline and public order." Local government
interpretations of the law varied, with some jurisdictions
showing limited tolerance for strikes while others continued
to treat worker protests as illegal demonstrations. Without
a clearly defined right to strike, workers had only a
limited capacity to influence the negotiation process.
During
the year there were many reports of strikes or work
stoppages throughout the country, and official media more
aggressively publicized cases of worker rights violations
and protests. The most publicized of these were three
large-scale protests at state-owned enterprise (SOE) steel
and coal plants in Jilin, Henan, and Hunan provinces. As a
result of planned privatization of these SOEs, workers
initiated large-scale strikes involving thousands of
workers, one of which, in Jilin, resulted in the death of a
manager. The privatization of the two steel SOEs was
cancelled.
Official media also more aggressively publicized worker
protests other than strikes, involving actual or feared job
loss, wage or benefit arrears, dissatisfaction with new
contracts offered in enterprise restructuring, failure to
honor contract terms, or discontent over substandard
conditions of employment. Representative examples of the
countless number of worker protest actions that occurred
included the following: taxi drivers in northeastern
Mudanjiang City staged sit-ins before local party and
government office buildings to protest the local
government's plan to reform the taxi operating system; more
than 400 motorcycle taxi drivers held a rally to protest a
government ban on their business in Quanzhou, Fujian
Province; hundreds of workers at a holding company of a
foreign company in Wuhan City blocked a major road to
protest potential job cuts; more than 5,000 taxi drivers in
Xining, the capital of Qinghai Province, protested because
of news that a new regulation would curtail the duration of
their operating licenses; more than 400 workers blocked a
road in a protest over unpaid wages in southwest China's
Chongqing Municipality; and in Beijing more than 20
construction workers occupied a 17-floor block of apartments
and demanded unpaid back wages. In November nearly 3,000
female workers of a German-invested company in Hainan
Province went on strike to press their demands on bonuses,
pay, and vacations.
On
July 13, the SPC announced that labor disputes climbed by 30
percent in the first half of the year, with dramatic
increases of 41.6 percent, 50.3 percent, and 159.6 percent
in Guangdong, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang, respectively. Much of
this increase was due to the continued implementation of the
three new labor laws, workers' increased knowledge of their
rights under these laws, and workers' increased willingness
to pursue their rights by filing claims. An ACFTU official
was quoted by the press as reporting that, by the end of
November, in Beijing approximately 80,000 workers were
involved in disputes with their employers, double the number
from 2008. During the year Beijing's arbitration committee
received more than 70,000 cases of labor disputes, compared
with 49,000 during the same period in 2008 and 26,000 in
2007. In addition, Beijing's Second Intermediate People's
Court reported that during the year labor dispute cases
doubled compared with the previous year.
b. The
Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The
labor law permits collective bargaining for workers in all
types of enterprises; however, in practice collective
bargaining fell short of international standards. Under
labor and trade union laws, collective contracts are to be
developed through collaboration between the labor union and
management and should specify such matters as working
conditions, wage scales, and hours of work.
The
trade union law specifically addresses unions'
responsibility to bargain collectively on behalf of workers'
interests. Regulations required the union to gather input
from workers prior to consultation with management and to
submit collective contracts to workers or their congress for
approval. There is no legal obligation for employers to
negotiate, and some employers refused to do so.
A key
article of the 2008 labor contract law requires employers to
consult with labor unions or employee representatives on
matters that have a direct bearing on the immediate
interests of their workers. Although the central government
had not clarified the meaning of this article, some local
jurisdictions interpreted it as a mandate for collective
bargaining and reflected such an interpretation in local
regulations on collective contract negotiations. In 2008 the
ACFTU also called on its local organizations to carry out
more aggressively their mandate to conclude collective
contracts with employers.
The
ACFTU reported that by September 2008, 1.1 million
collective contracts were signed nationwide (an increase of
13.6 percent from 2007) covering 1.9 million enterprises (up
11.9 percent) and 149.6 million workers (16.6 percent). As
of September 2008, 60.2 percent of the workers in
enterprises throughout the country were covered by
collective contracts. The ACFTU also engaged in a campaign
to target transnational enterprises and noted as an example
that collective contracts had been signed in Walmart's 108
unionized enterprises in the country.
The
law provides for labor dispute resolution through a
three-stage process: mediation between the parties,
arbitration by officially designated arbitrators, and
litigation. The 2008 labor dispute mediation and arbitration
law improved workers' access to and streamlined this
three-stage process. As noted above, the number of labor
disputes nationwide rose significantly, which experts
claimed was due in large part to an increase in workers'
awareness of the laws and reduction in costs that a worker
would incur in the process.
The trade union law provides specific legal remedies against
antiunion discrimination and specifies that union
representatives may not be transferred or terminated by
enterprise management during their term of office.
Collective contract regulations provide similar protections
for employee representatives during collective
consultations.
Workers and their advocates suffered harassment and
intimidation from officials and from by criminal elements
often hired by employers. For example, in January in
Shenzhen Province, local press reported that a developer who
owed a contractor a significant amount of money colluded
with police to violently attack and prosecute 47
wage-seeking workers, who claimed that they had not received
wages for six months. Fifty-two migrant workers protested in
Beijing against their employer, demanding unpaid wages.
According to press reports, they were severely beaten and
then arrested. In February more than 1,000 mostly female
workers from a textile factory in Sichuan Province gathered
to petition the government to demand legally entitled
compensation. Police and security guards were dispatched to
disperse the protesters; five workers were injured in the
confrontation, and three were detained but later released by
the police.
There
are no special laws or exemptions from regular labor laws in
export processing zones.
c.
Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The
law prohibits forced and compulsory labor and contains
provisions relevant to forced labor and trafficking for
labor purposes; however, there were reports that such
practices occurred. Punishment for forced labor offenses
under the criminal code ranged from an administrative fine
to a maximum of three years' imprisonment, which was deemed
"insufficiently dissuasive" by the International Labor
Organization's Committee of Experts on the Application of
Standards. In February two persons who admitted imprisoning
and beating workers (resulting in the death of an elderly
worker) at their illegal brickyard in Shaanxi were sentenced
to 18 months and 12 months (suspended for two years),
respectively, in prison.
In May
a forced labor case at a brick kiln in Anhui Province was
exposed. According to local press accounts, police rescued
32 persons with mental disabilities, who had been forced to
work as slave laborers, from brick kilns in Zhuanji and
Guangwu townships and arrested 10 persons.
Forced
labor remained a serious problem in penal institutions. Many
prisoners and detainees in RTL facilities were required to
work, often with no remuneration. In addition, there were
credible allegations that prisoners were forced to work for
private production facilities associated with prisons. These
facilities often operated under two different names: a
prison name and a commercial enterprise name. There was no
effective mechanism to prevent the export of goods made
under such conditions.
The
Ministry of Justice cooperated with international officials
to investigate an allegation of exported prison labor goods,
allowing visits to a prison facility to investigate
allegations that prison-made goods were being exported.
Information about prisons, including associated labor camps
and factories, was tightly controlled.
There
were reports that employers withheld wages, or required
unskilled workers to deposit several months' wages, as
security against the workers departing early from their
labor contracts. These practices often prevented workers
from exercising their right to leave their employment and
made them vulnerable to forced labor. However,
implementation of new labor laws, along with workers'
increased knowledge of their rights under these new laws,
reportedly reduced these practices.
d.
Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
The
law prohibits the employment of children under the age of
16, but child labor remained a problem. The government does
not publish statistics on the extent of child labor.
The labor law specifies administrative review, fines, and
revocation of business licenses of those businesses that
illegally hire minors and provides that underage children
found working should be returned to their parents or other
custodians in their original place of residence. However, a
significant gap remained between legislation and
implementation. Workers between the ages of 16 and 18 were
referred to as "juvenile workers" and were prohibited from
engaging in certain forms of physical work, including labor
in mines.
Social compliance auditors working for foreign buyers
continued to report some use of child labor in factories
producing for export. There were some reports that schools
supplied factories with illegal child labor under the
pretext of vocational training. The
International Trade Union
Confederation (ITUC)
alleged that the program used forced child labor to make up
for school budget shortfalls, including in dangerous and
labor-intensive industries such as fireworks manufacturing
and cotton harvesting. The ITUC further alleged that
teachers and children reported they were pressured to meet
daily quotas or faced fines if they failed to meet
production targets. Other industries reportedly employing
forced child labor include bricks, cotton, electronics, and
toys.
On
April 6, Liu Pan, a 17-year-old migrant worker from Sichuan
Province, was killed in a workplace accident at the Yiuwah
Stationary factory in Dongguan, Guangzhou Province. In a
follow-up investigation, a local labor NGO reported several
labor law violations at the factory, including that underage
and child labor were widespread at the factory, with workers
as young as 13 being hired in busy seasons. To settle claims
related to his death, local press reported that Liu Pan's
family accepted a settlement from the factory.
In
November one child died and 11 children were critically
injured in an explosion at an illegal fireworks shop near
Guilin. Two owners of the workshop were in police custody on
charges of employing child labor and producing dangerous
goods without a license. The children, ages 7 to 15, were
local students paid to make firecrackers at the workshop
after school.
In
June a local blogger posted photographs of child laborers in
Wuhan, including two school-age children repairing vehicles
outside.
In
July 2008 party secretary Ji Bingxuan of Heilongjiang
directed local police to rescue Du Xiguang, a 14-year-old
migrant child worker in Harbin, and instructed local police
to ensure that no business in the city hired children.
On
April 1, the government announced a reward system to
encourage persons to report the use of child labor, and it
continued to react strongly to any publicized cases of child
labor. However, many experts believed that child labor could
not be eliminated without reform of rural education system
and increased rural economic activity.
e.
Acceptable Conditions of Work
There
was no national minimum wage, but the labor law requires
local governments to set their own minimum wage according to
standards promulgated by the Ministry of Human Resources and
Social Security. These standards include the minimum cost of
living for workers and their families, levels of economic
development, and employment in the area, as well as the
level of social insurance and other benefits contributions
paid by the employees themselves. Labor bureaus set these
standards to cover basic needs. The regulation states that
labor and social security bureaus at or above the county
level are responsible for enforcement of the law. It
provides that where the ACFTU finds an employer in violation
of the regulation, it shall have the power to demand that
the relevant labor bureaus deal with the case.
Wage
arrears remained a common problem. Governments at various
levels continued their efforts to prevent arrears and
recover payment of missing wages and insurance
contributions. Legal aid lawyers and government sources
reported that nonpayment or underpayment of wages accounted
for a large portion of labor disputes. The incidence of wage
arrears continued to increase early in the year as many of
the country's export-oriented manufacturers, facing a sharp
decline in orders from overseas, began to lay off large
numbers of workers.
The
estimated 230 million migrant workers faced numerous other
obstacles with regard to working conditions and labor
rights. Many were unable to access public services such as
public education or social insurance in the cities where
they lived and worked because they were not legally
registered urban residents.
The
labor law mandates a 40-hour standard workweek, excluding
overtime, and a 24-hour weekly rest period. It also
prohibits overtime work in excess of three hours per day or
36 hours per month and mandates a required percentage of
additional pay for overtime work. However, in practice
compliance with the law was weak, and standards were
regularly violated, particularly in the private sector and
in enterprises that used low-skilled migrant or seasonal
labor.
There
was inadequate enforcement of wage regulations, and a
significant percentage of labor disputes filed by workers
were due to insufficient overtime payments. There were
reports that companies required workers to sign false
contracts and often maintained fraudulent records to deceive
government inspectors and factory auditors.
Other
illegal practices effectively reduced workers' wages,
including arbitrary fines and wage deductions levied by
employers for alleged breaches of company rules.
While
many labor laws and regulations on worker safety are fully
compatible with international standards, implementation and
enforcement were generally poor. The Ministry of Human
Resource and Social Security reported that in 2008 there
were only 23,000 full-time professional inspectors and
indicated that there were areas in which a single labor
inspector would be responsible for more than 50,000 workers.
Inadequate and poorly enforced occupational health and
safety laws and regulations continued to put workers' health
and lives at risk. The State Administration for Work Safety
(SAWS) sets and enforces occupational health and safety
regulations. The work safety law states that employees have
the right, after finding an emergency situation that
threatens their personal safety, to evacuate the workplace.
Employers are forbidden to cancel the labor contracts or
reduce the wages or benefits of any employee who takes such
action. In practice such protective provisions were poorly
enforced at the local level.
Businesses and factories that violate occupational hazard
regulations face closure and a maximum penalty of RMB
300,000 (approximately $44,000); they also are required to
inform employees about possible occupational hazards and
their consequences and provide occupational hazards
prevention training. In addition, employers are required to
give their workers necessary health checkups and buy
protective gear for employees working around hazards.
Businesses that violate the provision received a warning
from SAWS, ordering them to correct the practice within a
time limit. Enterprises that did not correct the problem
within the time limit were fined.
The
coal industry continued to have a high incidence of
accidents and fatalities, but SAWS reported that annual
deaths from coalmine accidents dropped 62.4 percent from a
peak of 6,995 in 2002 to 2,630 during the year, and the
death rate per million tons of mined coal has dropped 84.4
percent from 2000. Independent labor groups stated the
actual casualty figures could be much higher, since many
accidents were covered up.
The
government continued efforts to improve mine safety, which
included a policy of consolidating the industry into larger,
better-regulated mining companies. In December the
government announced that it had closed approximately 1,000
small coal mines during the year, cutting down the total
number of coal mines to 15,000 across the country. (This
followed a similar number of shutdown mines in 2008). In May
the government launched a new nationwide safety inspection
program for small coal mines. The campaign, to be jointly
carried out by the National Development and Reform
Commission, the State Energy Administration, SAWS, and the
State Administration of Coal Mine Safety, targeted small
mines with an annual production capacity of less than
300,000 tons.
Many
workers encountered difficulties in obtaining compensation
for work-related injuries. In July migrant miner Zhang
Haichao voluntarily underwent surgery to open up his chest
to prove he had pneumoconiosis, an occupational lung
disease, after repeated attempts to claim compensation for
pneumoconiosis failed. After proving the lung disease, Zhang
finally received compensation. According to official media
reports, more than 100 migrant workers in Shenzhen who
claimed compensation due to pneumoconiosis were refused by
the local occupational health authority due to their lack of
written labor contracts.
The
government sought to prosecute some employers responsible
for work-related accidents. The most highly publicized was
the State Council's decision to impose harsh criminal and
disciplinary penalties on 169 persons held responsible for
five major accidents in 2007 and 2008. The cases, involving
131 individuals, were handed over to judicial departments
for criminal prosecution. The five accidents included a 2007
mine blast in Linfen, Shanxi Province, that killed 105; an
April 2008 train collision that claimed 72 lives; and a
September 2008 landslide at an unlicensed iron ore tailings
facility, also in Linfen, that killed 277 persons.
In
addition, in May police detained the manager and four
production and management directors of a privately owned
mine in Dengfeng after seven persons died of gas poisoning
and the managers tried to cover up the accident. In June
four construction officials and a driver were arrested for
actions that allegedly caused the deaths of 11 miners at the
Majialiang coal mine in Shanxi Province, where
concentrations of toxic gas were too high. In August police
detained 11 individuals for allegedly covering up a coal
mine accident that left six persons dead in Shanxi Province.
In September authorities prosecuted 13 officials and
managers after two mining accidents in Henan Province caused
at least 57 deaths. In December a local court in Hebei
Province handed down sentences, including one death penalty,
to 21 persons connected with a fatal mine explosion that
claimed 26 lives in 2008.
TIBET
The United States recognizes the Tibet Autonomous Region
(TAR) and Tibetan autonomous prefectures, counties, and
townships in other provinces to be a part of the People's
Republic of China. The Tibetan population within the TAR was
approximately 2.8 million, while the Tibetan population
outside the TAR was an estimated 2.9 million. The government
strictly controlled information about, and access to, the
TAR and Tibetan areas outside the TAR, making it difficult
to determine accurately the scope of human rights abuses.
The government intensified these controls following the
March 2008 unrest in Tibetan areas and continued the policy
during the year.
The
government's human rights record in Tibetan areas of China
remained poor, and the severe repression of freedoms of
speech, religion, association, and movement that increased
dramatically following the March 2008 Lhasa riots and
subsequent unrest that occurred across the Tibetan Plateau
continued during the year. Authorities continued to commit
serious human rights abuses, including extrajudicial
killings, torture, arbitrary arrests, extrajudicial
detention, and house arrest. The preservation and
development of Tibet's unique religious, cultural, and
linguistic heritage remained a concern.
In
March 2008 monks and nuns from a number of monasteries in
Lhasa and other Tibetan communities mounted peaceful
protests to commemorate the anniversary of the 1959 Tibetan
uprising. After four days the protests and security response
devolved into rioting by Tibetans and a violent police
crackdown in Lhasa. Some protesters resorted to violence, in
some cases deadly, against Han and Hui residents. The
ensuing police actions resulted in an unknown number of
deaths, injuries, arrests, and human rights abuses. During
the year a number of Tibetans, especially monks, were
sentenced to prison for their role in the 2008 protests and
riots.
A
significant number of People's Armed Police (PAP) remained
in many communities across the Tibetan Plateau during the
year. The fallout from the protests continued to affect the
human rights situation in Tibetan regions of China.
Deprivation of Life
There were numerous reports that the government or its
agents committed arbitrary or unlawful killings; however, it
was not possible to verify independently these reports.
There were no reports that officials investigated or
punished those responsible for the killings.
On
January 23, Pema Tsepag died of injuries sustained during
beatings by authorities after he and two other Tibetan
youths protested in Dzogang County, Chamdo Prefecture,
calling for independence for Tibet and a boycott of the
Tibetan New Year.
According to the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and
Democracy (TCHRD), on March 25, public security agents
killed 27-year-old monk Phuntsok Rabten of Drango Monastery
in Drango County, Kardze (Ganzi), Sichuan Province, for
distributing leaflets calling for a work strike.
In
March Panchou Lede, a monk from the Hor Drago Monastery, was
killed in a clash that erupted between Tibetan farmers and
soldiers when the farmers refused to sign a pledge
committing to keep a certain percentage of their land under
cultivation. According to press reports, the monk had been
organizing farmers to refuse to plant crops.
In
August, according to TCHRD reports, 32-year-old Kalden, a
monk from Drepung Monastery, died after being tortured in a
Lhasa prison. Kalden was arrested in March 2008, and his
relatives were not informed of his detention location.
Following the outbreak of protests in 2008, the government
reported that 22 persons were killed in the Lhasa violence,
including 18 civilians, one police officer, and three
rioters. However, outside observers, including Tibetan exile
groups and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), variously
placed the number of persons killed in Tibetan areas due to
official suppression that began March 10 at between 100 and
218.
According to official media, in April Lobsang Gyaltsen and
Loyak were sentenced to death for their participation in the
2008 riots in Lhasa on charges related to "starting fatal
fires." The government confirmed that they were executed on
October 23. Reports of a third Tibetan executed at the same
time could not be confirmed.
Disappearance
Following the March 2008 riots in Lhasa, authorities
arrested Tibetans arbitrarily, including monks and nuns,
many of whom remained missing. Official statistics for the
number detained were incomplete and covered only limited
areas. On February 10, official media reported that 953
persons were detained or had surrendered to police in Lhasa
following the riots. The report stated that 76 persons were
sentenced to prison in connection with the unrest, and an
additional 116 were awaiting trial.
According to the International Campaign for Tibet, Northwest
Nationalities University student Tashi Rabten disappeared in
July, soon after publication of his book Written in Blood.
Tashi Rabten had edited a banned collection of writings on
the March 2008 demonstrations.
Documentarian Dhondup Wangchen remained in an undisclosed
prison near Xining, Qinghai Province. Authorities forced
Dhondup Wangchen to fire his original Beijing-based defense
counsel and told his family that only lawyers based in
Qinghai Province could represent him. Qinghai authorities
refused a request by foreign diplomats to observe his trial.
On December 28, a court in Qinghai Province sentenced
Dhondup Wangchen to six years in prison for making a film
critical of human rights conditions in Tibet. At year's end
there was no information on where he was serving his
sentence.
There
was no information on the whereabouts of five monks,
including Sonam Rabgyal, Damdul, and Rabgyal, who
disappeared following an April 2008 midnight raid on the
Ramoche Temple in Lhasa. The whereabouts of Paljor Norbu, a
Tibetan traditional painter sentenced to seven years in
prison after a secret trial in November 2008, remained
unknown at year's end. No new information was available on
the whereabouts of Phuntsok Gyaltsen, the deputy head of
Phurbu Township, Palgon County, who was detained in 2007.
The
whereabouts of the Panchen Lama, Gendun Choekyi Nyima,
Tibetan Buddhism's second-most prominent figure after the
Dalai Lama, and his family remained unknown. In October
government officials in Tibet told a visiting foreign
delegation that Gendun Choekyi Nyima was "growing up very
well, loves Chinese culture and enjoying his life." The
officials asserted that his identification as the 11th
Panchen Lama was "illegal."
Torture
The
security regime employed torture and degrading treatment in
dealing with some detainees and prisoners. Tibetans
repatriated from Nepal reportedly suffered torture,
including electric shocks, exposure to cold, and severe
beatings, and were forced to perform heavy physical labor.
Prisoners were subjected routinely to "political
investigation" sessions and were punished if deemed
insufficiently loyal to the state.
In
March police severely beat 21-year-old Tibetan nun Lobsang
Khandro from the Gema Dra-wok Nunnery for carrying out an
individual protest in Kardze (Ganzi) Prefecture. She
carried pamphlets and some prayer flags and shouted calls
for freedom and the Dalai Lama as she walked to the Kardze (Ganzi)
Prefecture government headquarters.
On May
24, according to the TCHRD, police injured six persons in
Tawu County of Kardze (Ganzi) Prefecture, Sichuan Province,
while breaking up a protest against a hydroelectric project.
According to numerous sources, many of those detained after
the rioting in March 2008 were subjected to extrajudicial
punishments such as severe beatings and deprivation of food,
water, and sleep for long periods. In some cases detainees
suffered broken bones and other serious injuries at the
hands of PAP and Public Security Bureau (PSB) officers.
According to eyewitnesses, the bodies of persons killed
during the unrest or subsequent interrogation were disposed
of secretly rather than returned to their families.
During
his trial, which began on April 21, Phurbu Tsering Rinpoche,
head of Pangri and Yatseg nunneries in Kardze (Ganzi), who
was arrested in March 2008, claimed that police handcuffed
him with arms outstretched to an iron pillar and forced him
to stand while they interrogated him continuously for four
days and four nights. They told Phurbu Tsering Rinpoche that
if he did not confess his wife and son would be detained.
His trial was later postponed indefinitely. Foreign
diplomats asked to observe the trial but received no reply.
In late December a court sentenced Phurbu Tsering Rinpoche
to eight-and-a-half years in prison for illegal possession
of weapons and ammunition (see Denial of Fair Public Trial
section).
On May
3, Tibetan monk Jigme Guri from the Labrang Monastery was
released from prison. He alleged that prison authorities
beat him repeatedly during two months of detention beginning
in March 2008. According to Jigme, the beatings left him
unconscious for six days, and he required two
hospitalizations.
Prison
Conditions
The
mass detentions connected with the March 2008 unrest
amplified already crowded and harsh prison conditions. Some
prisons used forced labor, including those in the public
security reeducation through labor system (RTL), to which
prisoners may be assigned for two years without court review,
detention centers, and prison work sites. The law states
that prisoners may be required to work up to 12 hours per
day, with one rest day every two weeks, but sometimes these
regulations were not enforced; conditions varied from prison
to prison.
According to numerous sources, political prisoners in
Tibetan areas endured unsanitary conditions and often had
little opportunity to wash or bathe. Many prisoners slept on
the floor without blankets and sheets. Prisoners reported
having to "sleep" side by side with 20 to 30 cell mates for
many days.
Former
detainees reported that prisoners were not provided with
enough food. According to sources, prisoners rarely received
medical care unless they had a serious illness. Prisoners
also complained that they often failed to receive money,
food, clothing, and books sent by their families because
such items were routinely confiscated by prison guards.
Arbitrary Arrest and Detention
During
the year arbitrary arrest and detention continued in Tibetan
areas. Police legally may detain persons for up to 37 days
without formally arresting or charging them. Following the
37-day period, police must either formally arrest or release
the detainees. Police must notify the relatives or employer
of an arrested person within 24 hours of the arrest. In
practice police frequently violated these requirements.
Official state media reported the detentions of 4,434
persons in Tibetan areas (1,315 in Lhasa) between March and
April 2008, although in November 2008, official media
reported that approximately 1,317 persons were arrested,
1,115 of whom were released afterwards. Overseas
organizations and the Tibet government-in-exile placed the
total number detained at more than 5,600.
Many
prisoners were subject to the RTL system or other forms of
detention not subject to judicial review.
Political Prisoners and Detainees
Due to the lack of independent access to prisoners and
prisons, it was impossible to ascertain the number of
Tibetan political prisoners. A number of the Tibetans
arrested or detained in the days and weeks following the
spring 2008 protests were sentenced throughout the year.
Many prisoners were held in the extrajudicial RTL prisons
operated by the Ministry of Public Security and never
appeared in public court.
Based
on information available from the Congressional Executive
Commission on China's political prisoner database, at year's
end there were 754 Tibetan political prisoners imprisoned in
Tibetan areas. However, the actual number of Tibetan
political prisoners and detainees was believed to be much
higher. Of the 754 documented currently detained political
prisoners and detainees, 715 were detained on or after the
March 2008 protests and 447 political prisoners and
detainees were Tibetan Buddhist monks and nuns. At year's
end the commission's database contained sentencing
information on only 148 of the Tibetan political prisoners.
The judicial system imposed sentences on these 148 political
prisoners ranging from one year to life imprisonment. An
unknown number of prisoners continued to be held under the
RTL system.
On
February 5, six Tibetans in Kardze (Ganzi) Prefecture,
Sichuan, were sentenced from 18 months to three years in
prison for participating in protests.
On May
21, according to the TCHRD, Tsultrim Gyatso, a monk of
Labrang Monastery in southern Gansu Province, was sentenced
to life imprisonment for "endangering state security."
The
TCHRD reported that on July 3, the Lithang County, Kardze (Ganzi)
Prefecture intermediate people's court sentenced Tibetan
monk Jamyang Tenzin of Yonru Geyden Rabgayling Monastery,
Lithang County, to three years' imprisonment for opposing a
work team sent to conduct a "patriotic education campaign"
at his monastery.
On
August 13, the TCHRD reported that eight Tibetans in Machen
County were sentenced to one to seven years in prison
following protests related to the suicide of Tashi Sangpo,
which was reportedly triggered by his inhumane treatment at
the hands of the police.
According to the Agence France Presse, early in the year
authorities handed down sentences ranging from three years
to life in prison to a total of 76 persons involved in the
March 2008 riots. In April Lobsang Gyaltsen and Loyak were
sentenced to death for setting fires to shops that
reportedly resulted in seven deaths, and they were executed
in October. Two others were given suspended death sentences.
Wangdu
(Wangdui), a former employee of an HIV/AIDS prevention
project run by a foreign NGO, who in 2008 was sentenced to
life imprisonment for engaging in "espionage" on behalf of
the "Dalai clique," remained in prison. Migmar Dhondup,
another former employee of a foreign NGO, also remained in
prison on the same charge.
Prominent Buddhist figure Tenzin Delek Rinpoche remained in
a Sichuan prison on firearms charges. According to Tibetan
sources, the firearms were left at his temple by a group who
had renounced hunting.
Dozens
of monks and nuns who resisted "patriotic education"
campaigns before the March 2008 protests continued serving
prison terms.
According to the TCHRD, the PSB arrested Kunga Tsayang, a
monk from the Amdo Labrang Tashi Kyil Monastery, during a
late-night raid on March 17; at year's end his whereabouts
remained unknown. The reported disappearance of Kunga
Tsayang was part of a continuing sweep of Tibetan Internet
writers that began after the March 2008 unrest. On November
12, he was sentenced to five years in prison on charges of
disclosing state secrets in a closed-door trial by the
Kanlho Intermediate People's Court in Gannan, Gansu
Province.
The
following persons also remained in prison: Rongye Adrak;
Adak Lupoe; lama Jigme Tenzin (Jinmei Danzeng) aka Bangri
Chogtrul; Jarib Lothog; monk Lodroe; Khenpo Jinpa; Jarib
Lothog; art teacher and musician Kunkhyen; Buchung; Penpa;
and Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche; monk Choeying Khedrub (Quyin
Kezhu); Dawa (also called Gyaltsen Namdak); monk Lobsang
Palden; teacher Dolma Kyab; Sherab Yonten, Sonam Gyelpo,
retired physician Yeshe Choedron (Yixi Quzhen) monk Tenzin
Bucheng (Danzeng Puqiong), monk Lobsang Ngodrub; and monk
Tsering Dhondup.
Denial
of Fair Public Trial
Legal
safeguards for Tibetans detained or imprisoned were
inadequate in both design and implementation. Most judges in
the TAR had little or no legal training. According to a TAR
Bureau of Justice official, all seven cities and prefectures
had established legal assistance centers that offered
services in the Tibetan language. Prisoners may request a
meeting with a government-appointed attorney, but in
practice many defendants did not have access to legal
representation.
Lawyers who volunteered to represent detainees involved in
the March 2008 protests received warnings from authorities
not to take on such cases. Authorities threatened some with
punishment or placed them under police surveillance. In
cases involving state security, trials often were cursory
and closed. Authorities denied multiple requests from
foreign diplomats to observe the trials of those charged
with crimes related to the March 2008 unrest. By law maximum
prison sentences for crimes such as "endangering state
security" and "splitting the country" are 15 years for each
count, not to exceed 20 years in total. Authorities
sentenced Tibetans for alleged support of Tibetan
independence regardless of whether their activities involved
violence.
In
November 2008 the Sichuan Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous
Prefecture Intermediate People's Court sentenced Dorje
Kangzhu, a 34-year-old nun, to seven years in prison for
"inciting secession." She was arrested for distributing
Tibetan independence leaflets and shouting pro-Tibet slogans
in May 2008.
In
late December Phurbu Tsering Rinpoche, a senior religious
leader who allegedly had been tortured to get a false
confession, was sentenced to eight-and-a-half years in
prison on weapons charges following the riots in Tibet.
Prosecutors maintained that a pistol and ammunition were
found during a police raid, but Phurbu Tsering Rinpoche
countered that he had been framed. The monk's lawyer stated
he had given a false confession after police deprived him of
sleep for four days (see Torture section).
Freedom of Speech and Press
Tibetans who spoke to foreign reporters, attempted to relay
information to foreigners outside the country, or passed
information regarding the 2008 protests were subject to
harassment or detention.
The
government severely restricted travel by foreign journalists
to Tibetan areas. In the TAR, foreign journalists can gain
access to the region only by participating in highly
structured government organized tours, where the constant
presence of government minders makes independent reporting
difficult. Outside the TAR, foreign journalists were
frequently expelled despite new government rules, adopted in
October 2008, that state foreign journalists no longer need
the permission of local authorities to conduct reporting.
In
March the Foreign Correspondents' Club of China urged the
government to halt detentions of journalists and open
Tibetan areas for news coverage. Reporters from at least six
different news organizations were detained or had their
property confiscated when they attempted to visit Tibetan
areas of Gansu, Sichuan, and Qinghai provinces ahead of the
first anniversary of social unrest in Tibet.
For
example, on February 27, PSB authorities detained Edward
Wong and Jonathan Ansfield, two New York Times
reporters, in Gansu Province for nearly 24 hours and forced
them to board a flight back to Beijing the next day. On
March 8, police detained Isabel Hormaeche, a producer with
broadcaster TVE, and her team in Sichuan Province. Some of
their materials were confiscated, and they were escorted out
of the region. On March 9, authorities detained Beniamino
Natale, a reporter with ANSA news agency, along with two
colleagues for more than two hours after they visited a
monastery in Qinghai Province. At approximately the same
time, police repeatedly detained and followed Katri Makkonen
of the Finnish Broadcasting Company on the road from Tongren
to Xining, Qinghai Province. No explanation was given for
the police actions.
In
August Reporters Without Borders reported the arrests of
four Tibetan writers: Zhuori Cicheng, the monk Gang Ni,
journalist Tashi Rabten (aka Therang), and Kang Gongque.
Kang Gongque was sentenced to two years in a Sichuan
Province prison.
The
government continued to jam radio broadcasts of Voice of
America's (VOA) and Radio Free Asia's (RFA) Tibetan and
Chinese-language services and the Oslo-based Voice of Tibet.
In Tibetan areas of southern Gansu Province and the Kardze (Ganzi)
Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province, police
confiscated or destroyed satellite dishes suspected of
receiving VOA Tibetan language television as well as VOA and
RFA audio satellite channels. Some Tibetans reported that at
times they were able to receive such radio broadcasts
despite frequent jamming. Some Tibetans were able to listen
to overseas Tibetan-language radio and television on the
Internet.
Cell
phone service and Internet service in the TAR and the
Tibetan areas of Sichuan, Qinghai, and Gansu provinces were
curtailed at times during the March period of sensitive
anniversaries and the new "Serf Liberation Day" (see
Academic Freedom and Protection of Cultural Heritage).
Officials also routinely denied foreign media
representatives access to Tibetan areas, ostensibly out of
concern for their safety. Domestic journalists reporting on
repression in Tibetan areas faced punishment.
Internet Freedom
The
Internet blog of well-known Tibetan poet and journalist,
Tsering Woeser, remained inaccessible to Internet users
inside China due to official Internet filtering. Authorities
continued to refuse to issue Woeser a passport. Most foreign
Tibet-related Web sites critical of official policy in
Tibetan areas were blocked to users in China throughout the
year. On March 24, government censors blocked the YouTube
site after a video purporting to show police beating a
Tibetan monk appeared on the site.
Official censorship greatly hampered the development of
Tibetan-language Internet sites. Although the government
funded projects designed to improve Tibetan-language
computer interfaces, security agencies responsible for
monitoring the Internet often lacked the language skills
necessary to monitor Tibetan content. As a result,
Tibetan-language blogs and Web sites were subject to blunt
censorship, with entire sites closed down even when the
content did not appear to touch upon sensitive topics.
On
February 26, police in Machu County, Gannan Tibetan
Autonomous Prefecture, arrested Kunchok Tsephel Gopey Tsang,
owner of the Tibetan cultural and literary Web site "The
Lamp," which was taken off the Internet for several months.
In November he was sentenced to 15 years in prison on
charges of disclosing state secrets.
According to the Dui Hua Foundation, Gonpo Tserang was
sentenced in Dechen, TAR, to three years in prison for
"inciting separatism" by sending e-mail and text messages
about the March 2008 protests. The verdict from the trial
stated that "Gonpo Tserang used the Internet to deliberately
fabricate rumors, distort the true situation to incite
separatism."
In
February both Internet and cell phone text messaging was cut
off in various parts of Kardze (Ganzi) and Aba prefectures
in the TAR.
Academic Freedom and Protection of Cultural Heritage
Authorities in Tibetan areas required professors and
students at institutions of higher education to attend
political education sessions in an effort to prevent
separatist political and religious activities on campus.
Ethnic Tibetan academics were frequently encouraged to
participate in government propaganda efforts, such as by
making public speeches supporting government policies or
accepting interviews by official media. Academics who failed
to cooperate with such efforts faced diminished prospects
for promotion. Academics in China who publicly criticized
the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) policies on Tibetan
affairs faced official reprisal. The government controlled
curricula, texts, and other course materials as well as the
publication of historically or politically sensitive
academic books.
Rapid
economic growth, the expanding tourism industry, the forced
resettlement of nomads, and the introduction of more modern
cultural influences continued to disrupt traditional living
patterns and customs.
The
2002 revision of the 1987 Regulation on the Study, Use, and
Development of the Tibetan Language in the TAR formally
lowered the status of the Tibetan language from the primary
working language to an optional language in many official
contexts.
In
January the Lhasa Municipal PSB began a city-wide "strike
hard" campaign. Although ostensibly an anticrime operation,
police searched private homes, guest houses, hotels, bars,
and Internet cafes for photographs of the Dalai Lama and
other politically forbidden items. Police examined the cell
phones of Lhasa residents to search for "reactionary music"
from India and photographs of the Dalai Lama. According to a
foreign press report, more than 5,000 suspects were
investigated, and at least 81 were detained. Human rights
groups believed the motive behind the "strike hard" campaign
was to harass human rights activists and supporters of
Tibetan independence.
Many
Tibetans both inside and outside the country advocated that
the Losar Tibetan New Year holiday, which fell on February
25, be a day of remembrance and prayer, rather than
celebration, in light of the deaths that occurred in 2008.
To counter this Losar boycott, officials in many Tibetan
regions ordered Tibetans to celebrate the holiday. In some
Tibetan areas, authorities distributed fireworks to
government offices and work units with orders that workers
participate in celebrations. The state media devoted heavy
coverage to Losar activities. More than 100 monks from
Lutsang Monastery, in Guinan, Qinghai Province, conducted a
candlelight vigil on the Tibetan New Year and a peaceful
march to the county government headquarters. They were
arrested, and all but six were released a few weeks later.
In April four of the monks were sentenced to two years in
prison.
On
March 28, the TAR celebrated a newly created holiday, "Serf
Emancipation Day," to mark the day in 1959 that China's
rulers formally abolished the Dalai Lama's regional
government. Government-orchestrated celebrations included a
large ceremony in the square of the Potala Palace and a
televised musical gala. In the run-up to the new holiday,
the official media launched a new round of criticism of the
Dalai Lama. A government white paper released prior to the
holiday stated the Dalai Lama's family once owned 6,000
slaves, and the country's liberation of Tibetan serfs "is
entirely comparable to the emancipation of slaves in the
American Civil War."
The
Dalai Lama and other observers expressed concern that
development projects and other central government policies
disproportionately benefited non-Tibetans and continued to
promote a considerable influx of Han, Hui, and other ethnic
groups into the TAR. On November 24, the Chinese government
reported that the railroad into the TAR had carried 8.3
million passengers and 62.21 metric tons of freight since
its opening in 2006.
Residents lacked the right to play a role in protecting
their cultural heritage, including their environment. In
2007 the TAR government revised the TAR Cultural Relics
Protection Regulations, asserting ownership over religious
relics and monasteries.
Tibetan and Mandarin are official languages in the TAR, and
both languages appeared on public and commercial signs.
Mandarin was widely spoken and was used for most official
communications. The illiteracy rate among Tibetans was more
than five times higher (47.6 percent) than the national
average (9.1 percent), according to 2000 census data. In
many rural and nomadic areas, children received only one to
three years of Tibetan-language education before continuing
their education in a Mandarin-language school. According to
official figures, the illiteracy rate among youth and
working-age adults fell from 30.9 percent in 2003 to 2.4
percent in 2008. However, the illiteracy rate for this group
was much higher in some areas. According to a 2006 report by
the Xinhua News Agency, a looser definition of literacy was
used for Tibetan speakers than for Mandarin speakers in
rural Tibet. Tibetan-speaking peasants and nomads were
considered literate if they could read and write the 30
letters of the Tibetan syllabary and read and write simple
notes. Mandarin-speaking nomads and herders were considered
literate if they could recognize 1,500 Chinese characters.
The
government established a comprehensive national
Tibetan-language curriculum, and many elementary schools in
Tibetan areas used Tibetan as the primary language of
instruction. Tibetan students also were required to study
Chinese, and Chinese generally was used to teach certain
subjects, such as arithmetic and science. In middle and high
schools--even some officially designated as Tibetan
schools--teachers often used Tibetan only to teach classes
in Tibetan language, literature, and culture and taught all
other classes in Chinese.
As a
practical matter, proficiency in Mandarin was essential to
qualify for higher education. China's most prestigious
universities provided no instruction in Tibetan or other
ethnic minority languages. Lower-ranked universities
established to serve ethnic minority students only offered
Tibetan-language instruction in courses focused on the study
of the Tibetan language or culture. At the minority
universities, Tibetans and other ethnic minority students
typically achieved high proficiency in Mandarin, since much
of the curriculum, such as computer and business courses,
was in Mandarin.
Leading universities generally required English language
proficiency for matriculation. Most graduates of Tibetan
schools, however, learned only Mandarin and Tibetan and were
thus unable to attend the better universities. This resulted
in a shortage of Tibetans trained in science and engineering
and, consequently, a near-total reliance on imported
technical specialists from outside the TAR to work on
development projects inside the TAR.
Freedom of Religion
While
the law provides for freedom of religious belief, the level
of actual religious freedom remained poor. During the year
the government maintained tight control over the teaching
and practice of Tibetan Buddhism. During the year the CCP
continued its efforts to discredit the Dalai Lama as a
religious leader and link reverence for him with political
opposition to the government and the CCP.
Press
and NGO reports suggested that continued tight government
controls on religious practices and places of worship in
Tibetan areas, in addition to social and economic factors,
were among the major reasons for the buildup of resentments
that led to the widespread protests that began in March
2008. Although authorities permitted many traditional
practices and public manifestations of belief, they promptly
and forcibly suppressed activities they viewed as vehicles
for political dissent or advocacy of Tibetan independence,
including openly worshipping the Dalai Lama. Government
officials closely associated Buddhist monasteries with
pro-independence activism in Tibetan areas.
During
the year authorities locked down many monasteries across
Tibetan areas, detaining and physically abusing an unknown
number of monks and nuns or expelling them from their
monasteries. At year's end more than 500 monks from other
Tibetan areas outside of the TAR who were expelled from
monasteries in Lhasa in 2008 had not been permitted to
return. In some Tibetan regions, local PSBs installed
cameras and opened police substations inside monasteries to
monitor the behavior of monks.
On
July 24, according to the TCHRD, Lobsang Tsultrim, the
disciplinary head monk of the Jachung Monastery in a Qinghai
Province, was expelled from his monastery and forbidden to
join any other monastery after no monk turned up for a
"patriotic education" session officials ordered him to call.
Lobsang Tsultrim was accused of opposing the "patriotic
education" campaign.
Following the March 2008 unrest, authorities forced many
monks to attend weekly, sometimes daily, political education
sessions. This policy continued during the year, although
the frequency and intensity of these campaigns declined.
During the year "patriotic education" and "legal education"
programs continued to be held at monastic institutions,
workplaces, businesses, and schools. In some areas these
political education campaigns involved forced denunciations
of the Dalai Lama. Officials also forced monks to remove
portraits of the Dalai Lama from prayer halls and personal
residences, although enforcement varied significantly by
region. Restriction on religious expression was most intense
at high-profile monasteries, such as Drepung and Sera in
Lhasa, in Kardze (Ganzi), and Kirti Monasteries in Sichuan,
Labrang in Xiahe, Gansu Province and Kumbum near Xining,
Qinghai province
Security measures intensified in the TAR and other Tibetan
areas during the Dalai Lama's birthday, sensitive
anniversaries, like the 50th anniversary of the 1959 Tibetan
uprising in March, and festival days. The prohibition on
celebrating the Dalai Lama's birthday on July 6 continued.
The
government continued to ban pictures of Gendun Choekyi Nyima,
the boy recognized by the Dalai Lama as the Panchen Lama.
Photographs of the "official" Panchen Lama, Gyaltsen Norbu,
were not widely displayed except at some high-profile
monasteries under tight government control and then only at
the insistence of government leaders. However, photographs
of the previous Panchen Lama, his daughter, and the Karmapa
(the leader of Tibetan Buddhism's Karma Kagyu schools and
one of the most influential religious figures in Tibetan
Buddhism who fled to India in 1999) were widely sold and
displayed. The ability of Tibetan Buddhist monks and nuns to
possess and display photographs of the Dalai Lama varied
greatly depending on location. In general rural monasteries
rarely visited by Han tourists and officials were able to
display photographs of the Dalai Lama. In some monasteries,
monks were able to display photographs of the Dalai Lama in
their private quarters, although such images were not always
allowed to be shown in public areas.
The
government restricted ethnic Han Buddhists from living and
studying in monasteries in the TAR and other Tibetan areas.
Monks outside the TAR desiring to study in the TAR are
required to obtain official permission from the religious
affairs bureaus (RABs) of their home province and the TAR or
Tibetan area involved, and such permission was not readily
granted.
Although Tibetan monks were not allowed to conduct
large-scale religious teachings outside Tibetan areas, many
monks continued to give private teachings to audiences in
non-Tibetan regions of China. According to reports, ethnic
Han Buddhists outside Tibetan areas were sometimes
discouraged from inviting Tibetan monks to give teachings.
Such visits required explicit permission from both the
monk's local RAB and the receiving province's RAB.
Nevertheless, Tibetan monks sometimes traveled in plain
clothes outside the TAR and other Tibetan areas to teach.
Monasteries in the TAR and major monasteries in other
Tibetan areas were not allowed to establish relationships
with other monasteries or hold joint religious activities.
One example was the repeated refusal of authorities in
Barkham County in the TAR to grant permission to hold an
annual religious event at the Tsodham Monastery. This event,
scheduled to take place in early 2010, would have brought
together monks from 50 monasteries in the Kham and Amdo
areas of the TAR.
The government continued to fund restoration efforts of
religious and cultural sites as part of its program to
develop tourism in Tibetan areas. Many Tibetans worried that
the promotion of tourism to monasteries distracted monks
from their religious work.
For a more detailed discussion, see the 2009
International Religious Freedom Report at
www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/.
Freedom of Movement
The
law provides for the freedom to travel; however, in practice
the government strictly regulated travel and freedom of
movement of Tibetans.
Freedom of movement, particularly for monks and nuns, was
limited severely within Lhasa and throughout the TAR, and in
Tibetan areas of Qinghai, Gansu, and Sichuan provinces. The
PAP and local PSBs set up multiple roadblocks and
checkpoints on major roads, in cities, and on the outskirts
of monasteries. Tibetans traveling in religious attire were
subject to extra scrutiny by police at roadside checkpoints.
Several Tibetan monks reported that it remained difficult to
travel outside their home monasteries, with officials
frequently denying permission for outside monks to stay
temporarily at a particular monastery for religious
education.
Many
Tibetans, particularly prominent religious figures,
scholars, and dissidents, as well as those from rural areas,
continued to report difficulties obtaining passports. It has
been more difficult for Tibetans to obtain passports
following the March 2008 protests. The renewal of existing
passports was also difficult for ethnic Tibetans. In some
cases, Tibetans had to promise not to travel to India to
obtain a passport. In some cases Tibetan students with
scholarships to foreign universities could not study abroad
because authorities refused to issue them a passport.
Tibetans continued to encounter substantial difficulties and
obstacles in traveling to India for religious, educational,
and other purposes. Government and CCP cadres in the TAR and
Kardze (Ganzi) Prefecture in Sichuan were not allowed to
send their children to study abroad. In addition to passport
restrictions, reinforcement of border posts made travel,
such as pilgrimages to Nepal and India to see the Dalai
Lama, more difficult.
The
government restricted the movement of Tibetans during
sensitive anniversaries and events and increased controls
over border areas at these times. There were reports of
arbitrary detention of persons, particularly monks and nuns,
returning from India and Nepal. Detentions generally lasted
for several months, although in most cases authorities did
not bring formal charges against prisoners.
Tight
border controls sharply limited the number of persons
crossing the border into Nepal and India. The Tibet
Reception Center in Dharamsala, India, received 838 visitors
during the year. While this number was an increase from
2008, it was still down significantly from previous years.
The
Dalai Lama, the Karmapa, and leaders of all other schools of
Tibetan Buddhism remained in exile.
The
government also regulated foreign travel to the TAR. In
accordance with a 1989 regulation, foreign visitors were
required to obtain an official confirmation letter issued by
the PRC government before entering the TAR. Most tourists
obtained such letters by booking tours through officially
registered travel agencies. Authorities halted nearly all
foreign travel to Lhasa for several months following the
March 2008 demonstration. Foreign tourists were again banned
from the TAR in March during the 50th anniversary of the
1959 Tibetan uprising. After March the number of foreign
tourists traveling to Tibet increased, but authorities
enforced more tightly than before existing rules that
foreign visitors must remain with tour groups.
Foreign nationals who were granted official permission to
travel to Lhasa again had their movements restricted within
the city and surrounding areas. PRC officials continued to
severely restrict the access of diplomats and journalists to
Tibet. Foreign officials and reporters were able to travel
to the region only on closely chaperoned trips arranged by
the Tibet Foreign Affairs Office. Foreign diplomats must
obtain permission from the TAR's Foreign Affairs Office for
each visit to the TAR; permission was difficult to obtain.
Official visits to the TAR were supervised closely and
afforded delegation members very few opportunities to meet
local residents not previously approved by the authorities.
With the exception of a few highly controlled trips,
authorities repeatedly denied requests for international
observers to visit Tibetan areas to assess the situation.
National Minorities
Although TAR census figures showed that Tibetans made up 92
percent of the TAR's permanently registered population,
official figures did not include a large number of long-,
medium-, and short-term Han residents, such as cadres,
skilled workers, unskilled laborers, military and
paramilitary troops, and their dependents. Chinese social
scientists estimated the number of this floating population,
including tourists and visitors on short-term business
trips, for Lhasa alone was more than 200,000 (nearly half
the population of Lhasa and more than 10 percent of the
TAR's population) during the May to November high season for
tourism and migrant workers.
Migrants to the TAR overwhelmingly were concentrated in
urban areas, where government economic policies
disproportionately benefited Han Chinese. Small businesses,
mostly restaurants and retail shops, run by Han and Hui
migrants predominated in cities throughout Tibetan areas.
Tibetans continued to make up nearly 98 percent of the rural
population, according to official census figures.
The
government continued its resettlement campaign of Tibetan
nomads into urban areas across the TAR and other Tibetan
areas. Officials offered nomads monetary incentives to kill
or sell their livestock and move to newly created Tibetan
communities. However, reports existed of incidences of
compulsory resettlement with promised compensation that
either failed to materialize or was inadequate.
In
January 2007 TAR Party Secretary Zhang Qingli stated that
the restructuring of Tibetan farming and grazing communities
was not only to promote economic development but also to
counteract the Dalai Lama's influence. He also stated that
to do so was essential for "continuing to carry out major
development of west China." According to a March 20 Xinhua
report on the progress to settle all 219,800 herder
households in the TAR, by the end of 2008, 200,000
households, including one million farmers and herders, had
been settled into permanent housing.
Improving housing conditions and education for Tibet's
poorest were among the goals of resettlement, yet a
requirement that villagers build houses according to strict
official specifications within two or three years often
forced resettled families into debt to cover construction
costs.
Although a 2008 state media report noted that Tibetans and
other minority ethnic groups made up 69 percent of
government employees in the TAR, ethnic Han continued to
hold the top CCP positions in nearly all counties and
prefectures, including that of TAR party secretary. Tibetans
holding government positions were prohibited from
worshipping at monasteries or practicing their religion.
The
economic and social exclusion of Tibetans was a major reason
why such a varied cross section of Tibetans, including
business operators, workers, students, university graduates,
farmers, and nomads participated in the 2008 protests. Some
Tibetans reported that they experienced discrimination in
employment, and some job advertisements in the TAR noted
that Tibetans need not apply. Some claimed that Han Chinese
were hired preferentially for many jobs and received greater
pay for the same work. Some Tibetans reported that it was
more difficult for Tibetans than Han to obtain permits and
loans to open businesses. The use of the Mandarin language
was widespread in urban areas and many businesses limited
employment opportunities for Tibetans who did not speak
Mandarin. New restrictions on international NGOs that
provide assistance to Tibetan communities resulted in the
elimination of many NGO programs and the expulsion of many
foreign NGO workers from the TAR.
The
TAR tourism bureau continued its policy of refusing to hire
Tibetan tour guides educated in India or Nepal. Government
officials stated that all tour guides working in the TAR
were required to seek employment with the Tourism Bureau and
pass a licensing exam on tourism and political ideology. The
government's stated intent was to ensure that all tour
guides provided visitors with the government's position
opposing Tibetan independence and the activities of the
Dalai Lama. Some ethnic Tibetan tour guides in the TAR
complained of unfair competition from government-sponsored
"Help Tibet" tour guides brought in from outside the TAR and
put to work after receiving a crash course on Tibet.
Women
and Children
There
were no formal restrictions on women's participation in the
political system, and women held many lower-level government
positions. However, women were underrepresented at the
provincial and prefecture levels of government. According to
an official Web site, female cadres in the TAR accounted for
more than 30 percent of the TAR's total cadres.
There
was no information on the incidence of rape or domestic
violence.
Prostitution was a growing problem in Tibetan areas, and
hundreds of brothels operated semi-openly in Lhasa.
International development workers in the TAR reported there
were no reliable data on the number of persons engaged in
the commercial sex trade in Lhasa and Shigatse, the TAR's
two largest cities. Some of the prostitution occurred at
sites owned by the CCP, the government, and the military.
Most prostitutes in the TAR were ethnic Han women,
predominantly from Sichuan Province. However, some ethnic
Tibetans, mainly young girls from rural or nomadic areas,
also engaged in prostitution. While the incidence of
HIV/AIDS among those in prostitution in Tibetan areas was
unknown, the TAR Health Bureau reported 102 cases of
HIV/AIDS in the TAR between 1993 and 2009, including 28 new
cases during January and November. Lack of knowledge about
HIV transmission and economic pressures on women and girls
engaged in prostitution led them to engage in unprotected
sex.
Family
planning policies permitted Tibetans and members of other
relatively small minority groups to have more children than
ethnic Han. Some urban Tibetans who have permanent
employment, as well as CCP members and government officials,
and some ethnic Han living in Tibetan areas, generally were
limited to two children. Rural Tibetans were encouraged, but
not required, to limit births to three children.
According to official policy, primary education was
compulsory, free, and universal. According to official TAR
statistics, 96.5 percent of children between the ages of six
and 13 attended school, and 90 percent of the TAR's 520,000
primary school students completed lower middle school, for a
total of nine years of education. In 2003 the UN Special
Rapporteur on the Right to Education reported that official
Chinese education statistics did not accurately reflect
attendance and were not independently verified.
The
TAR is one of the few areas of China that does not have a
skewed sex ratio resulting from sex-selective abortion and
inadequate health care for female infants.
HONG KONG
Hong Kong, with a population of approximately seven million,
is a Special Administrative Region (SAR) of the People's
Republic of China (PRC). The 1984 Sino-British Joint
Declaration on the Question of Hong Kong and the SAR's
charter, the Basic Law of the SAR (the Basic Law), specify
that Hong Kong will enjoy a high degree of autonomy except
in matters of defense and foreign affairs. The Fourth Term
Legislative Council (LegCo) was elected from a combination
of geographic and functional constituencies in September
2008 elections that were generally free and fair. Civilian
authorities generally maintained effective control of the
security forces.
The
government generally respected the human rights of its
citizens, although core issues remained. The SAR limits the
ability of citizens to participate in and change their
government. Claims of press self-censorship persisted. The
legislature is limited in its power to introduce or amend
legislation and is not empowered to approve executive
appointments. Disproportionate political influence is
granted to certain sectors of society through the existence
of small-circle "functional constituencies," that elected
half of the LegCo. Societal prejudice against certain ethnic
minorities persisted. The government began steps to
implement a minimum wage for all workers except live-in
domestic helpers and student interns, who lacked a
guaranteed right to bargain collectively.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including
Freedom From:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
The government or its agents did not commit any politically
motivated killings.
On
March 17, a fatal police shooting occurred during an
altercation in which ethnic Nepali Dil Bahadur Limbu
violently resisted a police constable's request to examine
his identity documents. The officer reported he was unable
to subdue Limbu with his baton or pepper spray and that he
fired on Limbu after Limbu ignored verbal warnings and
continued to threaten him with the sharp end of a broken
chair. The police conducted an internal investigation into
the incident and reported their findings to the coroner May
29. At year's end the coroner's inquest was continuing.
Limbu's family and local activists expressed concern that
the police officer had given his warnings only in Cantonese
(which Limbu did not speak), as well as the subsequent
decision to hold the coroner's inquest in Cantonese
(simultaneous interpretation was provided in Nepalese and
English for participants and observers in the public
gallery). The family requested an independent inquiry into
the incident. The LegCo's Security Panel called for an
independent investigation.
b.
Disappearance
There
were no reports of politically motivated disappearances.
c.
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment
The
Basic Law prohibits torture and other forms of abuse, and
the government generally observed the prohibition in
practice. In the first half of the year, there were 184
allegations of assault by police officers on persons in
detention. As of June, 51 officers were investigated with
results endorsed by the Independent Police Complaints
Council (IPCC); the rest were pending at year's end.
Investigations found one case to be unsubstantiated, four to
be false, and 14 to be not pursuable; the remaining 32
allegations were withdrawn. There were 38 cases of assault
by police officers on persons not in custody filed, with 20
pending investigation as of June. Investigations into the
remaining 18 were endorsed by the IPCC, with three cases
found not pursuable and 15 complaints withdrawn.
The
Police Force's Complaints Against Police Office (CAPO),
monitored by the IPCC, investigated an August incident in
which narcotics officers reportedly entered a house without
presenting identification or search warrant until the search
had already been underway for an hour. Officers reportedly
handcuffed and beat two residents in the course of a search
for narcotics, reportedly leaving one resident with a
ruptured right eardrum.
On
September 18, a police officer was sentenced to 12 years in
jail for accessing his colleagues' files and then, in four
separate incidents, sexually assaulting three of them and
raping one. In response to this incident and five other
serious offenses committed by police officers in 2008, the
commissioner of police convened a committee of senior
officers and a representative of the Independent Commission
Against Corruption (ICAC) to consider ways to better monitor
officers' integrity and improve the police force's image. He
also announced changes to the police recruiting process to
take effect in 2010.
Police
use of strip searches during detentions of protesters and
criminal suspects, which the UN Committee Against Torture
had criticized in its 2008 Concluding Observations, remained
a concern for LegCo. A 2008 IPCC review of one case led the
CAPO to rule in July that repeated searches conducted each
time an individual entered and departed a holding facility
were incorrect. The police amended their general orders to
allow searches at officer discretion, rather than
automatically, each time an individual reentered a detention
facility. The police also revised guidelines when some or
all of a detainee's clothing is removed, including providing
a form explaining the reasons for the search and giving the
detainee the right to register a complaint. In addition all
full strip searches are reviewed by the relevant assistant
divisional commanders.
Police
continued to defend the use of intrusive searches, noting
the large quantity of narcotics seized from persons
attempting to smuggle them into detention facilities.
Correctional Services reported 98 seizures of illegal
narcotics in the January to July period.
Prison
and Detention Center Conditions
Prison conditions generally met international standards. The
government permitted monitoring visits by independent human
rights observers and such visits occurred during the year.
There are separate facilities for adult male and female
prisoners and for male and female juveniles. As of 2008 the
total population in prison, rehabilitation, or pretrial
detention was 10,491: 8,259 male and 2,232 female. As of
June a total of 79 juveniles under age 16 were serving
sentences in penal, retraining, or rehabilitation
facilities.
Through June the average prison occupancy rate was 94
percent. Overcrowding occurred in some prisons, particularly
in maximum security prisons, pretrial detention facilities,
and institutions for female inmates. The Lo Wu Correctional
Institution was being modified to reduce overcrowding in
facilities housing female inmates.
Between January and June, there were two deaths in police
custody. An inquest into one case led to a coroner's finding
of death by "natural causes." At year's end the second case
was pending an inquest.
On
August 31, the High Court (Court of First Instance) ruled
against the system by which prison administrators
adjudicated breaches of discipline, using denial of sentence
reductions as a penalty. The decision called for an
administrator not connected with the institution in which
the offense occurred to hear the case, that a standard of
"beyond a reasonable doubt" be applied to the charges, and
that the proceedings be recorded to permit review.
d.
Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
The
law prohibits arbitrary arrest or detention, and the
government generally observed these prohibitions.
Role
of the Police and Security Apparatus
Civilian authorities maintained effective control over the
police, and the government had generally effective
mechanisms to investigate and punish abuse and corruption.
There
were no reports of impunity involving the security forces
during the year. A July 2008 bill provided a statutory basis
for the existing IPCC, which is charged with overseeing
CAPO. The IPCC began operations as a statutory body on April
1. It observes, monitors, and reviews complaints and actions
taken in connection with such complaints. It may identify
any fault or deficiency in police practices or procedures
and make recommendations in respect to such practices or
procedures. The IPCC can require the police to investigate
or reinvestigate complaints and provide other information as
it deems necessary. The IPCC also advises or makes
recommendations to the commissioner of police or the chief
executive (CE) as appropriate. IPCC members and observers
are also empowered to attend any interview conducted by the
police concerning a complaint and observe the collection of
evidence by the police in the investigation of a complaint
at any time and without prior appointment.
Human
rights activists and some legislators expressed concern that
all IPCC members are appointed by the CE and that the IPCC's
lack of power to conduct independent investigations limits
its oversight capacity. In 2008 the UN Committee Against
Torture, while "welcoming the enactment of the Independent
Police Complaints Council Ordinance…and the new Guidelines
on Searching of Detained Persons," recommended that Hong
Kong continue to take steps to establish a fully independent
mechanism mandated to receive and investigate complaints of
police misconduct.
In
April activists and media expressed concern about
absenteeism by the IPCC vice chairmen and members. Some of
the vice chairmen served concurrently as legislators and
cited conflicts with LegCo meetings. Of the council's 18
members, the media reported that only three attended all six
of the IPCC's 2008 meetings.
Arrest
Procedures and Treatment While in Detention
Suspects were apprehended openly with warrants based on
sufficient evidence and issued by a duly authorized
official. Suspects must be charged within 48 hours or
released, and the government respected this right in
practice. Interviews of suspects are required to be
videotaped.
The
average period of pretrial detention in the first half of
the year was 31 days. There is a functioning bail system,
and detainees are allowed prompt access to a lawyer and
family members. The law provides accused persons with the
right to a prompt judicial determination.
e.
Denial of Fair Public Trial
The
law provides for an independent judiciary, and the
government generally respected judicial independence in
practice. The judiciary provided citizens with a fair and
efficient judicial process. The courts may interpret those
provisions of the Basic Law that address matters within the
limits of the SAR's autonomy. The courts also interpret
provisions of the Basic Law that touch on central government
responsibilities or on the relationship between the central
authorities and the SAR. However, before making final
judgments on these matters, which are not subject to appeal,
the courts must seek an interpretation of the relevant
provisions from the Standing Committee of the National
People's Congress (NPC/SC). The Basic Law requires that
courts follow the NPC/SC's interpretations, although
judgments previously rendered are not affected. As the final
interpreter of the Basic Law, the NPC/SC also has the power
to initiate interpretations of the Basic Law.
The
NPC/SC's mechanism for interpretation is its Committee for
the Basic Law, composed of six Mainland and six Hong Kong
members. The CE, the LegCo president, and the chief justice
nominate the Hong Kong members. Human rights and lawyers'
organizations expressed concern that this process, which can
supersede the Court of Final Appeal's power of final
adjudication, could be used to limit the independence of the
judiciary or could degrade the court's authority.
Trial
Procedures
The
law provides for the right to a fair public trial, and an
independent judiciary generally enforced this right in
practice. The judiciary was an active participant in the
international community of common law jurisprudence. A panel
of 15 nonpermanent judges from other common law
jurisdictions served the Court of Final Appeal, providing a
fifth judge to join panels with four permanent justices to
hear cases and participate in the drafting of decisions.
Legal precedents from other common law jurisdictions were
routinely cited in the courts.
Trials
are by jury except at the magistrate and district court
level. An attorney is provided at the public's expense if
defendants cannot afford counsel. Defendants can confront
and question witnesses testifying against them and present
witnesses to testify on their behalf. Defendants and their
attorneys have access to government-held evidence relevant
to their cases. Defendants have the right of appeal.
Defendants enjoy a presumption of innocence except in
official corruption cases. Under the Prevention of Bribery
Ordinance, a current or former government official who
maintained a standard of living above that commensurate with
his official income, or who controls monies or property
disproportionate to his official income, is guilty of an
offense unless he can satisfactorily explain the
discrepancy. In practice the courts upheld this ordinance.
Court proceedings are conducted in either Chinese or
English, the SAR's two official languages.
Political Prisoners and Detainees
There
were no reports of political prisoners or detainees.
Civil
Judicial Procedures and Remedies
There
is an independent and impartial judiciary for civil matters
and access to a court to bring lawsuits seeking damages for,
or the cessation of, human rights violations.
f.
Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or
Correspondence
The
law prohibits such actions, and the government generally
respected these prohibitions in practice.
The
Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data (PCPD)
worked to prevent the misuse, disclosure, or matching of
personal data without the consent of the subject individual
or the commissioner. Certain exemptions allow authorities to
transfer personal data to a PRC body for safeguarding the
security, defense, or international relations of the SAR and
for the prevention, detection, or prosecution of a crime.
During the first half of the year, the commissioner
investigated 563 complaints. Of the 383 completed
investigations, 18 were found to have violations, 278 cases
were either rejected or resolved through mediation without
use of the commissioner's formal power of investigation, 11
were resolved or rejected after formal investigation, and 76
were withdrawn or found not pursuable.
In
February and March, there were reports that Police Force and
Fire Services Department data were leaked on to the Internet
because officers used computers equipped with a file-sharing
program. The police agreed to implement recommendations from
the PCPD to prevent further data leaks.
The
privacy commissioner ordered some private companies and a
public school to cease using biometric technology to record
attendance, on the grounds that such methods were
"excessive." The commissioner did not declare biometric
enrollment unlawful but stressed the need for fairness and
consent by employees. Companies responded by calling for
clearer regulation on the use of biometric technology.
The
use of covert surveillance and the interception of
telecommunications and postal communications can be granted
only to prevent or detect "serious crime" or protect "public
security." A 2006 law established a two-tiered system for
granting approval for surveillance activities, under which
surveillance of a more intrusive nature requires the
approval of a judge, and surveillance of a less intrusive
nature requires the approval of a senior law-enforcement
official. Applications to intercept telecommunications must
involve crimes with a penalty of at least seven years'
imprisonment, while applications for covert surveillance
must involve crimes with a penalty of at least three years'
imprisonment or a fine of at least HK$ one million
(approximately $128,000). In 2008, 1,719 interceptions and
205 surveillances were authorized, leading to 603 arrests.
There were 11 reported violations of the Communications and
Surveillance Ordinance, including one report that
information that might be subject to legal professional
privilege was inadvertently intercepted.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a.
Freedom of Speech and Press
The
law provides for freedom of speech and of the press, and the
government generally respected these rights in practice.
The
Code of Ethics of the Hong Kong Journalists Association
(HKJA) states "a journalist shall not lend himself/herself
to the distortion or suppression of the truth because of
advertising or other considerations." However, reports of
media self-censorship continued during the year. Most media
outlets were owned by businesses with interests on the
Mainland, which led to claims that they were vulnerable to
self-censorship, with editors deferring to the perceived
concerns of publishers regarding their Mainland business
interests. In its 2008 report, Freedom House changed its
description of press freedom in the SAR from "free" to
"partly free." A July poll found that 49 percent of those
polled believed the media practiced self‑censorship.
During
the year the HKJA expressed regret that Esquire
magazine removed 16 pages from a feature story on the 1989
Tiananmen massacre in its June issue. Two senior managers in
the magazine's parent company hold positions in Mainland
political consultative congresses, one at the provincial and
one at the national level.
Television Broadcasts (TVB), one of the SAR's two
free-to-air television stations, faced criticism at a public
hearing held by the Broadcasting Authority as part of the
station's midterm license review that it deliberately
downplayed coverage of the June 4 candlelight vigil to
commemorate the Tiananmen massacre. TVB management countered
that more than a third of the day's 6 p.m. news broadcast
was devoted to the vigil and that the vigil was the lead
story on the 11 p.m. broadcast.
In
February bodyguards for the student daughter of a foreign
country's leader assaulted two journalists outside her
residence. Several editorials, journalists, and democratic
legislators condemned the decision not to prosecute the
bodyguards. In a separate incident, the student's mother was
not prosecuted for a January assault on a photographer after
the PRC authorities ruled that she enjoyed diplomatic
immunity.
Journalists and politicians across the political spectrum
condemned the September 4 detention and reported beating of
three SAR journalists covering protests in Xinjiang.
The
government ended uncertainty regarding the future of
government-owned broadcaster Radio Television Hong Kong
(RTHK) by announcing that it would remain a government
entity staffed by civil servants. The RTHK staff, union,
activists, and media expressed concerns about the
relationship between a new advisory board, to be appointed
solely by the SAR's CE, and the editorial independence of
RTHK news and programming. While the government stated that
independence will be protected in a new charter, and the
director of broadcasting said that final editorial decisions
would lie with him, there were concerns that the political
clout of committee members, as well as the committee's
oversight of the station's budget, might allow it to
influence editorial policy.
International media organizations operated freely. Foreign
reporters needed no special visas or government-issued press
cards. The independent media were active and expressed a
wide variety of views without restriction.
Internet Freedom
There
were no government restrictions on access to the Internet;
there was some monitoring of the Internet to combat sexual
exploitation of children (see section 6, Children).
Commercial Internet service was widely available, including
a number of government-supplied wireless (WiFi) "hot spots"
and public and commercial venues in which WiFi or other
access was provided at no charge to visitors and customers.
Individuals and groups could engage in the peaceful
expression of views via the Internet, including by e-mail.
According to International Telecommunication Union
statistics for 2008, approximately 67 percent of the SAR's
inhabitants used the Internet.
Academic Freedom and Cultural Events
There
were generally no restrictions on academic freedom and
cultural events.
Some
scholars suggested Hong Kong-based academics practiced some
self-censorship in their China-related work to preserve good
relations and research and lecturing opportunities in the
Mainland.
b.
Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
Freedom of Assembly
The
law provides for freedom of assembly and association, and
the government generally respected these rights in practice.
The government routinely issued the required permits for
public meetings and demonstrations.
Approximately 150,000 persons joined the annual vigil
commemorating the June 4 Tiananmen massacre, the highest
turnout in many years and the largest such event anywhere in
China. Approximately 50,000 persons joined the annual July 1
democracy march. Both events were conducted peacefully.
On
August 14, the High Court (Court of First Instance) granted
a judicial review to a shipowner who was prevented from
taking activists to the Diaoyu Islands in May. The Marine
Department stopped three attempts by the "Action Committee
for Defending the Diaoyu Islands" from traveling to the
disputed waters (the Japanese claim the islands as the
Senkakus). The government claimed its decision rested on
safety concerns. Previous trips by the Action Committee to
the Diaoyus in similar vessels had been permitted.
On
August 21, the High Court (Court of First Instance) found
that the removal of a pro-Tibetan protest led by student
activist Christina Chan Hau-man during the Olympic Torch
relay May 2008 was justified. Officers protecting Chan from
counterdemonstrators felt they could not adequately
guarantee the safety of Chan's group, spectators, and the
police themselves. The court also ruled Chan's protest was
both lawful and peaceful.
Freedom of Association
In the
first half of the year, 1,195 societies were registered or
exempted from registration under the Societies Ordinance. No
applications were rejected by the police.
c.
Freedom of Religion
The
law provides for freedom of religion, and the government
generally respected this right in practice.
Societal Abuses and Discrimination
No
major societal abuses or acts of religious discrimination,
including anti-Semitic acts against the small Jewish
community, were reported during the year.
For a more detailed discussion, see the 2009
International Religious Freedom Report at
www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf.
d.
Freedom of Movement, Internally Displaced Persons,
Protection of Refugees, and Stateless Persons
The
law provides residents freedom of movement, freedom of
emigration, and freedom to enter and leave the territory,
and the government generally respected these rights in
practice, with some prominent exceptions. Under the "one
country, two systems" framework, the SAR continued to
administer its own immigration and entry policies and made
determinations regarding claims under the Convention Against
Torture (CAT) independently.
The
government cooperated with the Office of the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian
organizations in providing temporary permission to enter the
SAR and assistance to internally displaced persons,
refugees, returning refugees, asylum seekers, stateless
persons, and other persons of concern.
The
High Court (Court of Appeal) dismissed an appeal by Falun
Gong practitioners who challenged a 2003 decision by the
Immigration Department to bar from entry four activists
traveling from Taiwan. While affirming the decision, the
court expressed concern at the Security Bureau's (which
oversees the Immigration Department) destruction of relevant
documents that may have shed light on the decision,
describing the action as a breach of the government's duty
of "full and frank disclosure."
In a
number of cases, persons traveling for reasons that did not
appear to contravene the law were refused entry by the
Immigration Department. The Immigration Department, as a
matter of policy, declined to comment on individual cases.
Activists, some legislators, and others contended the
refusals, usually of activists or others holding critical
views of the Mainland, were made at the behest of the PRC
authorities. The Security Bureau countered that, while the
Immigration Department exchanges information with other
immigration authorities, including the Mainland, it makes
its decisions independently. In response to a June 3
question from the LegCo, the secretary for security stated
the Immigration Department "does not have a 'black list' of
persons not allowed to enter the SAR." However, the media
quoted the secretary as telling LegCo that the Immigration
Department did maintain a "surveillance list."
A
number of activists traveling to participate in events
relating to June 4 were denied entry. Danish sculptor Jens
Galschiot was refused entry on May 30. Xiang Xiaoli, a
veteran of the June 4 movement, was denied entry on June 3.
Three activists invited to attend a City University forum on
June 4 were denied entry. June 4 veterans Wang Dan and Wang
Juntao applied for and were denied Hong Kong visas by a PRC
diplomatic post (overseas, visas for Hong Kong are issued by
PRC diplomatic posts). Another June 4 veteran, Yang Jianli,
was refused entry to Hong Kong in May.
Most
residents easily obtained travel documents from the SAR
government. However, the PRC authorities did not permit some
Hong Kong human rights activists and most prodemocracy
legislators to visit the Mainland. Eleven incumbent
legislators have been denied "Home Return Permits" to visit
the Mainland.
On
occasion some of these legislators were permitted to visit
the Mainland. For example, in May a 25-member LegCo
delegation visited Guangdong Province in the PRC. Eleven
members of the delegation were associated with the SAR's
democracy movement (pan-democrats), including six without
Home Return Permits. While 12 pan-democrats were invited to
join a September LegCo delegation to Sichuan Province, only
two joined. The media reported pan-democratic leaders
expressed unhappiness that some legislators in the caucus
were not invited but denied there was a boycott.
Government policy was to repatriate undocumented migrants
who arrive from the Mainland, and authorities did not
consider them for refugee status. As of July 31, 5,184
immigration offenders and illegal immigrants were
repatriated to the Mainland. The government does not
recognize the Taiwan passport as valid for visa endorsement
purposes, although convenient mechanisms exist for Taiwan
passport holders to visit Hong Kong.
The
law does not provide for, and the government did not use,
forced exile.
Protection of Refugees
The
SAR is not a party to the 1951 Convention relating to the
Status of Refugees or its 1967 Protocol and has no temporary
protection policy. The director of immigration has
discretion to grant refugee status or asylum on an ad hoc
basis but only in cases of exceptional humanitarian or
compassionate need. The Immigration Ordinance does not
provide foreigners the right to have asylum claims
recognized. The government's practice was to refer refugee
and asylum claimants to a lawyer or the UNHCR. In November
2008 the UN Committee Against Torture expressed concern that
there was "still no legal regime governing asylum and
establishing a fair and efficient refugee status
determination procedure."
The
government in collaboration with nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) and on a case-by-case basis offered
in-kind assistance, including accommodation, food, clothing,
and other basic necessities as well as appropriate transport
allowance, and counseling and medical services, to asylum
seekers and torture claimants who were deprived of basic
needs while their claims were being processed. As of June
30, approximately 3,772 persons were receiving assistance.
Those
whose claims are pending have no legal right to work. They
are also ineligible for training by either the Employees
Retraining Board or Vocational Training Council.
Applications to attend school or university are considered
on a case-by-case basis, at the discretion of the Director
of Immigration. In September the first such claimant was
approved to attend university as a part-time "visiting
student."
A March 2 High Court (Court of First Instance) decision
ruled against the policy of charging claimants found to be
working with "overstaying " on grounds that their release on
recognizance constituted authority from the director of
immigration to remain in the SAR. The government appealed
the ruling, which reportedly resulted in an increase in
illegal immigration cases. On November 11, the LegCo passed
government‑proposed amendments making it illegal for
claimants--who are otherwise regarded as illegal immigrants
by the government--to work or establish a business.
The
UNHCR worked with potential host-country representatives to
resettle persons designated as refugees.
In
December 2008 the High Court ruled in favor of six
applicants for relief from removal under the CAT. The
applicants challenged the SAR's process for handling their
applications in a December 2007 case, and the court found
that the Immigration Department's process was not
sufficiently "certain and accessible."
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of
Citizens to Change Their Government
The
right of residents to change their government peacefully is
limited by the Basic Law, which provides for the selection
of the CE by an 800-person election committee (composed of
individuals who are directly elected, indirectly elected,
and appointed). The Basic Law provides for the direct
election of 30 of the 60 LegCo members. The other 30 seats
in the LegCo are elected by 28 functional constituencies
(FCs), which represent key economic and social sectors. As
of 2008 the 28 FCs represented fewer voters than the
electorate in a single geographic constituency. The vast
majority of FC voters are represented by the three largest
FCs, while the four smallest have less than 200 voters. FCs
set their own voting rules, with some allowing heads of
corporations to vote on behalf of their companies. Persons
with interests in more than one sector represented by an FC
may be able to cast three or more votes (one in their
geographic constituency and one in each FC for which they
meet eligibility requirements). The High Court (Court of
First Instance) struck down a legal challenge to corporate
voting December 10, ruling that the current election systems
did not contravene the Basic Law.
District Councils are responsible for advising the
government on matters affecting the well-being of district
residents, the provision and use of public facilities, and
the use of public funds allocated for local public works and
community activities. The District Council Ordinance gives
the CE authority to appoint 102 of the 529 district
councilors, and he exercised this power in practice.
The
SAR sends 36 deputies to the NPC and has 126 delegates in
the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
The
approval of the CE, two-thirds of LegCo, and two thirds of
the SAR's delegates to the Mainland's NPC are required to
place an amendment of the Basic Law on the agenda of the
NPC, which has the sole power to amend the Basic Law.
In
June the LegCo passed the Voting by Imprisoned Persons Bill,
which guaranteed voting rights to prisoners.
Elections and Political Participation
In
2007 the CE Election Committee selected incumbent Donald
Tsang Yam-kuen, and the PRC's State Council formally
appointed him. In September 2008 voters in six geographic
constituencies elected 30 legislators, half of the total
LegCo, in elections that were generally free and fair. A
record number of candidates, both party affiliated and
independent, contested the elections. Of the 30 FC seats, 14
returned uncontested.
In the
first six months of the year, the ICAC received 209
election-related complaints. Of these, 188 were under
investigation, nine were deemed nonpursuable, and 12 were
found to be unsubstantiated.
The
Basic Law prohibits the LegCo from putting forward bills
that affect public expenditure, political structure, or
government policy. Bills that affect government policy
cannot be introduced without the CE's written consent. The
government has adopted a very broad definition of
"government policy" to block private member bills, and the
president of the LegCo upheld the government's position.
When private member bills are considered, passage requires
separate majorities among members of both the geographical
constituencies and the FCs.
Seven
of the 30 executive councilors (cabinet ministers and
"nonofficial" councilors) were women. Seven of the 30
directly elected LegCo members were women, and women held
four of the 30 FC seats. Women made up between 17 and 23
percent of the membership in the major political parties.
Four political parties or movements represented in the LegCo
were headed by women, and several women were party vice
chairs. Four of the 22 most senior government officials were
women.
There
is no legal restriction against non-Chinese running for
electoral office or participating in the civil service,
although most elected or senior appointed positions require
that the office holder have legal right of abode only in the
SAR. There were no members of ethnic minorities in the
LegCo. The government regards ethnic origin as irrelevant to
civil service appointment and does not collect data on the
number of nonethnic Chinese serving in the civil service. It
was believed there were a number of ethnic minorities in
senior civil service positions. The requirement that civil
servants pass qualifications in both English and Chinese
meant that most nonnative speakers of Chinese failed to
qualify.
Section 4 Official Corruption and Government Transparency
There
were isolated reports of government corruption, and the
government sought to combat official corruption through the
Prevention of Bribery Ordinance and the ICAC.
In the
first half of the year, the ICAC received 498 reports of
corruption involving government institutions or personnel.
Of that total, 223 were under investigation, 164 were deemed
nonpursuable, and 111 were found to be unsubstantiated.
There
are no legal protections for whistleblowers. In an April
submission to the LegCo, the government argued that existing
procedures protected staff from being penalized for making
complaints or suggestions "in good faith" and that those
reporting crime or corruption were also protected under the
law.
The
SAR requires the 27 most senior civil service officials to
declare their financial investments annually and the
approximately 3,100 senior working-level officials
biennially. Policy bureaus may impose additional reporting
requirements for positions seen as having a greater risk of
conflict of interest.
There
is no freedom of information legislation. An administrative
code on Access to Information serves as the framework for
the provision of information by government bureaus and
departments, and the ICAC. However, they may refuse to
disclose information if disclosure would cause or risk
causing harm or prejudice in several broad areas: national
security and foreign affairs (which are reserved to the
central government); immigration issues; judicial and law
enforcement issues; direct risks to individuals; damage to
the environment; result in improper gain or advantage;
management of the economy; management and operation of the
public service; internal discussion and advice; public
employment and public appointments; research, statistics and
analysis; third party information; business affairs;
premature requests and information on which legal
restrictions apply. Political inconvenience or the potential
for embarrassment are not a justifiable basis for
withholding information. In its annual report, the Office of
the Ombudsman reported receiving 21 code‑related complaints,
up from 16 in 2008. The report expressed concern at
"instances of departments refusing information requests
without providing any reasons or with reasons not specified
in the code." The ombudsman also observed instances of
"gross misunderstanding or misinterpretation of the code or
its spirit." In its annual report, the HKJA called on the
government to pass a formal freedom of information law.
Section 5 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human
Rights
A wide
variety of domestic and international human rights groups
generally operated without government restriction,
investigating and publishing their findings on human rights
cases. Government officials generally were cooperative and
responsive to their views. Prominent human rights activists
critical of the central government also operated freely and
maintained permanent resident status in the SAR.
During
the year the government prepared independent submissions and
responses to queries from UN bodies.
There
is an Office of the Ombudsman and an Equal Opportunity
Commission (EOC), both appointed by the government but
independent in their operations. Both organizations operated
without interference from the government and published
critical findings in their areas of responsibility.
Section 6 Discrimination, Societal Abuses, and Trafficking
in Persons
The
law provides that all residents are equal, and the
government enforced this in practice. The EOC is responsible
for implementing the Sex Discrimination Ordinance (SDO), the
Disability Discrimination Ordinance, the Family Status
Discrimination Ordinance, and the Race Discrimination
Ordinance.
Women
Rape,
including spousal rape, is criminalized under the law, and
police enforced the law effectively. From January to June,
52 rape cases and 647 indecent assault cases were reported
to the police.
The
government regarded domestic violence against women as a
serious concern and took measures to prevent and prosecute
offenses. It effectively enforced criminal statutes
prohibiting domestic violence against women and prosecuted
violators. Between January and June, there were 2,311 cases
of domestic violence involving heterosexual partners, of
which 1,193 were found to be criminal and were investigated
by the police. The Domestic Violence Ordinance allows
victims to seek a three-month injunction, extendable to six
months, against an abuser. The ordinance does not
criminalize domestic violence directly, although abusers may
be liable for criminal charges under other ordinances,
including the Crime Ordinance and the Offences Against the
Person Ordinance. The government enforced the law and
prosecuted violators, but sentences typically consisted only
of injunctions or restraining orders.
In
August 2008 the Domestic Violence (Amendment) Ordinance took
effect. It expands the scope of previous law to cover
molestation between married couples and heterosexual
cohabitants, former spouses or cohabitants, and immediate
and extended family members. The revised law provides better
protection for victims under age 18, allowing them to apply
for an injunction in their own right, with the assistance of
an adult guardian, against molestation by their parents,
siblings, and specified immediate and extended family
members. The new law also empowers the court to require the
abuser to attend an antiviolence program. In cases in which
the abuser caused bodily harm, the court may attach an
authorization of arrest to an existing injunction, and both
injunctions and authorizations for arrest can be extended to
two years.
The
government maintained programs that provide intervention and
counseling to batterers. There were eight Integrated Family
Service Centers and Family and Child Protective Services
Units, which offered services to domestic violence victims
and batterers. The government also continued its public
information campaign to strengthen families and combat
violence and increased public education on the prevention of
domestic violence.
Prostitution is legal, but there are laws against activities
such as public solicitation, causing or procuring another to
be a prostitute, living on the prostitution of others, or
keeping a vice establishment.
The SDO prohibits sexual harassment or discrimination on the
basis of sex, marital status, and pregnancy. The law applies
to both males and females. The SDO also provides for the
establishment of the EOC to work towards the elimination of
discrimination and harassment as well as to promote equal
opportunity between men and women. As of August 31, the EOC
had handled 355 complaints under the SDO.
Couples and individuals had the right to decide the number,
spacing, and timing of children and had the information and
means to do so free from discrimination. Access to
information on contraception, and skilled attendance at
delivery and in postpartum care were widely available. Women
and men were given equal access to diagnostic services and
treatment for sexually transmitted infections.
According to 2008 statistics compiled by the Census and
Statistics Department, approximately 30 percent of managers
and administrators and approximately 38 percent of
professionals were women, with female managers earning
comparable pay to males. Approximately 73 percent of clerks,
53 percent of service workers and shop sales workers, and 64
percent of unskilled workers were women. Census Bureau
statistics showed 48 percent of postsecondary degree holders
were women, with women holding 59 percent of postgraduate
program teaching positions and 43 percent of postgraduate
program research positions.
While
the law treats men and women equally in terms of property
rights in divorce settlements and inheritance matters, in
practice women faced discrimination in employment, salary,
welfare, inheritance, and promotion. Women reportedly formed
the majority of the working poor and those who fall outside
the protection of labor laws.
The
government established a Women's Commission as an advisory
body for policy making, while a number of NGOs were also
active in raising problems of societal attitudes and
discrimination against women.
Children
All
Chinese nationals born in Hong Kong or abroad to parents of
whom at least one is a PRC national Hong Kong permanent
resident acquire both PRC citizenship and Hong Kong
permanent residence, which latter status allows right of
abode in the SAR. Children born in Hong Kong to non-Chinese
parents, at least one of whom is a permanent resident,
acquire permanent residence and qualify to apply for
naturalization as PRC citizens. Registration of all such
statuses was routine.
From
January to June, there were 819 cases of crimes against
children reported to police: 355 involved physical abuse
(referring to victims younger than 14 years of age), and 464
involved sexual abuse (referring to victims younger than 17
years of age). The Domestic Violence Ordinance mandates
substantial legal penalties for acts of child abuse such as
battery, assault, neglect, abandonment, sexual exploitation,
and child sex tourism, and the government enforced the law.
The
government provided parent education programs, including
instruction on child abuse prevention, in all 50 of the
Department of Health's maternal and child health centers. It
also provided public education programs to raise awareness
of child abuse and alert children about how to protect
themselves. The Social Welfare Department provided child
psychologists for its clinical psychology units and social
workers for its family and child protective services units.
The police maintained a child abuse investigation unit and a
child witness support program. A law on child-care centers
helped prevent unsuitable persons from providing child care
services.
Social
service providers and the media remained concerned at the
rise in "compensated dating" among minor girls. The majority
of cases involved teenage girls, both above and below the
age of consent, who advertised escort services that might
include sex, either to support themselves or for extra
pocket money. Some women and girls involved in the trade
reported being beaten or abused by clients. On July 27, a
man was sentenced to life imprisonment for the April murder
and dismemberment of a 16‑year-old girl he met through a
compensated dating Web site.
In
response to this trend, police continued monitoring Internet
chat rooms and Web sites used by both individuals and
syndicates to advertise services, with officers assigned to
gather evidence against the operations and determine the
techniques used by syndicates to recruit the girls.
Authorities posted warnings on five internet forums and
begun working with forum hosts on ways to prevent their
being used for compensated dating advertisements. In April
police concluded "Operation Whalediver," arresting 20 girls
ages 13 to 16 and six persons accused of being online pimps.
By September the media reported that police made 22 arrests
and referred 13 girls to the Social Welfare Department.
The
legal age of consent for heterosexuals is 16. Under the
Crimes Ordinance, a person having "unlawful sexual
intercourse" with a victim under 16 is subject to five
years' imprisonment, while having unlawful sexual
intercourse with a victim under 13 results in imprisonment
for life.
The Prevention of Child Pornography Ordinance makes it an
imprisonable offense to possess, produce, copy, import, or
export pornography involving a child under 18 years of age
or to publish or cause to be published any advertisement
that conveys or is likely to be understood as conveying the
message that any person has published, publishes, or intends
to publish any child pornography. The penalty for creation,
publication, or advertisement of child pornography is eight
years' imprisonment, while possession carries a penalty of
five years' imprisonment.
Trafficking in Persons
There
is no consolidated antitrafficking law; however, various
laws and ordinances allow law enforcement authorities to
take action against traffickers.
The
SAR was a point of transit and destination for persons
trafficked for sexual exploitation from the Mainland and
Southeast Asia. Sex trafficking cases detected by the
government, NGOs, and foreign consulates usually involved
women recruited from rural areas of the Mainland, Thailand,
Indonesia, or the Philippines to work in the SAR. While some
had legal work visas, many arrived on 14-day tourist visas
with the intention of working illegally. A small number were
believed to have traveled on forged documents. The majority
of these women came to the SAR believing they would be
employed in restaurants, bars, and hotels, but upon arrival
they were forced into prostitution through debt bondage or
physical coercion. Syndicates sometimes held passports and
travel documents until debts were paid. A smaller number
came illegally, either on their own or were recruited to
work in the legal sex trade, but fell victim to trafficking
by their recruiters or organized crime after their arrival.
Some
foreign domestic workers, particularly those from Indonesia
and the Philippines, faced high levels of indebtedness
assumed as part of the terms of employment, which could in
some cases lead to situations of debt bondage if unlawfully
exploited by recruiters or employers. Many Indonesian
domestic workers earned the minimum wage or less and entered
into contracts requiring them to pay as much as HK$21,000
(approximately $2,700) to their Indonesian recruitment
agency within their first seven months of employment,
amounting to roughly 90 percent of a worker's monthly salary
if they were making minimum wage. Although these fees are
lawful, reports indicated they may make some workers more
vulnerable to labor trafficking. While these fees were
imposed by Indonesia-based recruitment agencies, some Hong
Kong‑licensed recruitment agencies reportedly were involved.
Some Hong Kong agencies reportedly confiscated passports,
employment contracts, and ATM cards of domestic workers upon
arrival and withheld them until the debt had been completely
repaid, factors that also may facilitate labor trafficking.
Provisions in the Immigration Ordinance, the Crimes
Ordinance, the Employment Ordinance, and other relevant laws
enable law enforcement authorities to take action against
trafficking in persons. The Security Bureau oversees the
police, customs, and immigration departments, enforces
antitrafficking laws, and combats migrant trafficking. The
courts can impose heavy fines and prison sentences of up to
14 years for activities such as arranging passage of
unauthorized entrants, arranging entrance or exit of a
person for the purpose of prostitution, and aiding and
abetting any person to use forged, false, or unlawfully
obtained travel documents.
However, the government's interpretation of trafficking
continued to focus on illegal migration and smuggling. The
law does not classify as a trafficking victim a voluntary
migrant who, upon arrival, is faced with a situation of
labor trafficking or sex trafficking. Although law
enforcement officials received special training on handling
and protecting victims and vulnerable witnesses, including
victims of trafficking, they said it was difficult to
identify trafficking victims from among illegal immigrants,
particularly when victims declined to identify themselves or
assist in investigations.
There
were no reports that government officials participated in,
facilitated, or condoned trafficking, and no officials were
prosecuted, convicted, or sentenced to imprisonment or were
removed from their duties for trafficking during the year.
NGOs
contended that the government did not pursue cases in which
workers reported that they received less than the legal
minimum wage or that their travel documents were unlawfully
held. The government made legal aid available to those
taking legal action against an employer and immunity from
prosecution for those assisting in the investigation and
prosecution of traffickers. The Social Welfare Department
and local NGOs provided social services to victims of
trafficking, but victims are not permitted to work.
Trafficking victims assisting in a prosecution were given a
stipend by the government regardless of whether they
ultimately served as a prosecution witness. The government
tried to prevent trafficking by distributing pamphlets and
by other public information campaigns, in a wide range of
languages, on workers' rights.
The Department of State's annual Trafficking in Persons
Report can be found at
www.state.gov/g/tip.
Persons with Disabilities
The
law prohibits discrimination against persons with physical
and mental disabilities in employment, access to health
care, or the provision of other state services, and the
government effectively enforced these provisions.
The
Social Welfare Department, directly or in coordination with
NGOs and employers, provided a range of services and
training to assist persons with disabilities in finding work
commensurate with their abilities. As of March approximately
15,000 persons were participating in these programs.
As of
March the government employed 3,223 civil servants with
disabilities, including 15 at the senior directorate grade,
in a total workforce of 155,128.
Instances of discrimination against persons with
disabilities persisted in employment, education, and the
provision of some public services. The Disability
Discrimination Ordinance calls for improved building access
and sanctions against those who discriminate. Despite
inspections and the occasional closure of noncompliant
businesses under the Buildings Ordinance, access to public
buildings (including public schools) and transportation
remained a serious problem for persons with disabilities.
The
EOC sponsored a variety of activities to address
discrimination against persons with disabilities, including
offering youth education programs, distributing guidelines
and resources for employers, carrying out media campaigns,
and cosponsoring seminars and research.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Although 95 percent ethnic Chinese, the SAR is a multiethnic
society with persons from a number of ethnic groups
recognized as permanent residents with full rights under the
law. Discrimination based on race is prohibited by law, and
the EOC oversees implementation and enforcement of the 2008
Race Discrimination Ordinance (RDO). The Race Relations
Unit, which is subordinate to the Constitutional and
Mainland Affairs Bureau, served as secretariat to the
Committee on the Promotion of Racial Harmony and implemented
the committee's programs. The unit also maintained a hotline
for inquiries and complaints concerning racial
discrimination.
A June report by the Census and Statistics Department showed
that acceptance of certain ethnic minorities by Chinese
citizens was notably lower than acceptance of noncitizen
Chinese, Caucasians, Japanese, or Koreans as tenants,
employees, or classmates for their children.
The
RDO and various implementing regulations entered into force
on July 10, when the EOC was empowered to handle complaints.
The Code of Practice (along with selected other EOC
materials) was available in Hindi, Thai, Urdu, Nepali,
Indonesian, and Tagalog in addition to Chinese and English.
In its
"Concluding Observations" issued August 28, the UN Committee
on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD)
recommended "that all government functions and powers be
brought within the scope of the RDO" and "the adoption of an
equality plan with a view to ensuring the effective
implementation of the law." The CERD also recommended that
"indirect discrimination with regard to language,
immigration status, and nationality be included among the
prohibited grounds of discrimination in the RDO." In
response the government stated that protection under the RDO
applies equally to all persons in the SAR. Conceding that
"the RDO does not specifically cover all functions of the
government," the government argued the RDO does regulate the
government with regard to employment, education, and
provision of services. The government also stressed that
there were organizations that deal with complaints against
the government, and the government is subject to both the
Bill of Rights Ordinance and court rulings on
discrimination. Previously, the government argued that
broadening the law could affect the government's ability to
function, including in areas meant to correct societal
inequities, and might open the government up to litigation.
While
English and Chinese are the two official languages, persons
not fluent or literate in Cantonese faced tremendous
challenges in seeking employment and in choice of education.
The Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Bureau sponsored a
"Cross‑Cultural Learning Program for Non-Chinese Speaking
Youth" through grants to NGOs. In its "Concluding
Observations," the CERD expressed concern that, despite the
provision of a Supplementary Guide to the Chinese language
curriculum, no official education policy for teaching
Chinese as a second language in the SAR had been adopted.
The CERD recommended that a policy on Chinese teaching for
non-Chinese speaking students be developed in consultation
with teachers as well as the communities concerned and that
efforts to improve the quality of Chinese-language education
for immigrant children should be intensified.
In
response the government stated its policy to integrate
non‑Chinese students into the regular education system. The
government also noted it had provided a special grant for
designated schools with a critical mass of non-Chinese
students to develop their own programs and to share best
practices with other schools, as well as to develop
supplementary curriculum materials and to set up the Chinese
Language Support Centers to provide after-school programs.
The
government provided HK$ eight million (approximately $1
million) to sponsor NGOs to set up four support service
centers that teach ethnic minority groups special skills,
including English and Cantonese, and HK$16 million ($2
million) per year to fund their annual operating costs. The
first such center, International Social Service's HOPE
Support Service Center for Ethnic Minorities, opened August
29. The fourth, operated by Hong Kong Christian Service,
opened September 5.
Activists reported that citizens of South Asian descent
faced discriminatory treatment from police on patrol,
including repeated checks of identity documents and the use
of disparaging terms for South Asians. South Asians carrying
large amounts of money were on some occasions treated as
suspicious and asked to explain where the money came from.
Activists and the government disputed whether new immigrants
from the Mainland should be considered as a population of
concern under antidiscrimination legislation. While the
government argued they should not, activists contended
language barriers (many new immigrants, although able to
read Chinese, did not speak the prevailing Cantonese
dialect) and other factors put these new immigrants at a
disadvantage. While concerns have been raised that new
immigrants do not qualify to receive social welfare benefits
until they have resided in the SAR for seven years, the
courts have upheld this legal standard. Such immigrants can
apply on a case-specific basis for assistance.
Societal Abuses, Discrimination, and Acts of Violence Based
on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
There
are no laws criminalizing same-sex relationships. In 2005
the High Court (Court of First Instance) ruled that
maintaining an age of consent for male-male relations at 21
rather than 16 violated the Bill of Rights Ordinance. In
2006 the Law Reform Commission began a review of sexual
offenses in common and statue law; this review continued. In
the interim, enforcement of the law was in accordance with
the 2005 decision. There are no specific laws governing age
of consent for female-female relations.
There
were no reports of societal violence or official
discrimination based on sexual orientation. On December 16,
the LegCo amended the Domestic Violence Ordinance (renamed
the Domestic and Cohabitation Relationships Violence
Ordinance) to cover domestic violence concerns among
same-sex partners.
A
number of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT)
organizations and LGBT-related organizations existed and
held events in the SAR. Since 1998 the government has
provided more than HK$5 million (approximately $650,000) for
"worthwhile community projects which aim at promoting equal
opportunity on grounds of sexual orientation or gender
identity, or seek to provide support services for sexual
minorities" through its Equal Opportunities (Sexual
Orientation) Funding Scheme. In November the Lesbian and Gay
Film Festival celebrated its 20th anniversary, while the
LGBT-oriented Pride Parade was held for a second year.
Other
Societal Violence or Discrimination
There
were no reports of societal violence or discrimination
against persons with HIV/AIDS.
Section 7 Worker Rights
a. The
Right of Association
The
law provides for the right of association and the right of
workers to establish and join organizations of their own
choosing. Trade unions must register under the Trade Unions
Ordinance and must have a minimum membership of seven
persons for registration. At the end of 2008, there were 796
registered trade unions, consisting of 752 employee unions,
19 employers' associations, and 25 mixed organizations of
employees and employers. During the first half of the year,
13 new unions were registered and three unions were
deregistered upon request.
Government statistics indicated that, as of the end of 2008,
there were 708,953 salaried employees and wage earners
claiming affiliation with a union, totaling 21.5 percent of
the workforce.
The
1997 Employment and Labor Relations (Miscellaneous
Amendments) Ordinance bans the use of union funds for
political purposes, requires the CE's approval before unions
can contribute funds to any trade union outside of the SAR,
and restricts the appointment of persons from outside the
enterprise or sector to union executive committees.
Work
stoppages and strikes are legal. There are some restrictions
on this right for civil servants. Although there is no
legislative prohibition of strikes, in practice most workers
had to sign employment contracts that typically stated that
walking off the job is a breach of contract, which could
lead to summary dismissal. In addition, there is no legal
entitlement to reinstatement in the case of unfair
dismissal. Four strikes, collectively involving 655 workers,
were held during the first half of the year.
b. The
Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The
law provides for the right to organize, and this right was
implemented in practice; however, it does not guarantee the
right to collective bargaining. The 1997 Employment and
Labor Relations (Miscellaneous Amendments) Ordinance does
not provide a legal framework for trade unions to engage
employers in collective bargaining. In all but a few trades,
unions were not powerful enough to force management to
engage in collective bargaining. A motion supported by union
activists in the LegCo that called on the government to
promote collective bargaining and legislate on the right to
collective bargaining failed due to opposition by the
government and business representatives.
The
government did not engage in collective bargaining with
civil servants' unions. According to an International Trade
Union Congress report, only 1 percent of the workforce was
covered by collective agreements, and these were not legally
binding.
The
Workplace Consultation Promotion Unit in the Labor
Department facilitated communication, consultation, and
voluntary negotiation between employers and employees.
Tripartite committees for each of the nine sectors of the
economy included representatives from some trade unions,
employers, and the Labor Department.
There
is no provision guaranteeing reinstatement of workers
dismissed because of their trade union membership.
There
are no export processing zones in the SAR.
c.
Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The
law prohibits forced or compulsory labor, and there were no
reports that such practices occurred.
d.
Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
The
Employment of Children Regulations prohibits employment of
children under the age of 15 in any industrial
establishment. The regulations limit work hours in the
manufacturing sector for persons 15 to 17 years of age to
eight hours per day and 48 hours per week between 7 a.m. and
7 p.m. They also prohibit overtime in industrial
establishments with employment in dangerous trades for
persons less than 18 years of age.
Children 13 and 14 years of age may work in certain
nonindustrial establishments, subject to conditions aimed at
ensuring a minimum of nine years of education and protection
of their safety, health, and welfare. The Labor Department
conducted regular workplace inspections to enforce
compliance with the regulations. During the first half of
the year, the Labor Department conducted 78,441 inspections.
Three employers were convicted of offenses involving
employment of children 13 to 14 years of age without written
parental consent and valid school attendance certificates.
Fines were between HK$1,000 and HK$4,000 (approximately $130
to $515).
e.
Acceptable Conditions of Work
There
is no statutory minimum wage except for domestic workers of
foreign origin. Aside from a small number of trades where a
uniform wage structure exists, wage levels customarily are
fixed by individual agreement between employer and employee
and are determined by supply and demand. Some employers
provided workers with various kinds of allowances, medical
treatment, and subsidized transport. Two-income households
were the norm. There are no regulations concerning working
hours, paid weekly rest, rest breaks, or compulsory
overtime. Workweeks of up to 60 hours and more were not
uncommon.
While
the government provides assistance to many low-wage earners
through the Comprehensive Social Security Assistance scheme
and housing assistance programs, workers and labor unions
contended wages in many low-level positions were
insufficient to guarantee workers a decent standard of
living.
On
July 8, the government's Minimum Wage Bill had its first
reading in the LegCo. The bill would create a minimum wage
(but not set its rate) and establish a Minimum Wage
Commission which would advise the CE on the rate to be set.
On February 7, the government appointed a Provisional
Minimum Wage Commission made up of academics, employers, and
organized labor representatives, and government economic and
labor officials. At year's end both the bill and the wage
rate remained under discussion.
Unionists alleged workers increasingly were tricked by
employers into signing contracts that changed their terms of
employment to "self-employed," and thus they were not
entitled to employer-provided benefits such as paid leave,
sick leave, medical insurance, workers' compensation, or
Mandatory Provident Fund payments.
The Occupational Safety and Health Branch of the Labor
Department is responsible for safety and health promotion,
enforcement of safety management legislation, and policy
formulation and implementation. The Factories and Industrial
Undertakings Ordinance, the Occupational Safety and Health
Ordinance, the Boilers and Pressure Vessels Ordinance, and
their 35 sets of subsidiary regulations regulate safety and
health conditions. During the first half of the year, the
Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health Branch
conducted 59,475 workplace inspections. There were 842
convicted summonses, resulting in fines totaling HK$6.06
million (approximately $780,000). In addition to prosecuting
offenses under the safety legislation, the Labor Department
also issued improvement notices requiring employers to
remedy contraventions of safety laws within a specified
period and suspension notices directing removal of imminent
risks to life and limb in workplaces. During the first half
of the year, 709 improvement notices and 41 suspension
notices were served.
Although worker safety and health continued to improve,
serious problems remained, particularly in the construction
industry. In the first quarter of the year, the Labor
Department reported 8,512 occupational injuries, including
2,842 classified as industrial accidents. In the same
period, there were two fatal industrial accidents. Employers
are required under the Employee's Compensation Ordinance to
report any injuries sustained by their employees in
work-related accidents. There is no specific legal provision
allowing workers to remove themselves from dangerous work
situations without jeopardy to continued employment.
The media reported on the danger of working on bamboo
scaffolding. It cited a Labor Department study showing
"falling from height" as the primary source of fatalities in
the construction industry, with 8,000 workers injured and
149 killed between 1998-2007.
There are no laws restricting work during typhoon or
rainstorm warning signals save a Labor Department
recommendation that employers have only essential staff come
to work during certain categories of typhoon or rainstorm
warnings.
The minimum wage for foreign domestic workers was HK$3,580
per month (approximately $460). The standard workweek was 48
hours, but many domestic workers worked much longer hours.
The standard contract law requires employers to provide
foreign domestic workers with housing, worker's compensation
insurance, travel allowances, and food or a food allowance
in addition to the minimum wage, which together provided a
decent standard of living. Foreign domestic workers can be
deported if dismissed. After leaving one employer, workers
have two weeks to secure new employment before they must
leave the SAR. Activists contended this restriction left
workers vulnerable to a range of abuses from employers.
Workers who pursue complaints through legal channels may be
granted leave to remain; however, they are not able to work,
leaving them either to live from savings or to depend on
charitable assistance.
Domestic workers were required to live with their employers
(who do not always provide separate accommodation for the
worker), which made it difficult to enforce maximum working
hours per day or overtime.
The
government contended that the "two-week rule" was necessary
to maintain effective immigration control and prevent
migrant workers from overstaying and taking up unauthorized
work. Regarding maximum hours and rest periods, the
government stated that the Employment Ordinance rules on
these issues cover local and migrant workers. However, in
its explanation of why live-in domestic helpers (both local
and foreign) would not be covered by the anticipated
statutory minimum wage, the government explained that "the
distinctive working pattern–-round-the-clock presence,
provision of service-on-demand, and the multifarious
domestic duties expected of live-in domestic workers–-makes
it impossible to ascertain the actual hours worked so as to
determine the wages to be paid."
During
the first six months of the year, seven employers were
convicted for labor law maltreatment violations under the
Employment Ordinance relating to the employment of foreign
domestic workers. During the first seven months of the year,
86 foreign domestic workers filed criminal suits, 43 of
which were against employers, for maltreatment including
rape (five), indecent assault (four), and injury and serious
assault (34).
MACAU
Macau, with a population of approximately 557,400, is a
Special Administrative Region (SAR) of the People's Republic
of China (PRC) and enjoys a high degree of autonomy, except
in defense and foreign affairs, under the SAR's constitution
the Basic Law. On July 26, the 300-member Electoral
Commission selected Fernando Chui Sai-on as chief executive
(CE) in an uncontested election, and Chui took office
December 20. On September 20, in elections considered
generally free and fair, voters elected 12 of the
legislature's 29 members in direct elections based on
geographical constituencies; of the other 17 members of the
legislature, 10 are elected indirectly, and seven are
appointed by the CE. Civilian authorities generally
maintained effective control of the security forces.
The
government generally respected the human rights of its
citizens; however, some problems remained, most notably
limits on citizens' ability to change their government,
reports of official corruption, and trafficking in persons.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including
Freedom From:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
There were no reports that the government or its agents
committed arbitrary or unlawful killings.
b.
Disappearance
There
were no reports of politically motivated disappearances.
c.
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment
The
law prohibits such practices, and the government generally
respected these rights. During the first half of the year,
police examined eight cases of offenses against the
"physical integrity" and two of "threat" against persons not
in custody. Separately, the Commission for Disciplinary
Control of the Security Forces and Services of Macau
received two complaints, one of which was substantiated and
forwarded to the Office of the Prosecutor for investigation.
In 2008 there were 15 complaints of police brutality against
persons in custody; four resulted in disciplinary
proceedings, six were pending, and five were dismissed for
lack of evidence.
Prison
and Detention Center Conditions
Prison
and detention center conditions generally met international
standards, and the government permitted monitoring visits by
independent human rights observers. No such visits were made
during the year. In 2008 prison authorities invited both
local and international media to visit the prison and
participate in workshops with inmates.
The
prison has a 1,050-person designed capacity and during the
first half of the year housed 961 inmates. In 2008 (the most
recent available figures) there were 108 female prisoners
and 21 juveniles (ages 16 to 17) in prison. An additional 31
juveniles were held in a separate facility run by the Young
Offenders Institute.
d.
Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
The
law prohibits arbitrary arrest and detention, and the
government generally observed these prohibitions.
Role
of the Police and Security Apparatus
Civilian authorities maintained effective control over the
Public Security Police (general law enforcement) and
Judiciary Police (criminal investigations), and the
government has effective mechanisms to investigate and
punish abuse and corruption. There were no reports of
impunity involving the security forces during the year.
Arrest
Procedures and Treatment While in Detention
Persons were apprehended openly with warrants based on
sufficient evidence and issued by a duly authorized
official. Detainees were allowed access to a lawyer of their
choice or, if indigent, to one provided by the SAR
government. Detainees also were allowed prompt access to
family members. Police must present persons in custody to an
examining judge within 48 hours of detention. The examining
judge, who conducts a pretrial inquiry in criminal cases,
has a wide range of powers to collect evidence, order or
dismiss indictments, and determine whether to release
detained persons. The law provides that cases must come to
trial within six months of an indictment. The criminal
procedure code mandates that pretrial detention is limited
to between six months to three years, depending on the
charges and progress of the judicial system. According to
judiciary figures, the standard pretrial detention in 2008
was 8.2 months. Judges often refused bail in cases where
sentences could exceed three years.
e.
Denial of Fair Public Trial
The
law provides for an independent judiciary, and the
government generally respected judicial independence in
practice. The courts may rule on matters that are "the
responsibility of the PRC government or concern the
relationship between the central authorities and the SAR,"
but before making their final judgment, which is not subject
to appeal, the courts must seek an interpretation of
relevant provisions from the National People's Congress
(NPC) Standing Committee. When the Standing Committee makes
an interpretation of the provisions concerned, the courts,
in applying those provisions, "shall follow the
interpretation of the Standing Committee."
Both
Portuguese and Chinese are official languages. The need to
translate laws and judgments into both Chinese and
Portuguese and a shortage of local bilingual lawyers and
magistrates hampered the development of the legal system.
There also was a severe shortage of judges.
Trial
Procedures
The law provides for the right to a fair trial, and an
independent judiciary generally enforced this right.
Defendants enjoy a presumption of innocence and have access
to government-held evidence relevant to their cases and a
right to appeal. Trials are public and are by jury except at
the magistrate-court level. Defendants have the right to be
present at their trials and to confront witnesses. They also
have the right to consult with an attorney in a timely
manner; public attorneys are provided for those who are
financially incapable of engaging lawyers or paying expenses
of proceedings. The law extends these rights to all
residents.
The
judiciary provides citizens with a fair and efficient
judicial process; however, due to an overloaded court
system, a period of up to a year often passed between filing
a civil case and its scheduled hearing.
Political Prisoners and Detainees
There
were no reports of political prisoners or detainees.
Civil
Judicial Procedures and Remedies
There
is an independent and impartial judiciary for civil matters,
and citizens have access to a court to bring lawsuits
seeking damages for, or cessation of, a human rights
violation.
f.
Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or
Correspondence
The
law prohibits such actions, and the government generally
respected these prohibitions in practice. On June 26, the
Strike Against Computer Crime Law passed. It criminalizes a
range of cybercrimes and empowers the police, with a court
warrant, to order Internet service providers to save and
then provide a range of data. Some legislators expressed
concern that the law grants the police authority to take
these actions without court order under some circumstances.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a.
Freedom of Speech and Press
The
law provides for freedom of speech and of the press, and the
government generally respected these rights in practice.
On
February 26, in accordance with a requirement under Article
23 of the Basic Law, the Law on Safeguarding National
Security entered into force. It criminalizes both committing
and acts in preparation to commit: treason, secession,
subversion of the PRC government, and theft of state
secrets. The crimes of treason, secession, and subversion
all specify the use of violence, and the government stated
that the law would not infringe on peaceful political
activism or media freedom.
Activists and some legislators expressed concern about the
vagueness of "acts in preparation," which they saw as
possibly criminalizing a broad range of activities.
Government officials maintained that, to be prosecuted as
preparatory acts, the actions would need to meet tests
already established under criminal law of both intention and
actual capability to commit a violent act as defined under
the law.
Activists and some legislators were also concerned about the
use of "prying into" to define one type of illegally
acquiring state secrets and the lack of an explicit "public
interest defense" for journalists publishing classified
information. There was also concern that the PRC's broad
definitions of state secrets, as well as its ability
retroactively to declare formerly unclassified material to
be secret, would impact enforcement of the law. The SAR
government asserted that only persons in possession of
secret information, which by definition should only be
government officials, could be charged with revealing a
secret. Journalists or others to whom such material was
given (assuming they did not explicitly ask for it or offer
to buy it) would not be held responsible. The government
also stated that a person could not be held liable for
revealing information not marked as classified. (The Law on
Publications, which predates the Law on Safeguarding
National Security, specifies that journalists do not have
the right to publish material known to be classified as a
state secret.) By year's end no one had been charged with a
crime under the new law.
The
independent media were active and expressed a wide variety
of views without restriction, and international media
operated freely. Major newspapers were heavily subsidized by
the government and tended to follow closely the PRC
government's policy on sensitive political issues, such as
Taiwan; however, they reported freely on the SAR government,
including reports critical of the government.
The
media reported that activists who attempted to run an
advertisement critical of "people from big business clans
taking office," a reference to the uncontested election of
Chief Executive Fernando Chui Sai-on, had their fundraising
bank account closed. The bank told local media, "the bank is
entitled to terminate a bank account if it considers the use
that a client is making, or is planning to make, of a bank
account is detrimental to the bank." The money in the
account was returned to the account holder. Activists
alleged the account was closed under political pressure. No
local media were willing to publish the advertisement.
Internet Freedom
There
were no government restrictions on access to the Internet or
reports that the government monitored e-mail or Internet
chat rooms. Individuals and groups could engage in the
peaceful expression of views via the Internet, including by
e-mail. According to International Telecommunication Union
statistics for 2008, approximately 49 percent of the SAR's
inhabitants used the Internet.
Academic Freedom and Cultural Events
There
were no government restrictions on academic freedom or
cultural events.
b.
Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
Freedom of Assembly
The
law provides for freedom of assembly, and the government
generally respected this right in practice. The law requires
prior notification, but not approval, of demonstrations.
Local
opponents of the Law on Safeguarding National Security held
protest activities, although protesters from Hong Kong were
denied entry into the SAR on several occasions (see section
2.d.). However, in March a group of Hong Kong activists who
had been permitted into the SAR staged a protest in front of
the Government House. By law demonstrations may not be
conducted within thirty yards of government, court, or
police buildings, or in front of central government and
consular missions to the SAR.
Freedom of Association
The
Basic Law and the Civil Code guarantee freedom of
association. No authorization is required to form an
association, and the only restrictions are that the
organization not promote violence, crime, or disruption of
public order. From January 2008 through June 2009, 458
associations were formed, and no applications were rejected.
c.
Freedom of Religion
The
law provides for freedom of religion, and the government
generally respected this right in practice.
Societal Abuses and Discrimination
Relations among various religious groups were generally
amicable. The Jewish population was extremely small, and
there were no reports of anti-Semitic acts.
For a more detailed discussion, see the 2009
International Religious Freedom Report at
www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/.
d.
Freedom of Movement, Internally Displaced Persons,
Protection of Refugees, and Stateless Persons
The
law provides for freedom of movement within the country,
foreign travel, emigration, and repatriation, and the
government generally respected these rights in practice.
Persons denied entry into the SAR have the right to contact
their consulate or other representative of their country, to
have assistance with language interpretation, and to consult
a lawyer. The Immigration Department cooperated with the UN
High Commissioner for Refugees in handling refugees.
The
law prohibits forced exile, and the government generally
respected the law in practice.
The
Internal Security Law grants the police the authority to
prevent entry and to deport nonresidents who are regarded
under the law as unwelcome, or who constitute a threat to
internal security and stability, or who are regarded as
suspected of transnational crimes. The police used this
provision of law to prevent the entry of several persons who
sought to participate in peaceful political activities, as
well as persons participating in academic exchanges or
journalism, particularly when the Law on Safeguarding
National Security was under consideration as well as in the
period immediately following passage of the law.
On
March 9, Secretary for Security Cheong Kuoc-va told the
media that immigration cases were decided on a case-by-case
basis and denied the existence of a "blacklist."
On
March 15, a delegation of 35 Hong Kong activists, including
14 legislators, traveled to the SAR. Thirty were admitted,
but two legislators--Leung "Long Hair" Kwok-hung and Lee
Cheuk-yan--along with three other activists were denied
entry.
On
June 2, Tiananmen-era activist Wu'erkaixi tried to enter the
SAR to "turn himself in" to PRC authorities with the stated
goals of forcing the PRC government into a dialogue
regarding the Tiananmen massacre and to see his parents. As
a Taiwan passport holder, Wu'erkaixi would normally be
permitted visa-free entry into Macau, but he was refused
entry and returned to Taiwan on June 3.
On
December 19, two journalists were denied entry. One,
planning to cover the 10th Anniversary of Macau's return to
the PRC for the Hong Kong daily newspaper Ming Pao,
told the media she was not informed of the reason she was
denied entry. The Security Police, who oversee immigration,
later told the media she posed a threat to public security.
The Hong Kong Journalists' Association and the Hong Kong
News Executive's Association condemned the decision.
A
journalist, for Hong Kong's Next magazine, who was
traveling with her family for vacation, was also barred from
the SAR.
Also
on December 19, Hong Kong legislator Long Hair Leung again
was denied entry along with 14 other activists. They had
intended to petition visiting PRC President Hu Jintao on
universal suffrage in Hong Kong.
On
December 20--Macau Foundation Day and the inauguration day
of the new Chui administration--two activists with Hong
Kong's Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements
in China were denied entry into Macau. They had intended to
demonstrate for the release of Mainland Charter '08 activist
Liu Xiaobo. Alliance activist Chui Pak-tai told the media he
was physically abused by immigration officers, who then
declined to allow him and fellow activist Richard Tsoi
Yiu-cheong to file a complaint. Three other Alliance
activists were permitted to enter the SAR but chose to
depart with their colleagues.
In
December 2008 a group of 24 Hong Kong activists, including
nine legislators, was denied admission to the SAR. The group
was traveling to participate in activities related to the
then pending Article 23 national security legislation (see
section 2.a.).
Protection of Refugees
The
law provides for the granting of asylum or refugee status in
accordance with the 1951 Convention relating to the Status
of Refugees and its 1967 protocol, and the government has
established a system for providing protection to refugees.
In practice the government provided protection against the
expulsion or return of refugees to countries where their
lives or freedom would be threatened on account of their
race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular
social group, or political opinion. During the year there
were five applications for refugee status.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of
Citizens to Change Their Government
The
law limits citizens' ability to change their government.
Elections and Political Participation
Only a fraction of citizens play a role in the selection of
the CE. The 300-member Election Committee consists of 254
members elected from four broad societal sectors (which have
a limited franchise) and 46 members chosen from among the
SAR's legislators and representatives to the NPC and Chinese
People's Political Consultative Congress. Following
discussions within the sectors and their subordinate units
responsible for selecting the Election Committee, exactly
254 candidates were nominated, thus constituting the
Committee without an election. By virtue of securing 286 of
the 300 nominating votes, and thus precluding any other
candidate from winning the fifty nominations required to
stand for election, former secretary for social affairs and
culture Fernando Chui Sai-on ran unopposed for CE. He
received 282 votes from the Election Committee on July 26
and was formally appointed by the PRC State Council as the
third-term CE. Chui took office on December 20.
On
September 25, the SAR also elected parts of its Legislative
Assembly. Seven seats were filled by appointment by the CE;
10 indirectly elected legislators were returned uncontested
after internal consultation among the four broad sectors
that elect these seats. Sixteen electoral "slates"
representing 123 candidates (the SAR does not have formal
political parties for elections, and candidates form ad hoc
rosters to contest elections) competed for the 12 directly
elected seats.
There
are limits on the types of legislation that legislators may
introduce. The law stipulates that legislators may not
initiate legislation related to public expenditure, the
SAR's political structure, or the operation of the
government. Proposed legislation related to government
policies must receive the CE's written approval before it is
submitted. The legislature also has no power of confirmation
over executive or judicial appointments.
A
10-member Executive Council functions as an unofficial
cabinet, approving draft legislation before it is presented
in the Legislative Assembly. The Basic Law stipulates that
the CE appoints members of the SAR Executive Council from
among the principal officials of the executive authorities,
members of the legislature, and public figures.
There
are no registered political parties; politically active
groups register as societies or companies. These groups are
active in promoting their political agendas, and those
critical of the government do not face restrictions. Such
groups participated in protests over government policies or
proposed legislation without restriction.
There
were four women in the Legislative Assembly. Women also held
a number of senior positions throughout the government,
including the secretary for justice and administration, the
second-highest official in the SAR government. Eleven of the
SAR's 29 judges were women. Women made up almost 40 percent
of the executive, more than 45 percent of the judicial, and
more than 45 percent of the legislative branch work forces.
There were three members of ethnic minorities in the
Legislative Assembly. One member of the Executive Council
was also from an ethnic minority, as was the police
commissioner.
Section 4 Official Corruption and Government Transparency
The
law provides criminal penalties for official corruption;
however, officials sometimes engaged in corrupt practices.
The
Commission Against Corruption (CCAC) investigates the public
sector and has the power to arrest and detain suspects.
The
most recent figures showed that during the first half of the
year the CCAC received 417 complaints against public
officials in a variety of agencies; 336 were criminal cases,
and 81 were administrative cases. The CCAC pursued 138 of
these complaints, including 57 criminal cases and 81
administrative complaints, 11 of which were transferred to
the Public Prosecutions Office. The Ombudsman Bureau, within
the CCAC, reviews complaints of maladministration or abuse
by the CCAC. There were no reports of such complaints during
the year. There also is an independent committee outside
CCAC called the Monitoring Committee on Discipline of the
CCAC Personnel, which accepts and reviews complaints about
CCAC personnel.
By law
the CE, his cabinet, judges, members of the Legislative
Assembly and the Executive Council, and executive agency
directors are required to disclose their financial
interests.
The
law does not provide for public access to government
information. However, the executive branch published online,
in both Portuguese and Chinese, an extensive amount of
information on laws, regulations, ordinances, government
policies and procedures, and biographies of government
officials. The government also issued a daily press release
on topics of public concern. The information provided by the
legislature was less extensive.
Section 5 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human
Rights
A
number of domestic and international groups monitoring human
rights generally operated without government restriction,
investigating and publishing their findings on human rights
cases. Government officials often were cooperative and
responsive to their views.
The
government sent delegations to join the PRC delegation at UN
human rights fora throughout the year. The government also
cooperated with diplomatic missions in researching human
rights issues.
Section 6 Discrimination, Societal Abuses, and Trafficking
in Persons
The
law stipulates that residents shall be free from
discrimination, and many local laws carry specific
prohibitions against discrimination; the government
effectively enforced the law.
Women
The
law criminalizes rape, including spousal rape, and the
government effectively enforced the law. In the first half
of the year, there were six reported rapes. The police and
courts promptly acted on rape cases.
The
government effectively enforced criminal statutes
prohibiting domestic violence against women and prosecuted
violators; however, various nongovernmental organizations
(NGOs) and government officials considered domestic violence
against women to be a growing problem. Domestic violence is
punishable by one to 15 years in prison. In the case of both
spousal abuse and violence against minors, the penalty is
two to eight years' imprisonment; if the abuse leads to the
death of the victim, the penalty is five to 15 years. In the
first half of the year, 221 cases of domestic violence were
reported to the police.
The
government provided hospital treatment for victims of abuse,
and medical social workers counseled victims and informed
them of social welfare services. The government may provide
victims of domestic violence with public housing until their
complaints are resolved, but it did not reserve facilities
expressly for this purpose. The government also supported
two 24-hour hotlines, one for counseling and one for
reporting domestic violence cases.
NGOs
and religious groups sponsored programs for victims of
domestic violence, and the government supported and helped
to fund these organizations and programs. The Bureau for
Family Action, a government organization subordinate to the
Department of Family and Community of the Social Welfare
Institute, helped female victims of domestic violence by
providing a safe place for them and their children and
advice regarding legal actions against perpetrators. A
family counseling service was available to persons who
requested such services at social centers. Two
government-supported religious programs also offered
rehabilitation programs for female victims of violence.
Prostitution is legal and common; however, procurement and
the operation of a brothel are illegal. Nevertheless, the
SAR had a large sex trade, including brothels, most of which
were believed to be controlled by Chinese organized crime
groups, and many of those exploited by the trade were women.
There
is no law specifically addressing sexual harassment,
although harassment in general is prohibited under laws
governing equal opportunity, employment and labor rights,
and labor relations. Between January and June, neither the
Labor Affairs Bureau nor the Social Welfare Bureau received
complaints either of discrimination based on gender or
sexual harassment.
Couples and individuals had the right to decide the number,
spacing, and timing of children, and had the information and
means to do so free from discrimination. Access to
information on contraception, and skilled attendance at
delivery and in postpartum care were widely available. Women
and men were given equal access to diagnostic services and
treatment for sexually transmitted infections.
Equal
opportunity legislation mandates that women receive equal
pay for equal work; however, observers estimated that there
was a significant difference in salary between men and
women, particularly in unskilled jobs. The law allows for
civil suits, but few women took their cases to the Labor
Affairs Bureau or other entities. Discrimination in hiring
practices based on gender or physical ability is prohibited
by law, and penalties exist for employers who violate these
guidelines. There were no reports alleging sexual
discrimination during the first half of the year.
Children
In
accordance with the Basic Law, children of Chinese national
residents of Macau born in or outside of the SAR, and
children born to non-Chinese national permanent residents
inside the SAR, are regarded as permanent residents. There
is no differentiation among these categories in terms of
access to registration of birth. The government protected
the rights and welfare of children through the general
framework of civil and political rights legislation that
protects all citizens.
Education is compulsory and free for most children between
ages five and 15 through general secondary education.
However, the children of illegal immigrants were excluded
from the educational system. Experts believed this exclusion
affected only a few children.
The
law specifically provides for criminal punishment for sexual
abuse of children and students, statutory rape, and
procurement involving minors. The criminal code sets 14 as
the age of sexual consent and 16 for participation in the
legal sex trade. Child pornography is prohibited by law.
Trafficking in Persons
The
SAR is a transit and destination point for women and girls
trafficked for the purposes of commercial sexual
exploitation. Most victims were persons from inland Chinese
provinces who migrated to the border province of Guangdong
in search of employment, where they fell prey to false
advertisements for jobs in Macau. Other foreign and mainland
Chinese women and girls were deceived into migrating
voluntarily for employment opportunities in casinos, as
dancers, or other types of employment; upon arrival, some
victims were passed to local organized crime groups, held
captive, and forced into sexual servitude. Some foreign
victims were misinformed about their destination and
diverted to the SAR, where they were trafficked into
prostitution.
A 2008
comprehensive antitrafficking law prohibits all forms of
trafficking in persons and prescribes penalties ranging from
three to 12 years' imprisonment. Penalties increase by
one‑third for trafficking victims under 14 years old.
Retaining, hiding, spoiling, or destroying the
identification or travel documents of a trafficking victim
also incurs a penalty of one to five years' imprisonment, if
no harsher punishment is available in other laws. In
November the first person convicted under the 2008 law was
sentenced to 7.5 years' imprisonment. Several other cases
were awaiting trial.
Although prostitution is legal, a "procurement" law makes it
a crime to instigate, favor, or facilitate the practice of
prostitution by another person for the purposes of profit or
as a way of life, although the penalties for this crime are
less severe and the procurement crime does not recognize a
victim.
Between January and December, there were four reported cases
of human trafficking. On May 16, the Judiciary Police
arrested four men and two women for human trafficking,
controlling prostitutes, and illegal retention of identity
documents. Nineteen victims were rescued from six
residential apartments where they reportedly were forced to
provide sex services. One victim told police she had been
forced to perform sex services 60-70 times, and all her
earnings were taken by the traffickers.
Authorities believed that Chinese, Russian, and Thai
criminal syndicates in some instances were involved in
trafficking women to the SAR for prostitution, after which
victims were passed on to local crime syndicates. Victims
were from mainland China, Mongolia, Russia, the Philippines,
Central Asia, Vietnam, and Thailand. There were no confirmed
reports of official involvement in human trafficking. A
police officer arrested in 2007 for allegedly blackmailing
two women in prostitution for "protection" fees was expelled
from the police force and was awaiting trial.
The
Social Welfare Bureau provided temporary shelter,
counseling, and financial and medical assistance to
identified victims of trafficking. The government also
published leaflets to educate citizens on human trafficking,
associated penalties, and the government's protection
measures for victims. The leaflets, printed in Chinese,
Portuguese, and English, were available at border and
transit points, police and other government offices,
health-care and social welfare facilities, and educational
institutions. The government ran television, newspaper, and
radio announcements to further educate the public about
human trafficking. The Antitrafficking Commission launched a
Web site in Chinese, Portuguese, and English to provide
antitrafficking resources and information, including the two
hotlines dedicated for reporting trafficking crimes.
The Department of State's annual Trafficking in Persons
Report can be found at
www.state.gov/g/tip.
Persons with Disabilities
The
law prohibits discrimination against persons with physical
and mental disabilities in employment, access to health
care, or the provision of other state services, and the
government generally enforced these provisions in practice.
The law mandates access to buildings for persons with
disabilities. The Social Welfare Institute was primarily
responsible for coordinating and funding public assistance
programs to persons with disabilities. The government
employed 79 persons with disabilities as public servants.
Societal Abuses, Discrimination, and Acts of Violence Based
on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
There
are no laws criminalizing any sexual orientation, and no
prohibition against lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender
(LGBT) persons forming organizations or associations. There
were no such organizations active during the year. No LGBT
marches or other events occurred during the year. There were
no reports of violence against persons based on their sexual
orientation.
Other
Societal Violence or Discrimination
The
law prohibits discrimination against persons with HIV/AIDS
and limits the number of required disclosures of an
individual's HIV status. Employees outside medical fields
are not required to declare their status to employers. There
were anecdotal reports that persons whose status became
known, as well as organizations supporting them, faced some
forms of discrimination. There were no reported incidents of
violence against persons with HIV/AIDS.
Section 7 Worker Rights
a. The
Right of Association
The
law provides for the right of workers to form and join
unions or "labor associations" of their choice without
previous authorization or excessive requirement, and the
government generally respected this right in practice.
Between January 2008 and June 2009, the government
registered 31 new labor associations, eight new professional
associations, and 29 new private sector associations; none
were deregistered. Data on the percentage of unionized
workers was unavailable. A draft law on labor unions was
rejected by the Legislative Assembly in April, due to
concern that key issues were not addressed with sufficient
clarity.
According to the International Trade Union Confederation
(ITUC), due to the PRC government's strong influence over
local trade union activities, including the direct selection
of the leadership of the Federation of Trade Unions (FTU),
trade union independence was undermined and the protection
of trade union members' rights compromised. PRC government
policies emphasized minimizing workplace disruption, and
some unions were criticized for tending to resemble local
traditional neighborhood associations promoting social and
cultural activities. The Union for Democracy Development
Macau (UDDM) and some local journalists claimed that the FTU
was more interested in providing social and recreational
services than in addressing labor problems such as wages,
benefits, and working conditions.
Workers have the right to strike, but there is no specific
protection in the law from retribution if workers exercise
this right. The government argued that striking employees
are protected from retaliation by labor law provisions,
which require an employer to have "justified cause" to
dismiss an employee; however, there were reports that the
government failed to enforce these provisions. Strikes,
rallies, and demonstrations were not permitted in the
vicinity of the CE's office, the Legislative Assembly, and
other key government buildings.
Workers who believed they were dismissed unlawfully may
bring a case to court or lodge a complaint with the Labor
Department or the Office of the High Commissioner Against
Corruption and Administrative Illegality, which also
functions as ombudsman. However, migrant workers had no
right to such recourse.
b. The
Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The
law provides that agreements concluded between employers and
workers shall be valid, but there is no specific statutory
protection that provides for the right to collective
bargaining; however, the government did not impede or
discourage collective bargaining. Pro-PRC unions
traditionally have not attempted to engage in collective
bargaining. Migrant workers and public servants did not have
the right to bargain collectively.
The
ITUC maintained that under the law, the high percentage of
foreign labor, which has no right to collective bargaining,
was eroding the bargaining power of local residents to
improve working conditions and increase wages.
The
law prohibits antiunion discrimination and employer
interference in union functions; however, the UDDM expressed
concern that the local law contains no explicit provisions
that bar discrimination against unions.
There
are no export processing zones.
c.
Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The law prohibits forced or compulsory labor, and there were
no reports that such practices occurred.
d. Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
The
law prohibits minors under the age of 16 from working,
although minors between the ages of 14 and 16 can be
authorized to work on an "exceptional basis." Some children
reportedly worked in family-operated or small businesses.
Local laws do not establish specific regulations governing
the number of hours these children can work, but
International Labor Organization conventions were applied.
The Labor Department enforced the law through periodic and
targeted inspections, and violators were prosecuted.
e.
Acceptable Conditions of Work
Local
labor laws establish the general principle of fair wages and
mandate compliance with wage agreements. There was no
mandatory minimum wage, except for government-outsourced
security guards and cleaners. Average wages provided a
decent standard of living for a worker and family.
In
2008 representatives of employers, employees, and the
government discussed a minimum wage scheme for all sectors.
They concluded that a minimum wage imposed on all industries
would be complex and difficult and a mandatory minimum wage
would be implemented only after the community reaches a
consensus. In response to a legislative query, the Labor
Affairs Bureau in April again stated that society had not
yet reached a consensus on a minimum wage.
Local
customs normally favored employment without the benefit of
written labor contracts, except in the case of migrant
workers, who were issued short-term contracts. Labor groups
reported that employers increasingly used temporary
contracts as a means to circumvent obligations to pay for
workers' benefits such as pensions, sick leave, and paid
holidays. The short-term nature of the contracts also makes
it easier to dismiss workers by means of nonrenewal. In its
August 25 "Concluding Observations" on the report issued by
China (including Macau and Hong Kong), the UN Committee on
the Elimination of Racial Discrimination called on the SAR
government to extend social welfare benefits to all workers,
including migrant workers.
Labor
legislation provides for a 48-hour workweek, an eight-hour
workday, paid overtime, annual leave, and medical and
maternity care. Although the law provides for a 24-hour rest
period each week, workers frequently agreed to work overtime
to compensate for low wages. The Labor Department provided
assistance and legal advice to workers upon request.
The
Labor Department enforced occupational safety and health
regulations, and failure to correct infractions could lead
to prosecution. During the first half of the year, the Labor
Department Inspectorate conducted 2,830 inspections and
uncovered 55 violations carrying fines totaling
approximately 162,300 patacas ($20,330). In the first half
of the year, there were 1,728 work-related injuries and
three work-related deaths. Although the law includes a
requirement that employers provide a safe working
environment, no explicit provisions protected employees'
right to continued employment if they refused to work under
dangerous conditions. |