Latest: On the day of Chinese human rights lawyer Lu Siwei's hearing for his license, at least eight people were arrested. A lawyer who also handled the case of the 12 #HongKong youth described #Beijing's move as "revealing its guilty conscience."
Lu was appointed by family members of the 12 Hong Kong people detained in Shenzhen to handle their cases last year, and earlier this month, he received a notification from the Sichuan Provincial Justice Department, informing him that they were planning to revoke his license.
He was scheduled to attend a hearing at 9 a.m. on Wednesday morning and according to information from sources, Lu was brought into the Justice Department in an arbitrary fashion.
Several human rights lawyers and dissidents who originally planned to attend the hearing were arrested by police and taken to the local police station.
At around 8:40 a.m., Chinese human rights lawyer Yu Wensheng’s wife @xuyan709, human rights lawyer Wen Donghai, Wu Quimin, Chen Keyun and Liu Sishin were on their way to the Justice Department and they were suddenly stopped by police.
A heated argument broke out between them and the five of them were taken away by police.
“We were all heading towards the Justice Department from different locations and at first, I tried to get to the building from the east side, but I was stopped by the police,” said the human rights lawyer.
“Then I tried to get to the building from the west side, but I was also stopped by the police. They told me that I shouldn’t head to the building this morning, and they also asked me what was I trying to do at the Justice Department."
After the five human rights lawyers and dissidents were taken away by police, Lu Siwei was arbitrarily taken into the Justice Department, while two of his proxies, human rights lawyer @lawyerxieyanyi and Cheng Hai were both kept outside of the building by plainclothes police.
Ren Quanniu, another human rights lawyer who also handled the case of the 12 #HK people and faced the possible fate of losing his license, said Lu was surrounded by more than a dozen people and said Lu was eventually dragged into the Justice Department by three to four people.
“There were more than a dozen plainclothes police outside the building and three to four of them would surround one of us,” Ren wrote online. “They wouldn’t let us take photos and they also wouldn’t let us get close to the building of the Justice Department.”
Not long after, Ren said another human rights lawyer Xie yang was pressed to the ground by three to four plainclothes police and they took away his cellphone. Eventually, Xie was taken away by the police.
Additionally, human rights lawyer Wang Yu was dragged into a police car while searching for her friends around the Justice Department. According to Ren, police told Wang that they needed her for an investigation.
Ren also lost contact with his other friends soon after Wang was taken away by the police.
Diplomats from 10 countries were all outside the Justice Department, hoping to be able to attend the hearing. However, they were all banned by the police.
n fact, Lu Siwei had been followed by unknown individuals a few days before the hearing. According to Xie Yanyi, several police cars have been parking outside of Lu’s residence since Monday, and he was also followed and surveilled by several unknown individuals.
On Tuesday, while Xie and Lu tried to run some errands at a hospital in Chengdu, two cars suddenly parked around their car, forcing their car to be stuck by the side of the road.
Lu decided to call the police to the scene, but after the police arrived, they took Lu to the police station rather than making sure what happened at the scene. The police claimed that they needed to handle relevant matters at the police station.
“While I was talking to the police, I told them that they should either let us drop the report or they should show their legal documents and began to conduct investigation,” Xie said. “However, they knowingly broke the law by unlawfully restrict Lu’s personal freedom.”
Another human rights lawyer who was also hired by family members of the 12 #HK youths to handle their cases said as Beijing decides to revoke the licenses of two human rights lawyers since the beginning of 2021,...
... she believes the government’s intention is to create a chilling effect, hoping that other human rights lawyers will stay away from sensitive cases.
She also thinks that the arrest of eight human rights lawyers and dissidents who tried to attend the hearing reflects the Chinese government’s guilty conscience.
“There are diplomats from 10 countries at the scene, and they were also banned from attending the hearing,” said the human rights lawyer.
“Such behavior shows that the Chinese government didn’t want the international community to pay attention to Lu’s case and their efforts to ensure the case receives minimal attention exposes their guilty conscience and fear.”
The human rights lawyer also said that as Beijing increases its crackdown on human rights lawyers, she remains pessimistic about the prospect facing human rights lawyers in China.
“We can no longer get involved in sensitive cases and after the two human rights lawyers lose their license, I think the Chinese government will increase their crackdown on human rights lawyers in the country,” she said.
She thinks that all the lawyers who had tried to handle the cases of the 12 Hong Kong people have probably been put on the government’s blacklist.
She believes that the Chinese government will increase its surveillance of human rights lawyers bu she vows to keep playing the role of a human rights lawyer. “After all, I’m a lawyer and I shouldn’t stay away from sensitive cases simply because of pressure from the government."
“However, I also know that the possibility for me to get involved in sensitive cases will become slimmer in the future. As a lawyer, if I can still handle cases, I will try my best to defend my clients.
As a citizen, if I can no longer get involved in sensitive cases, I should still pay attention to these cases and speak up for them.”
With less than a week until he leaves office, the Trump administration imposed more sanctions on officials and companies for alleged misdeeds in the South China Sea and imposing an investment ban on nine more firms.
Executives of state-owned enterprises, officials of the Chinese Communist Party and military, along with oil giant CNOOC will face new restrictions for allegedly using coercion against states with rival South China Sea claims.
Nine Chinese firms were added to the Pentagon’s list of companies with alleged ties to the Chinese military, including planemaker Comac and phone maker Xiaomi Corp.
The CECC report called for a formal US “determination on whether atrocities are being committed” in Xinjiang, and such a determination is required within 90 days of US legislation passed on December 27.
CECC co-chair, Democratic Representative Jim McGovern, called China’s actions to crush human rights in the past year “shocking and unprecedented” and urged Congress and the incoming Biden administration to hold Beijing accountable.
Latest: Following #China's ratification of its extradition agreement with Turkey, human rights organizations and #Uyghurs in Turkey are now anxiously waiting to see if the Turkish parliament would ratify the agreement or not.
"#China's NPCSC ratified the extradition agreement signed in 2017 with Turkey on December 26, 2020. The news made thousands of Uyghurs living in Turkey begin to fear for the possibility that they might be extradited back to China at Beijing’s request."
Mirzehmet İlyasoglu, a Uyghur man living in Turkey, said the Chinese government has long viewed the Uyghurs as targets for crackdown. Any Uyghur who has studied, travelled to or lived in Turkey will be viewed as a separatist by Beijing.
Chinese human rights lawyer Yu Wensheng’s wife @xuyan709 got to meet her husband for the first time in almost three years since his arrest on January 19, 2018. He reportedly showed up in jumpsuits and handcuffs and his head was shaved. The meeting was conducted through ...
... video conference and lasted around 20 to 25 minutes. Yu told his wife that he has requested to be transferred back to a prison in #Beijing, so he can be close to his family. Xu also told him about the ongoing international attention on his imprisonment as well as ...
... the state facing human rights lawyers in #China. He expressed gratitude to the support. Xu expresses her demand to the Chinese government for allowing her to meet her husband in person the next time she is allowed to visit. “It’s been three years since I last saw him ...
"Internet users noticed the website HKChronicles was unreachable from some Hong Kong-based devices last week, and its owner put out a statement saying she believed authorities were blocking access."
"Police declined to comment, but on Thursday Hong Kong Broadband Network -- one of the city's internet service providers -- confirmed a takedown order had been issued.
Another powerful piece by @yangyang_cheng: "They conveniently ignore the hidden labour that underpins their comfort: the years-long effort by the Chinese public to learn English and the daily toil of fixers, guides and interpreters." theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
"Lived experience alone does not equate with scholarship, and at the same time, linguistic dexterity alone is a poor metric for genuine understanding. Plenty of excellent reporting and analysis on China is conducted in non-Chinese languages."
"Beneath the arrogant gatekeeping and flippant dismissals is an old tale of power and personhood: who is interested in China? Whose opinions are valued? What constitutes Chinese-ness, and who gets to define it?"