OPINION No. 7/2003 (CHINA)
Communication addressed to the Government on 28 August 2002.
Concerning: Chen Gang, Zhang Wenfu, Zhong Bo, Liu Li, Wu Xiaohua, Gai Suzhi,
Liu Junhua, Zhang Jiuhai, Zhu Xiaofei.
The State has signed but not yet ratified the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights
1. (Same text as paragraph 1 of opinion No. 15/2002.)
2. The Working Group conveys its appreciation to the Government for having forwarded
the requested information in good time.
3. (Same text as paragraph 3 of opinion No. 15/2002.)
4. In the light of the allegations made, the Working Group welcomes the cooperation
of the Government. The Working Group transmitted the reply provided by the Government
to the source, which provided the Working Group with its comments. The Working
Group believes that it is in a position to render an opinion on the facts and
circumstances of the case, in the context of the allegations made and the response
of the Government thereto.
5. According to the information transmitted by the source, Chen Gang, male,
28 years old, resident of Tianshui city, Gansu province, was arrested in April
2002 by members of the Lanzhou city police, who beat and ill-treated him. He
is detained in the Luergou Detention Centre, Tianshui city, Gansu province,
and is reportedly in critical condition. The source further reports that Chen
Gang was detained in November 1999 for 15 days when he went to Beijing to ask
the Government to stop its persecution of Falun Gong. In January 2000, the Chief
of the Politics and Law Committee of Tianshui city detained him for one month.
Later, he was sent to the Ping’antai Labour Camp in Lanzhou city for one
year of forced labour. While in detention in this camp, he was tortured severely.
According to the reports received, guards bounded his arms and legs, sealed
his mouth and nose, shoved him under a board bed and then stomped on it. In
March 2001, he was released but the police did not allow him to go back to work
and his salary was stopped by the work unit. It was further said that the police
often went to his residence to
harass him, which caused him to leave his home to live on the streets.
6. Zhang Wenfu, male, resident of Dalian city, Liaoning province, was reportedly
arrested on 19 January 2002 and sent to Pulandian Detention Centre for 50 days.
It was alleged that on 8 March 2002, without any legal procedure, he was transferred
to the No. 5 Division of Dalian Labour Camp where he was put under strict supervision
for over 40 days. He was not allowed to wash his face or brush his teeth, and
was forced to do heavy labour for long periods each day. On 18 April 2002, he
was transferred to the No. 8 Division of Dalian Labour Camp. On 28 April 2002,
he started a hunger strike to protest the conditions of his detention. In response,
he was allegedly tortured by three team leaders, Li Xuezhong, Li Shaofu and
Peng Dahua, and by an inmate, Chi Diandong. His mouth and eyes were sealed with
tape, his hands were handcuffed and his head was beaten with a rubber baton.
He was also beaten with a wooden board. Torturers used chopsticks to poke inside
his mouth, causing it to bleed profusely. Later, he was locked in a compartment,
handcuffed and forced to lie on a wooden board for
a day.
7. Zhong Bo, female, 42 years old, employee of the Anda Chemistry Factory, resident
of Anda city, Heilongjiang province, was reportedly arrested at her home on
31 May 2002 at 9 a.m. by six policemen led by Liu Yingshan, an officer from
the 610 Office, an agency reportedly created specifically to persecute Falun
Gong. At the compound of the Politics and Administration Department in Anda
city, she was beaten with a wooden stick by six policemen led by Wang Jun, the
Vice-Director of the Anda City Police Station. At the 610 Office she was subjected
to electric shocks on her back. Her eyes bled and her face became black and
swollen. That evening, she jumped from a second-floor window. The examination
at Daqing City Hospital in Heilongjiang province showed that two of her right
ribs and her teeth were broken. She lost all memory of what happened and cannot
take care of herself.
8. Liu Li, female, resident of Taonan city, Jilin province, blind in one eye,
was reportedly arrested at her home on 28 July 2002 together with 11 other Falun
Gong practitioners and taken to the Taonan City Police Bureau. The Chief of
the Department of Politics and Security, Liu Jinwei, told her that she would
be sent to the Heizuizi Labour Camp in Changchun city or to re-education classes
in Daan city. He told her that she would not be released unless she renounced
Falun Gong.
9. Wu Xiaohua, female, 47 years old, an associate professor of the Environmental
Art Department at Anhui Civil Construction Engineering College at Hefei city,
Anhui province, was reportedly placed under house arrest in October 2001, during
the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit held in Shanghai. Later, she was
sent to a labour camp for women. She was allegedly tortured at the camp in a
variety of ways, including having her mouth stuffed with rags and tissues soaked
in urine and menstrual blood. In mid-October 2001, on the tenth day of a hunger
strike she had initiated to protest against her detention, she was sent to the
No. 4 People’s Hospital at Hefei city, Anhui province. At the hospital
she was stripped of her clothes and shocked with electric needles and an electric
baton all over her body. She was threatened by a medical doctor, Dr. Li, with
electric shocks until she became unconscious. She was also forcibly given injections
and force-fed drugs. It was further reported that Professor Wu was first arrested
in December 1999 for appealing in Beijing to the Government to put an end to
its persecution of
Falun Gong. She was allegedly tortured at the Anhui Female Detention Centre
in Anhui province. Later she was transferred to the No. 4 People’s Hospital
of Hefei city where she also was tortured, including by being locked in a bathhouse
full of mosquitoes for one night and being forced to use a pigpen full of spider
webs as a toilet. At the end of April 2001, she was again arrested.
10. Gai Suzhi, female, 63 years old, a retired employee of the No. 2 Petrochemical
Factory at Fushun city, Liaoning province, was reportedly arrested in August
2001 and sent to the Wujiabao Labour Camp at Fushun city, in spite of the fact
that by law, the labour camp is not allowed to detain anyone who is older than
60. To protest her illegal detention, she has gone on hunger strike several
times at the camp. She only weighs about 35 kg now and she has become extremely
sick. It was alleged that she has been cursed, beaten and tortured very often
at the camp. It was further reported that Ms. Gai was first arrested in December
2000, when she went to Beijing to protest against the persecution of Falun Gong.
She was detained for more than two months. Subsequently, she was arrested twice
more.
11. Liu Junhua, male, aged 36, employee of Sanjiang Food Company at Jiamusi
city, Heilongjiang province, was reportedly arrested on 9 April 2002 at his
home at Jiamusi city by members of the Nanwei Police Station for his belief
in Falun Gong. He is imprisoned in Xigemu Forced Labour Camp, Heilongjiang province.
His wife was forced to leave home to avoid further harassment and persecution
from local police. He had previously been detained and sentenced to two years
of re-education through forced labour. At the end of October 2001, he was re-arrested
in Mishan city and released after he went on hunger strike for 44 days.
12. Zhang Jiuhai, male, aged 35, from Liudian town, Pinggu district, Pinggu
county, Beijing city, was reportedly arrested at his home on 6 August 2002 and
sent to re-education classes in Pinggu county. It was further reported that
he was previously detained from August 2000 to February 2002 in Tuanhe Labour
Camp, Beijing, where he was severely tortured, reportedly because he refused
to renounce Falun Gong. In April 2002, he was arrested again and administered
shocks with electric batons at the Haidian District Police Bureau, Beijing.
The local police ransacked his home six times and detained his father twice.
13. Zhu Xiaofei, male, former employee of Lushun 4810 Factory, resident of Lushunkou
district, Dalian city, Liaoning province, was reportedly arrested on 26 November
2001 at his workplace by police. He was sent directly to Dalian Forced Labour
Camp, in Liaoning province, where the guards allegedly ordered other inmates
to monitor him and physically torture him by shocking him with electric batons.
He was later transferred to Guanshan Forced Labour Camp in Changtu city, Liaoning
province, where he is forced to do hard labour. It was further reported that
Mr. Zhu had been previously detained twice at the Lushunkou District Police
Station, where police officer Ye Qiang tortured him, choking him with a rope
and shocking him with electric batons.
14. According to the source, the nine above-mentioned persons are being held
in detention illegally solely because of their belief in Falun Gong. Many of
them have been sent for re-education through forced labour without trial because
they refuse to renounce their belief. The source adds that their activities
were always peaceful.
15. The Government provided the Working Group with the following information.
16. Chen Gang, male, aged 25, resident of Tianshui city, Gansu province, was
ordered by the Tianshui city labour rehabilitation committee in February 2000,
to serve one year’s re-education through labour for repeatedly disturbing
the peace. In September 2002, the Tianshui city labour rehabilitation committee
ordered Mr. Chen to serve three years’ labour re-education for once again
having disturbed the peace. While serving his term of labour re-education, Mr.
Chen has not been subjected to any harassment or ill-treatment.
17. Zhang Wenfu, male, aged 40, resident of Dalian city, Liaoning province,
was ordered by the Dalian city labour rehabilitation committee to serve two
years and six months’ labour re-education, to run from 20 January 2002
to 19 July 2004, for disturbing the peace. While serving his term of labour
re-education, Zhang has never embarked on any hunger strikes.
18. Zhong Bo, female, aged 42, resident of Anda city, Heilongjiang province,
was taken into criminal detention on 21 October 2002 for repeatedly disturbing
the peace. On 11 November, she was granted medical parole. She has never been
subjected, as alleged, to any harsh beatings, nor did she jump from a second-floor
window and break two ribs.
19. Liu Li, female, aged 46, resident of Taonan city, Jilin province. On 3 February
2001, Ms. Liu was ordered by the local labour rehabilitation committee to serve
one year’s labour re-education for disturbing the peace, but, because
she is blind in one eye, the order was amended to allow her to serve the term
of labour re-education outside the custodial facility. While serving her term,
Ms. Liu was once again ordered, in April 2002, to serve one year’s labour
re-education for disturbing the peace, which again was to be served outside
the custodial facility. Ms. Liu is currently leading a normal life at home.
20. Wu Xiaohua, female, aged 48, formerly an associate professor at the Anhui
Construction Industry College, was ordered on 28 January 2000 by the labour
rehabilitation authorities to serve one year’s labour re-education for
causing a serious disturbance of the peace. While serving her term of labour
re-education, the facility employees noticed that her mental state was very
distracted and observed that she displayed other abnormal symptoms, such as
a tendency to injure herself without cause or reason, to refuse food and other
aberrations. On 17 July 2000, she was diagnosed by the Anhui psychiatric appraisal
committee to be suffering from schizophrenia (of the paranoid variety), and
incapable of responding to labour re-education. The labour re-education facility
promptly took steps for her to receive medical attention outside the facility
and she was thereupon discharged from her term of labour re-education. After
undergoing treatment, Ms. Wu’s state of health improved, but she once
again conducted activities which seriously disturbed the peace. On 2 June 2001,
the Hebei municipal labour rehabilitation committee ordered her to be examined
by the expert appraisal committee of the provincial psychiatric hospital, with
a view to identifying her psychiatric disorder. The diagnosis was that, during
the period while her schizophrenia was in full remission, she was capable of
responding to labour re-education, whereupon she was ordered to serve two years’
labour re-education. While Ms. Wu was undergoing her term of labour re-education,
the responsible authorities, acting on humanitarian grounds, frequently arranged
prompt medical treatment for her and she was not subjected, as alleged, to any
cruel treatment or insults or made to endure any electric shocks or physical
beatings.
21. Gai Suzhi, female, aged 62, resident of Fushun city, Liaoning province,
was ordered in October 2000 by the Fushun city labour rehabilitation committee
to serve two years’ labour re-education, to run from 19 October 2000 to
18 October 2002, for disturbing the peace. In view of her age, her poor physical
condition and her many ailments, the labour re-education facility, following
the relevant regulations, decided to allow her to serve her term of labour re-education
outside the custodial facility. While serving her term, Ms. Gai once again caused
a breach of the peace and was ordered to serve a further three months’
labour re-education. Ms. Gai completed her term of labour re-education on 8
January 2003.
22. Liu Junhua, male, aged 36, resident of Jiamusi city, Heilongjiang province,
was ordered by the Jiamusi city labour rehabilitation committee to serve two
years’ labour re-education, to run from 23 October 1999 to 22 October
2001, for disturbing the peace. While serving his term of labour re-education,
Mr. Liu caused breaches of the facility rules and regulations and, on 3 November
2000, he conspired with other inmates to escape. On 28 September 2001 he was
reapprehended by the public security authorities and returned to the facility
to continue serving his term. On 9 June 2002, the Jiamusi City People’s
Court, acting in accordance with the law, sentenced him to 10 years’ fixed-term
imprisonment for the offence of sabotaging implementation of State law.
23. Zhang Jiuhai, male, aged 35, resident of Beijing, was ordered in July 2000
to serve one year’s labour re-education for causing a disturbance of the
peace. On 1 April 2002, the Beijing city labour rehabilitation authorities ordered
him to serve two years’ labour re-education, for having once again disturbed
the peace. He is currently serving his term.
24. Zhu Xiaofei, male, aged 26, resident of Dalian city, Liaoning province,
was ordered on 1 October 2001 by the Dalian city labour rehabilitation committee
to serve two years and six months’ labour re-education, to run from 26
November 2001 to 25 May 2004, for causing a disturbance of the peace. He is
currently serving his term in Guanshan labour re-education facility in Liaoning
province.
25. In its observations, the Government states that China is a country governed
by the rule of law. Chinese law fully safeguards the lawful rights and interests
of persons undergoing labour re-education. Where persons undergoing labour re-education
are concerned, the basic policy followed by the labour re-education facility
is that they should be re-educated, guided by persuasion and thus reformed;
that they should be accorded the same solicitude as parents accord their children,
teachers accord their students and doctors accord their patients; that they
should receive consideration, assistance and education; and that their lawful
rights and interests should be protected in accordance with the law. At the
same time, in the actual practice of labour re-education, full use is made of
such procedures as the remission of terms, the granting of parole for terms
to be served outside the facility and early release from detention in the facility,
so that those undergoing labour education are reformed to the maximum extent.
Once released from the labour re-education facility, students may return to
their studies, employees and workers may resume employment and their rights
to a normal life and job are fully upheld.
26. In its reaction to the reply from the Government, the source states that
the Government of China used “disruption of social order” as the
pretext for detaining Zhong Bo, Liu Li, Wu Xiaohua, Gai Suzhi, Chen Gang, Zhang
Wenfu, Liu Junhua, Zhang Jiuhai and Zhu Xiaofei. According to the source, the
Government failed to name the specific offences with which they had been charged.
The source notes how strange it is that people of different ages (from 25 to
62), different professions (workers, professors, retirees) and from different
locations suddenly develop the same tendency to “disrupt social order”,
many even repeatedly. According to the source, Zhong Bo, Liu Li, Wu Xiaohua,
Gai Suzhi, Chen Gang, Zhang Wenfu, Liu Junhua, Zhang Jiuhai and Zhu Xiaofei
are all Falun Gong practitioners and were persecuted for exercising the freedom
of belief guaranteed by China’s Constitution. They were repeatedly detained
and tortured for refusing to renounce Falun Gong.
27. The Working Group notes that the Government of China has informed it that
Zhong Bo, Liu Li and Gai Suzhi are no longer being detained. When this information
was transmitted to the source, it was not disputed.
28. The Working Group further observes that the Government has not denied that
Chen Gang, Zhang Wenfu, Wu Xiaohua, Liu Junhua, Zhang Jiuhai and Zhu Xiaofei
are Falun Gong practitioners, or that they were detained in connection with
the practice of this discipline.
29. As there is no evidence that Falun Gong is a violent belief, as far as the
cases under consideration are concerned, its free exercise should be protected
by article 18 on freedom of belief and article 19 on freedom of opinion and
expression of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
30. Even though the sentence of re-education through labour is, as claimed by
the Government, a more favourable measure offering better possibilities to the
person concerned than a prison sentence imposed by a court judgement, it still
constitutes, in the opinion of the Working Group, administrative deprivation
of liberty that may be arbitrary in character, as found by the Group in its
deliberation 04 of 1993 (see E/CN.4/1993/24, chap. II).
31. In its report on its visit to China (E/CN.4/1998/44/Add.2, para. 95), the
Working Group stated that the measure of re-education through labour should
not be applied to any person exercising his or her fundamental freedoms as guaranteed
by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In the cases at hand, detention
does constitute a coercive measure designed to undermine the freedom of those
persons to adopt beliefs of their own choosing.
32. The Working Group therefore deems that these persons were prosecuted and
sentenced to the administrative measure of re-education through labour, and
therefore deprived of their liberty, mainly for exercising fundamental rights
which are set out in articles 18 and 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights: the right to freedom of conscience and religion (art. 18) and the right
to freedom of opinion and expression (art. 19).
33. In the light of the foregoing, the Working Group issues the following opinion:
Since Zhong Bo, Liu Li and Gai Suzhi have been released in the meantime, the
Working Group decides, pursuant to paragraph 17 (a) of its methods of work,
to file their case, without taking position as to whether their detention was
arbitrary.
The detention of Chen Gang, Zhang Wenfu, Wu Xiaohua, Liu Junhua, Zhang Jiuhai
and Zhu Xiaofei is arbitrary, being in contravention of articles 18 and 19
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and falls within category II of
the categories applicable to the consideration of cases submitted to the Working
Group.
34. Consequently, the Working Group requests the Government to take the necessary
steps to remedy the situation of these persons and to bring it into conformity
with the standards and principles set forth in the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, and encourages it to ratify the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights.
Adopted on 9 May 2003
E/CN.4/2004/3/Add.1