Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Forced Abortion Continues in China at Alarming Rate says Latest Report

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Forced Abortion Continues in China at Alarming Rate says Latest Report
Whistleblower Beaten Again
[img]http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/08/26/PH2005082602079.jpg[/img]
LINYI, October 26, 2005 (LifeSiteNews.com) � Despite claims by some Chinese
authorities that forced abortion and sterilization is illegal, a massive
program underway since March in China�s Shandong province still goes on
unabated.

Bowing to international pressure in 2002, China claims to have made a change
to its forced abortion and sterilization policy; the new law states that
only financial �incentives� such as monetary fines of up to a year�s wages,
can be used to induce compliance.

A report from India Sunday, however, confirms that the abuse continues. So
far more than 120,000 women have fallen victim to the program, the India
Telegraph reports. The Telegraph reported the story of farmers Zhu Hong Ying
and her husband, Xia Jian Dong, from the Linyi region, where blind social
activist Chen Guangcheng alerted the world about the abuses this summer.

Zhu fled to Linyi city after learning that authorities were brutally
enforcing the One Child policy in March. After her three sisters were
arrested, Zhu returned; her son was forcibly aborted by having a needle
filled with poison injected into her womb. Looking at her dead son after he
was delivered still-born the following day was �the most heartbreaking
moment of my life,� Zhu said.

Xia said a nurse then dumped the baby in a black garbage bag, instructing
him to throw it into the back of a truck parked outside. �It had a large
container kind of thing at the back,� he said emotionally. �When I opened
the door and looked in it was full of black bags and blood.�

Meanwhile Chen Guangcheng was again the victim of a beating from authorities
for the second time in a month, according to a Radio Free Asia report.
�(They) started beating and kicking him,� Chen�s cousin Chen Guangli said.
�He fell to the ground five or six times. He is a blind man. He could not
see them.� Chen was reportedly trying to leave his home to welcome visitors,
when he was attacked by the guards who ensure Chen does not violate his
house arrest.

Nine assailants, including two authorities, participated in the beating. One
officer told RFA, �His injury is not a big deal.� Chen�s cousin reported
that he had not been allowed to receive medical attention.

See the India Telegraph report:

See the Reuters coverage of the Radio Free China coverage:

See previous LifeSiteNews.com story
China Labels Stanford Researcher "International spy" For Exposing Forced
Abortion Policy

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Tuesday, October 25, 2005

'Law Is Dead' - Blind China activist beaten up again

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Blind China activist beaten up again - group
Tue Oct 25, 2005 9:25 AM BST
By Benjamin Kang Lim

BEIJING (Reuters) - A blind activist under house arrest for exposing forced
abortions in China's east has been beaten for the second time this month, a
village official and the Washington-based Radio Free Asia said on Tuesday.

It was also the second attack on a civil rights campaigner in as many weeks.

About nine people, including two officials, punched and kicked Chen
Guangcheng on Monday when he tried to force his way out of his home in
Dongshigu village, Shandong province, to greet two friends barred from
entering his home, RFA quoted a villager surnamed Han and Chen's cousin as
saying.

"(They) started beating and kicking him. He fell to the ground five or six
times. He is a blind man. He could not see them," the cousin, Chen Guangli,
was quoted as saying.

But a village official told Reuters that Chen Guangcheng had berated his
assailants before the scuffle broke out and bit one of them for refusing to
let him go out.

Chen and his family could not be reached for comment. His mobile phone was
turned off and his home phone was cut.

On October 8, Lu Banglie was beaten by thugs when he tried to help a British
reporter from the Guardian enter Taishi village in the southern province of
Guangdong to interview villagers seeking to vote out their elected chief
over allegations of corruption.

Four days earlier, Chen, whose whistleblowing prompted the government to
sack and and detain several officials in Shandong's Linyi city, was beaten
and found bleeding on a street in his home village when three lawyers
arrived to negotiate with local officials to free him from house arrest.

Officials from Yinan county, which administers Dongshigu, forcibly brought
back Chen to his home from a hiding place in Beijing in September.

RFA said Tuesday's attack left Chen bleeding in the right temple area. His
left eye and left temple area also hurt and he could not bend his fingers,
it said, adding that officials refused to let Chen seek medical treatment.

But the official said by telephone: "His life is not in danger. His injury
is not a big deal."

RFA said 20 people were guarding Chen's house in three shifts, each shift
led by two cadres.

Chen's freedom was restricted after officials accused him of providing
"intelligence" to foreigners about forced abortions and sterilisations as
part of strict family planning rules, the official said by telephone.

Asked if putting Chen under house arrest broke the law, the official said:
"It's orders from above. It's not us."

"No one in the village is bad mouthing Chen Guangcheng. We all support him,"
the official said.

"But whoever helps him will be detained. Whoever goes to his home and talks
to him will be detained," the official said when asked why the village
mayor, a distant cousin of Chen, did not help the activist.

The whereabouts of Chen's guests are unknown. "I don't know where they are
now and I am concerned," his cousin told RFA.

(Additional reporting by Vivi Lin)

Rising tide of protests challenges Beijing's desire for social stability
BY EVAN OSNOS / Chicago Tribune

BEIJING - The last thing Lu Banglie remembers, he was grabbed by the hair
and pulled from the car. He blacked out under a rain of kicks and punches.

Chinese officials beat blind activist Science Daily (press release) - 11
hours ago JINAN, China, Oct. 25 (UPI) -- A blind activist who has exposed
official abuses and forced abortions in China's eastern Shandong ...

Blind China activist beaten up again - group Reuters.uk, UK - 12 hours ago
By Benjamin Kang Lim. BEIJING (Reuters) - A blind activist under house
arrest for exposing forced abortions in China's east has been ...

Forced abortions in China Calcutta Telegraph, India - Oct 24, 2005 Beijing,
Oct. 23: A spate of government-sanctioned but illegal abortions of women
carrying their second child has been taking place ...

�Law Is Dead� In These Times, IL - 9 hours ago It was difficult for Chen
Guangcheng to come to Beijing The blind social activist from Linyi, in
China�s eastern Shandong province, needed a friend to hold ...

Blind Chinese Activist Beaten, Refused Medical Treatment Radio Free Asia,
D.C. - 22 hours ago HONG KONG�A blind social activist who blew the whistle
on official abuses under China's one-child policy in the eastern province of
Shandong was beaten by a ...

Blind Chinese activist 'beaten up again' Sydney Morning Herald
(subscription), Australia - 12 hours ago A blind activist under house arrest
for exposing forced abortions in China has reportedly been beaten for the
second time this month. ...

Chinese officials beat blind activist Webindia123, India - 10 hours ago A
blind activist who has exposed official abuses and forced abortions in
China's eastern Shandong province was beaten Monday when he tried to leave
his home. ...

Chinese officials beat blind activist Monsters and Critics.com, UK - 12
hours ago JINAN, China (UPI) -- A blind activist who has exposed official
abuses and forced abortions in China`s eastern Shandong province was beaten
Monday when he ...

Blind Chinese Activist Beaten, Refused Medical Aid NewsBlaze, CA - 19 hours
ago By Radio Free Asia. HONG KONG - A blind social activist who blew the
whistle on official abuses under China's one-child policy in ...

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Monday, October 24, 2005

Forced abortions in China

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Forced abortions in China by JEHANGIR S. POCHA
[img]http://www.telegraphindia.com/1051024/images/24baby1.jpg[/img]
lucky tot: An infant at a post-natal care unit in Beijing. (Reuters)

Beijing, Oct. 23: A spate of government-sanctioned but illegal abortions of
women carrying their second child has been taking place across some
provinces in China.

More than 120,000 people in eastern Shandong province alone have been forced
to undergo abortions and sterilisations over the past few months, said Chen
Guangcheng, 34, a blind social activist from Linyi town in eastern Shandong
where some of the worst cases occurred.

Some women were in their last month of pregnancy, and died during the
process.

�It is a crazy and merciless situation,� said Chen. �Recently no one was
really enforcing the one-child policy. But as the population in Shandong has
ballooned. I think the provincial government put pressure on local family
planning departments who�ve just gone nuts.�

Days after making this comment in Beijing, Chen was ambushed on the street
by plainclothes security officers from Shandong who bundled him into a car
and took him back to Linyi. There, Chen found himself under de facto house
arrest, where he remains even though no charges have been filed against him.

Though China�s National Population and Family Planning Commission has said
this figure is exaggerated, in a rare admission the commission�s
spokesperson, Yu Xuejun, admitted that �some persons concerned in a few
counties and townships of Linyi did commit practices that violated the law.�

Zhu Hong Ying and her husband, Xia Jian Dong, who are farmers in Zhai Tian
Zhuang village near Linyi, and who already have one son, said they first
heard of the forced abortions in March, when Zhu was five months pregnant.

�We panicked and ran into (Linyi) to hide,� Zhu said in an interview that
had to be conducted on the telephone as local police had sealed off her area
in the wake of Chen�s detention. �But to get to us, about a month after we
left they arrested three of my sisters-in-law. So we felt very guilty and
went home.�

Zhu said what happened next went beyond her deepest fears.

Officials from the local family planning department took her to a clinic
where a doctor injected her in the stomach. A day later Zhu said she
delivered a still-born baby boy. Gazing at the corpse was �the most
heartbreaking moment of my life�, she said.

But there was no time to dwell on emotions.

Xia said a nurse came into the room and dumped the dead baby in a black
plastic bag and asked him to throw it into the back of a truck parked nearby.

�It had a large container kind of thing at the back,� said Xia, his voice
quavering over the line. �When I opened the door and looked in it was full
of black bags and blood.�

Such reports have been filtering out of various provinces in China for the
last few months, said Gao Zhi Zheng, an activist lawyer in Beijing .

�One of my clients is an unmarried woman from (central Henan province) who
was aborted at seven months because it seems the authorities took it upon
themselves to decide a single woman had no right to have a baby,� Gao said,
as he spread pictures his client and her partner had taken of their aborted
fetus across his table. �Look at this, is this abortion or murder?�

Despite China �s tough one-child policy, forced abortions are technically
illegal in the country. Only financial and other civil penalties can be
levied against parents who have more than one child.

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Saturday, October 22, 2005

Chen Guangcheng's Activism Helping Expose China's Latest Largest Atrocity

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[img]http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/08/26/PH2005082602079.jpg[/img]
Blind Activist Chen Guangcheng's Activism Helping Expose What 'Time magazine
described the operation as "one of the most brutal mass sterilization and
abortion campaigns in years."'

China's Second Thoughts About Family Planning
Amid New Doubts, Harsh Policies Linger

BEIJING, OCT. 22, 2005 (Zenit.org).- China's fierce demographic control
policies have exacted a heavy toll during the last quarter-century. An
overview of the consequences appeared in an article in the Sept. 15 issue of
the New England Journal of Medicine.

"The Effect of China's One-Child Family Policy after 25 Years," authored by
Therese Hesketh and Zhu Wei Xing, noted that the regulations cover matters
ranging from family size, late marriage and the spacing of children. The
term "one-child policy" is, in fact, misleading in that it is applied only
to a part of the population, primarily government workers and those living
in urban areas. Rural families are generally allowed a second child, five
years after the birth of the first, especially if the first was a girl.

The restrictions are underpinned a system of rewards and penalties, which
are administrated by local officials and which vary widely. They can include
economic incentives for compliance, as well as substantial fines, including
confiscation of belongings and dismissal from work, for noncompliance.

Contraception and abortion are the backbone of the implementing the policy.
Long-term measures are favored, with intrauterine devices and sterilizations
together accounting for more than 90% of contraceptive methods used since
the mid-1980s. The authors note that the majority of women are offered no
choice in contraception.

Hesketh and Zhu note that authorities claim that the policy has prevented
250 million to 300 million births. The authors caution that population
statistics in China are known to be subject to government manipulation. The
total fertility rate -- the mean number of children born per woman --
decreased from 2.9 in 1979 to 1.7 in 2004, with a rate of 1.3 in urban areas
and just under 2.0 in rural areas.

Girls eliminated

One consequence of the family planning restrictions has been the growing
disproportion between male and female births. The proportion of male live
births to female live births ranges from 1.03 to 1.07 in industrialized
countries. In China the ratio was 1.06 in 1979, but climbed to 1.17 by 2001.

Sex-selective abortion, facilitated by the use of ultrasound images to find
out the sex of unborn children, accounts for a large proportion of the
female babies killed. And while infanticide is thought to be rare, sick
female infants are known to receive less medical care. The growing scarcity
of females has already resulted in kidnapping and trafficking of women for
marriage, and could well be a threat to the country's stability in coming
years, according to some analysts.

The low birthrate has set the stage for a rapid aging of China's population.
The percentage of those over age 65 was 5% in 1982 and now stands at 7.5%.
It might top 15% by 2025. These figures are low compared to industrialized
nations. But the lack of an adequate pensions system in China means that
most of the elderly depend on their children for support, leading to concern
over how the ever-smaller numbers of children will cope in coming years.

Authorities have tacitly acknowledged some of the problems caused by the
family planning system, by adopting a more flexible policy in various
regions. A more-open admission came at the start of this year, Reuters
reported Jan. 6. On the occasion of China's population reaching the 1.3
billion mark, an editorial in the China Daily supported the one-child policy
but conceded: "Admittedly, the family planning policy has gone awry in some
places."

Reuters also reported the same day that China was taking further steps to
avoid the selective abortion of females. The news agency said that
government data showed 119 boys were being born for every 100 girls.
Sex-selective abortion was already illegal, but the new plans involve a
further tightening of regulations, including banning the use of ultrasound
machines to detect the sex of fetuses.

Authorities, however, made it clear that they will not countenance
opposition to family planning policies. The Associated Press reported Jan. 5
that a Shanghai woman, Mao Hengfeng, was sentenced to an additional three
months in a labor camp because of her opposition to the policies. She was
already serving a one-and-a-half year sentence for her campaign to abolish
the family planning policies.

Repression intensifies

Recent events in the eastern province of Shandong indicated just how harsh
the family planning policies still are. On Sept. 7 the Washington Post
reported that Chen Guangcheng, a blind peasant who campaigned against the
use of forced sterilization and abortion, had been seized by authorities.
Chen was visiting Beijing while preparing a lawsuit to challenge the abuses.

Chen, who lives in Linyi, a city to the southeast of the capital, had
protested against local measures that required parents with two children to
be sterilized and women pregnant with a third child to undergo abortions.
Three days later the Washington Post reported that Chen had been confined to
his home by authorities and couldn't receive visitors.

Time magazine in its Sept. 19 issue also reported on the events in the
province. The article graphically described the case of a forced abortion of
a 9-month-old unborn child being carried by Li Juan.

The article explained that family planning policies were eased at the
national level in 2002, allowing parents to have extra children, so long as
they paid big fines. But in many cases local Communist Party officials still
maintain the old, harsher restrictions and attitudes.

Faced with criticisms by provincial leaders that the birthrate was too high,
local officials launched a campaign in March to eliminate what they
considered to be the extra births. Time magazine described the operation as
"one of the most brutal mass sterilization and abortion campaigns in years."
In one county alone at least 7,000 people were forced to undergo
sterilization between March and July. According to Time, several villagers
were beaten to death for trying to help family members avoid sterilization.

Officials also resorted to arresting family members of women who did not
agree to be sterilized, the Chicago Tribute reported Oct. 2. And in one case
a family was forced to pay a fine and fees equivalent to $617, more than an
average farmer makes in a year in the province.

The Washington Post followed up the matter with a report Sept. 20. The
newspaper said that officials in the city of Linyi had been dismissed for
abuses committed while enforcing the one-child policy. But the newspaper
also cited Jian Tianyong, a local lawyer involved in a lawsuit against the
officials, as saying that only a few low-level officials had been punished,
leaving the party leaders untouched.

The recent events have been criticized by the human rights organization
Amnesty International. In an Oct. 14 press release Amnesty started by noting
it has not taken an official position on China's "birth control policy." But
it is concerned about the human rights violations resulting from the
coercive methods used to apply the policy.

Referring to forced abortion and sterilization, and the forcible detention
of people, Amnesty declared that it considers such actions "to be cruel,
inhuman and degrading treatment amounting to torture."

Code: ZE05102205

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Monday, October 17, 2005

Foe of China�s coercive abortion policy beaten

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Foe of China�s coercive abortion policy beaten

ACTIVIST BEATEN �- A blind activist who has campaigned against coercive
population control policies in China was beaten recently, as were three
lawyers seeking to assist in his case.

Chen Guangcheng, who is blind, was left on the main street of his home town
with various injuries after the Oct. 4 beating by local officials, Radio
Free Asia reported. Chen, 34, had filed a class-action lawsuit against
authorities in the eastern Chinese city of Linyi for forcing women to have
abortions and sterilizations.

The lawyers -� Xu Zhiyong, Li Subin and Li Fangping �- had come to Linyi to
help mediate between local officials and Chen, who effectively has been
under house arrest, according to the report. Unidentified men attacked the
lawyers while they were in the city, Radio Free Asia reported.

Officials in many parts of China have practiced a forced population control
program for about 25 years in an attempt to curb the birth rate in the
world�s most populous country. A law codifying the policy throughout China
went into effect in 2002.

The policy limits couples in urban areas to one child and those in rural
areas to two, if the first is a girl. Other exceptions have been made in
some provinces, and the enforcement of the policy has varied among
provinces. The program has been marked by coercive sterilization and
abortion, but infanticide, especially of females, also has been reported.

The Beijing government announced Sept. 19 it had fired some officials in
Linyi for abusing the population control policy, The Washington Post
reported. The government, however, did not specify what crimes were committed.

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Sunday, October 16, 2005

Chinese Social Unrest - Local Crackdowns Backfiring

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Line of Defense - Beijing is worried about 'alarming' levels of social
unrest, but a policy of local crackdowns is backfiring.
By Melinda Liu / Newsweek International
[img]http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Sections/Newsweek/Components/Photos/Mag/051024_Issue/051015_OverseasChina_hsmall.widec.jpg[/img] [img]http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/08/26/PH2005082602079.jpg[/img]
Riot police on alert in Taishi, Guangdong

"Local goons show up very quickly these days," says lawyer and veteran
China-watcher Jerome Cohen, currently teaching in Beijing. He cites blind
activist Chen Guangcheng, who was assaulted by toughs after he exposed rural
Shandong authorities for illegally forcing women to have abortions if they
had kids above the official "quota." Chen remains a virtual prisoner, his
home surrounded by thugs.

Oct. 24, 2005 issue - In the '90s, the Chongqing Special Steelworks was
touted as a modern state-run enterprise, with fat profits and grand plans to
expand. In fact, its managers were cooking the books to feign profitability.
They couldn't pay back loans�or, eventually, the workers' salaries. After
the company declared bankruptcy in July, its 15,000 workers began
protesting. Some hung white banners�and a 1970s Chairman Mao portrait�out in
public, demanding new jobs. On Oct. 7, more than 4,000 workers and relatives
converged near the plant, blocking traffic. When more than 100 police pulled
up, a melee erupted. Cops and unidentified civilians waded into the crowd
swinging electric cattle prods. "Three protesters died, and more than 30
were wounded," one jittery eyewitness told NEWSWEEK last week, requesting
anonymity because he feared for his safety. Another began weeping when she
recalled the bloodshed, motioning at dozens of Chinese riot police who
continued to mill about the protest site last week, days after the
confrontation.

At last week's Communist Party Central Committee meeting in Beijing,
President Hu Jintao and his comrades approved a new economic plan that
listed as its chief goal building a "harmonious society." They'd better get
to work, because China is anything but harmonious these days. Protests of
varying size and intensity erupt almost daily throughout the country.
Because the demonstrations are scattered and isolated, these social squalls
aren't a serious threat to the regime. Still, authorities acknowledge that
unrest has reached "alarming" levels. Not long ago, the mainland's top cop,
Zhou Yongkang, said that 74,000 major protests took place last year, up from
58,000 in 2003. More than 3.7 million people took to the streets in
2004�angry about such issues as official corruption, health problems,
environmental degradation, mistreatment by employers and home evictions.
Little wonder that Zhou named "actively preventing and properly handling"
such incidents as his main task this year.

In a broad sense, the protests are the dark side of the country's economic
miracle. Pell-mell economic growth has boosted incomes for hundreds of
millions of people, but it's also physically disrupted life in the
countryside and left millions more feeling left out of the prosperity boom.
Wages in cities are three times greater than in rural areas. According to
the U.N. Development Program, China now has one of the worst so-called Gini
coefficients in the world�a quantitative measure of economic inequality.
China's Gini coefficient is .45, and experts say that any number above .4 is
likely to trigger social upheaval. That is precisely what's happening in
rural China and high-unemployment industrial regions like the northeast
(accompanying story), where citizens are seething with discontent. "Never
before in human history has so much change happened for so many people in
such a short time," says entrepreneur James McGregor, author of a new book
titled "One Billion Customers."

At last week's Central Committee meeting, the Communist Party leadership
vowed to bridge the income gap and take better care of the environment as
the nation roars ahead. Beijing's strategy for placating the discontented
isn't quite so progressive, however. The government has simply ordered local
authorities to clamp down, and many are doing so�violently. Minxin Pei, of
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, says that the
Public Security Ministry has threatened to fire local police if
demonstrators are spotted on the streets. Moreover, Zhou has warned local
authorities that democracy activists might try to co-opt local gatherings
and weld them into a larger anti-party movement. That's why the government
has recently cracked down on NGOs, tightened controls on the conventional
news media and closed down cutting-edge Internet chat rooms and Web sites.

But Beijing's plan may be backfiring. More and more, local officials are
turning to harsh tactics to keep people in check. Many �are hiring "black
societies"�local thugs�to keep a lid on protests. In two separate incidents
in October alone, local goons roughed up three foreign correspondents when
they tried to report on unrest in Guangdong's Taishi village, where in July
locals began a legal signature-gathering campaign to recall the elected
mayor. Many in the village have accused him of incompetence and corruption,
the latter related to a lucrative real-estate deal. (The mayor, still in
office, says "they're lying.") This month in Taishi, Beijing lawyer Guo
Feixiong was arrested, and a political activist was beaten.

The repression of activists and journalists is beginning to make China, or
parts of it, seem like a mafia state. Last Thursday a Chinese cameraman in
Tianjin, who was filming a demonstration for a European TV network, was
pulled out of a car and assaulted by toughs in civilian clothes. (The
beating took place outside the office of Tianjin's mayor, whom the group had
just finished interviewing.) "Local goons show up very quickly these days,"
says lawyer and veteran China-watcher Jerome Cohen, currently teaching in
Beijing. He cites blind activist Chen Guangcheng, who was assaulted by
toughs after he exposed rural Shandong authorities for illegally forcing
women to have abortions if they had kids above the official "quota." Chen
remains a virtual prisoner, his home surrounded by thugs.

Beijing's embrace of capitalism has demolished many state and corporate
subsidies, making a shambles of everything from pension schemes to
health-care systems to school fees. The income gap is now a chasm. Of
China's 1.3 billion people, the most affluent fifth earns half of total
income, according to one official study, while the bottom fifth takes home a
piddling 4.7 percent. Increasingly, those at the bottom realize that the
system itself must change if they are to break out of the trap of poverty.
In contrast to earlier protests, therefore, more and more demonstrations now
seek to boost social justice more broadly�pushing for democratization, rule
of law, and citizens' rights to a healthy environment.

The tense Taishi stalemate, for instance, could influence the very
development of grass-roots democracy in China. Last month Prime Minister Wen
Jiabao told visiting British Prime Minister Tony Blair that "if Chinese can
manage a village, I believe in several years they can manage a township." At
the moment, directly elected officials govern Chinese villages only, not the
larger townships where leaders are normally appointed.

So political activists saw an iconic struggle brewing when residents of
Taishi (population: 2,000) began a legal campaign to oust the mayor, Chen
Jinsheng. Taishi residents collected enough signatures for a recall. But in
early August, after discovering an apparent attempt to burgle the village's
accounting books, they took up a vigil to guard the records. Things got ugly
Aug. 16, when hundreds of police and local thugs clashed with protesters. In
early September, 16 hunger-strikers from the village were detained. More
violence erupted shortly afterward, when some 1,000 cops took possession of
Taishi's accounting books and fired water cannons at protesters, many of
them elderly. On Oct. 7 local thugs punched and jostled the China-based
correspondents for Radio France International and the South China Morning
Post when the reporters arrived in Taishi to report on the ongoing protest.

The following day, The Guardian's Shanghai reporter Benjamin Joffe-Walt
traveled to Taishi with Lu Banglie, 35, who'd been briefly detained in
Taishi once already. When a gang of village toughs saw Lu, they pulled him
out of the car and beat him brutally, according to four eyewitnesses who
believed the attackers belonged to local mafia, known as hei shehui, or
black societies. The beating triggered a wave of international press
coverage and concern�raising Chinese activists' hopes that
central-government authorities would take notice of the repressive tactics
at last. "Now there's huge internation�al pressure," says Hou Wenzhuo of the
Empowerment and Rights Institute in Beijing. "This can't be covered up
easily the way it was before."

It's possible that Beijing will step in to resolve the Taishi mess. As
recently as Sept. 14, the Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily ran a
commentary that was remarkably sympathetic to the villagers. They felt it
was tantamount to central-government blessing for their recall campaign. "No
matter who is right or wrong... there's one comforting point in that these
rural villagers know how to use legal procedures to recall an unpopular
village official," the newspaper said, pointing out Taishi's "signs of a
democratic environment built upon rationality and legality." Says Hou, "I
hope this is a turning point. Maybe the central government will intervene.
Then maybe the detainees will be released."

In fact, Hu and Wen are still consolidating power. Behind the scenes,
they're trying to push back some of the robber-baron tactics of their
predecessors and do more for rural residents. Last year, for example,
Beijing eliminated all agricultural taxes. The "Shanghai faction" close to
ex-president Jiang Zemin is now more identified with unscrupulous
real-estate tycoons in cahoots with crooked authorities, all of them
obsessed with big business and big profits. "The current government pays
greater attention to the concerns of the weaker sector [of society]," says
Prof. Zuo Dapei, of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. "The former
government didn't care."

James McGregor, the author and former journalist who worked in China for two
decades, agrees. He says that in the 1980s and 1990s, the mainland's
commissars "were like trickle-down Republicans." They concentrated on
pushing growth and rewarding cronies�and "what went by the wayside was
health care, social services and the like." He views Hu and Wen as "more
like Social Democrats," adding: "If they don't [stand up for the underclass]
they'll be run out of power."

They'll need more than cosmetic gestures to do so, though. Zuo blames
yawning inequality in the cities on the privatization of state firms and
warns that massive layoffs are likely to lead to social disturbances "just
like the former Soviet Union." That looks to be the case at the Chongqing
Special Steelworks. Neither the government nor the company that bought bits
of the old plant feel responsible for the steelworkers, an official from the
municipality's Economic and Trade Commission told NEWSWEEK. "No one wants to
take the burden." Some 3,000 have been laid off in the past two years.
Another 15,000 still get $15 monthly stipends but are all over 40, without
specialized skills, and therefore pretty much unemployable. The official
says, "This problem isn't going away any time soon." At least on that point,
Chongqing's angry steelworkers would agree.

URL:

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Thursday, October 13, 2005

In search of fair play and justice in China

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In search of fair play and justice in China
Frank Ching / Oct 13

CHINA has performed a miracle over the last quarter-century, lifting
hundreds of millions of people from dire poverty and turning the country
into an economic powerhouse. In the process, Beijing has raised people�s
expectations not only of a better life but of a fairer society.
Now, however, there are many who feel that the Government has let them down.

Sometimes, a tragedy causes the Government to sit up and take notice. One
such event was the beating to death last year in Guangzhou of a 27-year-old
university graduate, Sun Zhigang, because he could not show his temporary
residence card. The outcry that followed caused the State Council to rescind
a regulation allowing police to detain people who failed to produce local
residence permits.

However, the Sun Zhigang case was an exception. Most of the time, the
central Government seems to turn a blind eye to the outrages perpetrated by
provincial and local authorities.

People with grievances across the country stream to Beijing to present
petitions and demand justice. But such is the demand that the redress system
is overwhelmed and unable to cope.

The ongoing saga of Chen Guangcheng, a 34-year-old blind man in Yinan
county, near the city of Linyi in Shandong province, offers a perfect
illustration of the problems involved.

Chen can be described as a "barefoot lawyer" since he has no law degree and
is largely self-taught through getting his wife and older brother to read
law books to him. He provided legal help to friends and neighbours,
successfully arguing, for example, that disabled people who cannot work are
not liable to pay agricultural tax.

His problems began when he took up the cudgels to help people victimised by
family planning officials who flagrantly violated the law through forced
abortions and compulsory sterilisations. If a pregnant woman went into
hiding, the authorities would jail her relatives and neighbours and beat
them until she turned herself in.

Officials in Beijing agreed that such behaviour was a flagrant violation of
Chinese law. However, so far they have not lifted a finger to help this
blind man, who has been beaten up, detained and interrogated, and who now is
under virtual house arrest and allowed no visitors. His computer has been
seized and his telephone cut so that he cannot communicate with the outside
world. Lawyers from Beijing who went to Linyi to offer their services were
also beaten up.

So far, the central Government seems unwilling to involve itself in the
case, even though it has been highly publicised in the international Press.

When criticised by the international community about such things as forced
abortions, China routinely insists that they do not represent government
policy and are against the law. But often such illegal behaviour is a direct
result of pressure from Beijing on local officials to enforce birth quotas.

It is hypocritical, therefore, for the central Government to pretend that
such illegal acts are not officially sanctioned. Certainly, when the central
Government knows about such abuses and does nothing, it looks even worse.
Laws are meaningless of they are not enforced.

Thanks to the Communist Party�s economic and other reforms, expectations are
rising in China along with a much stronger sense of individual rights. One
way to ease such pent-up pressures and to create a more harmonious society
is to allow an independent judicial system to provide recourse. This is what
happens in other societies.

A major problem that prevents courts from acting independently in China is
that judges are paid by local governments and are often considered
extensions of the bureaucracy. Then when people with grievances against
local governments go to court and run into a blank wall, it simply increases
their sense of frustration.

Things do not have to be this way. Beijing has known for years about the
problems of the legal system and especially about local protectionism. The
Supreme People�s Court has been talking at least since the mid-1990s of
developing a nationwide judiciary whose members are paid not by local
officials but out of the judiciary�s funds, allocated by the central
Government. Such a move would go a long way to making the judiciary more
independent, and yet so far the Communist Party has not shown the political
will to institute such a pressing reform.

Beijing needs to bite the bullet and make that happen. It should see the
Chen Guangcheng case as an opportunity to build up a strong legal system
and, in the process, show the international community that the Chinese
Government means what it says about building a society where rule of law
holds sway.

Frank Ching is a Hong Kong-based writer and commentator.

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Getting 'Out the Rabbit Hole' with Robert Larson

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You took the Red Pill and Went Down the Rabbit Hole
[img]http://www.kuci.org/images/topnav_logo5.gif[/img]
[img]http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:WD1GTQ73ZWgJ:misterhayes.homestead.com/blue-pill.jpg[/img] [img]http://www.queensburyschool.org/schools/ms/teacher/stewart/images/rabbit_looking_out_hole_sm_clr_13347.gif[/img]
Now you can take the Blue Pill by Tuning In to a Radio Show designed to help
us back "Out of the Rabbit Hole" so we can fix the problems exposed by the
New Awareness.

Out of the Rabbit Hole - Reality Slamming Gab & Jamming w/ Right Rev. Deputy
Bob, Fridays, 3:00pm-4:00pm Pacific Time.

Listen Online:
MP3 - 24k
MP3 - 128k

Real Audio - 24k
Real Audio - 128k

Years ago my friend Robert Larson hosted a phenomenal radio show called
CARTOON PLEROMA. He interviewed the leading writers and researchers into all
things paranormal, mystical and beyond.

You can hear the archives of many of those shows at the links below...

Cartoon Pleroma Archives

Peter Jordan on Contactee Howard Menger, Mind Kontrol, UFOs, Cattle
Mutilations, Black Helicopters...
With Guest CoHost Greg Bishop and special appearance by Peter Stenshoel Part
One | Part Two

11.26.00 - Featuring Mack White on underground comics, Mind Control
conspiracies, mystery religions, mythology and MORE! Part One | Part Two |
Part Three

cp001126a.mp3
cp001126b.mp3
cp001126c.mp3

7.2.00 - Featuring Kenny Ausubel
On his book and film about The Hoxsey Cancer Treatment saga Part One | Part
Two

cpKennyAusubelHoxseyCancer1.mp3 cpKennyAusubelHoxseyCancer2.mp3

4.5.99 - Featuring Fred Alan Wolf
On Soul, Mind & Spirit Part One | Part Two
cpFredAlanWolf990405a.mp3 cpFredAlanWolf990405b.mp3

2.15.99 - Featuring Paul Williams on Philip Kindrid Dick Part One | Part
Two
cpPaulWilliamsPKD1.mp3 cpPaulWilliamsPKD2.mp3

12.7.98 - Featuring David Pursglove
editor of Zen & The Art of Close Encounters and organizer of the New Being
Project & New Being Seminars Part One | Part Two

HOLOGRAPHIC UNIVERSE 8.23.98
Guest hosted by Robert Larson & Greg Bishop Featuring SMiles Lewis
Discussing everything from Parapsychology to Parapolitics, Mind to UFOs Part
One | Part Two

9.3.98 - Featuring SMiles Lewis
On Dreams, Lucidity, Altered States of Consciousness, Psychedelics, Sleep
Paralysis, Out of Body/Astral Voyages, Dream Swapping, Shared Near Death
Experiences, Parapsychology and Much More
Part One | Part Two | Part Three | Part Four

7.9.98 - Featuring Dr. William Cone
One of the authors of the highly controversial book, The Abduction Enigma
(with co-authors Kevin Randle & Russ Estes) and author of Alien
Rape,speaking on his work and research with people he believes suffer from
sleep paralysis but who believe themselves to be abductees.

Part One | Part Two

WilliamCone980709a.mp3 WilliamCone980709b.mp3

4.10.98 - Featuring SMiles Lewis
Part One | Part Two | Part Three

cpMikeLindemen.mp3

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Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Chen Guangcheng Still Detained Over China's Forced Sterilization Programs

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Chinese peasants jailed to enforce 1-child rule
Chicago Tribune | October 10, 2005
BY EVAN OSNOS
[img]http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/08/26/PH2005082602079.jpg[/img]
NIGOU, China - (KRT) - Above a shuttered fertilizer store in this eastern
China town, men and women are locked up because their relatives will not
agree to undergo government-ordered sterilization or abortion, according to
current and former detainees.

Such detentions are against the law in China, where peasants and activists
are trying to cast new light on abuses by local authorities enforcing the
national population-control rule, known as the one-child policy. The jailing
of residents here suggests abuses might be occurring on a wider scale than
had been previously reported, despite central government pledges to curb
violations.

Local family planning officials, whose headquarters face the detention
center across the street, say they know nothing about the site.

Yet, the chief of the largest maternity ward in the area said the family
planning office jails relatives of peasants who hide to avoid medical
procedures because detention is the only way to get some residents to comply.

"What else can they do? They have a job to do," said Dr. Wang Haiyan, head
of the ward at state-run People's Hospital in the neighboring town of
Taierzhuang, referring to family planning officials.

In brief interviews last week, a woman and a man standing at the fenced
second-floor window of the fertilizer store told a visitor below that they
were being held with 10 others in connection with family planning laws.

"We cannot leave," said the woman, who described herself as a 52-year-old
farmer. "We have no freedom."

The practice of illegally detaining family members to pressure people who
flee population control policies is emerging as a central complaint among
peasants chafing under China's limits on childbearing.

Since the one-child policy was introduced in 1979, China has relied on
contraception and abortion to limit family size. Local rules vary, but the
policy generally allows urban families to have one child and rural couples
to have two or three.

The one-child policy has proved to be an important component of the
country's economic rise. It has helped keep China's population to 1.3
billion, slowing population growth by hundreds of millions over the past
generation and thereby easing the burden of feeding and clothing the world's
most populous nation.

But critics say the policy leaves aging parents without enough children to
support them and also creates a relative surplus of men to women. That is
largely due to the illegal use of ultrasound technology to help selectively
abort girl fetuses, reflecting a traditional Chinese preference for boys.

A report in the New England Journal of Medicine last month argues that China
could relax the one-child policy without causing disruptive gains in
population.

"With the freedoms that have resulted from wealth and globalization, the
one-child policy seems increasingly anachronistic," it said. "A relaxation
of the one-child policy would be desirable."

China has begun to loosen the system. In the 1980s, forced sterilization and
abortion were common, but criticism at home and abroad compelled leaders to
pass a law in 2002 that dictates the use of financial incentives or
penalties to encourage compliance. The 2002 family planning law bars
officials from violating citizens' rights but does not define those rights.

Nevertheless, Communist Party cadres can still be promoted or punished on
the basis of meeting population control goals, and activists say that
encourages coercion. The issue ignited in August when reports of the jailing
of peasants and of forced sterilization and abortion surfaced in the city of
Linyi, 60 miles northeast of here.

Chen Guangcheng, a prominent Linyi activist, told foreign reporters and
diplomats that he planned to file a class-action lawsuit on behalf of
peasants in the area who had been detained, beaten or forced to undergo
medical procedures.

He described an aggressive campaign by local officials, including a single
county in which 7,000 people were sterilized between March and July.

Authorities in Beijing responded by launching an investigation into the
allegations "in a few localities" and vowing to remove local officials,
according to a Sept. 19 statement by the National Population and Family
Planning Commission. That announcement made no mention of extending the
investigation to the city of Zaozhuang in this region of cornfields and
small towns some 450 miles southeast of Beijing.

Beijing's pledge to investigate also has done little to protect Chen, the
whistle-blower. After raising the issue, Chen, who has been blind since
birth, was detained by Linyi officials and placed under house arrest.
Telephone lines to his home have gone dead, and several dozen police
officers are stationed along the main dirt road that runs through his village.

A Chicago Tribune reporter who approached Chen's stone courtyard home one
day last week was barred from entering by 12 men in uniform and plainclothes
and later was escorted out of town.

Lawyers involved in Chen's case said they believe local authorities are
preparing to charge him with providing intelligence to foreigners, a crime
that can bring a lengthy jail term.

Family planning officials in Beijing declined to comment further on Chen's
case or conditions in Nigou.

But whether the central government is able or willing to rein in local
authorities raises questions about more than family planning, China analysts
said. The problems range from environmental pollution to corruption, they
said.

"Here is a case of overzealous local officials trying to take an issue into
their own hands," said Dali Yang, a China specialist at the University of
Chicago. "The issue is to what extent can the central government address it."

The central family planning commission noted that it "has required staff
members ... to learn lessons and draw inferences from this case." But asked
if they had been informed of Chen's case or lessons drawn from it, officials
in Nigou said they had heard nothing.

"We seriously enforce the law according to China's family planning
regulations," said Jin Shouyong, Nigou's deputy director of family planning.

Wan Zhendong, head of the office's statistics department, said people who
allege being detained are simply seeking to avoid paying fines for having
too many children.

Wan said the policy is accepted by "99.9 percent of the people here."

If the detention center is meant to be a secret, it is not well kept.
Peasants for miles around can provide the address, and the building sits on
the town's main street, surrounded by a hair salon and fruit stands.

It is unclear how many, if any, involuntary abortions and sterilization are
conducted in this town of 58,000 people. Wan, the statistics chief, and
Wang, the doctor, independently said 20 sterilizations are performed each
month at People's Hospital, though it's unclear if those are voluntary or
coerced.

Wang said her department performs two regular abortions per day and three to
four late-term abortions per month.

A 35-year-old peasant who asked to be identified only by his surname, Xu,
said his wife is eight months pregnant and in hiding to avoid an involuntary
abortion. He said local authorities detained his father at the site in
downtown Nigou for four weeks this summer in an effort to force the
daughter-in-law to return.

In the end, the family paid fines and fees of $617 - more than an average
farmer makes in a year in this province - to secure his release, the son said.

Teng Biao, a Beijing-based scholar who visited Linyi in August to
investigate the allegations, said descriptions of the detention center in
Nigou appeared to fit the pattern of coercive practices in Linyi, though
residents here have not banded together to bring light to the issue.

"Zaozhuang may have the same situation, but it is very hard for people there
to get information to lawyers and the media," said Teng, a lecturer at the
China University of Political Science and Law. "The local authorities will
try their best to make sure nobody knows about it."

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Friday, October 07, 2005

More News Links on Chen Guangcheng

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RFA: Blind Chinese Activist Describes 38-Hour Kidnapping by ...
Blind rights activist Chen Guangcheng, who was detained in Beijing on Sept
6, ... HONG KONG�Chinese rights activist Chen Guangcheng has described being
...

RFA: Blind Social Activist, Lawyers Beaten in China
Blind rights activist Chen Guangcheng, who was detained in Beijing on Sept
6, ... Chen Guangcheng, who is blind, was left bleeding from his injuries on
the ...

Statement on Police Kidnapping Handicapped Human Rights Defender ...
CRD demands the immediate release of Mr. Chen Guangcheng and requests
investigation by the Ministry of Public Security, seeking accountability for
the ...

Chinese Law Prof Blog: Rural activist Chen Guangcheng seized in ...
Rural activist Chen Guangcheng seized in Beijing ... where the city of Linyi
is located, seized (in Beijing) Chen Guangcheng, "a blind peasant who has
been ...

China Information Center (cicus.org)
Mr. Chen Guangcheng, 34, a blind peasant who has been preparing a
class-action lawsuit to challenge population-control abuses in the eastern
city of Linyi, ...

Chinese Authorities Seize Population Control Activist - Philip P ...
The detention of Chen Guangcheng, 34, a blind peasant who has been preparing
a class-action lawsuit challenging population-control abuses in the eastern
...

Who Controls the Family? - Philip P. Pan :: China Digital Times ...
A crowd of disheveled villagers was waiting when Chen Guangcheng stepped out
of the car. More women than men among them, a mix of desperation and hope on
...

Statement on Police Kidnapping Handicapped Human Rights Defender ...
CRD demands the immediate release of Mr. Chen Guangcheng and requests
investigation ... The detention of Chen Guangcheng, 34, a blind peasant who
has been ...

Activist's rescuers beaten - World - smh.com.au
Chen Guangcheng, 34, a blind self-taught law student, exposed a drive in
Linyi ... "Chen Guangcheng was bleeding from several cuts and injuries to
his arms, ...

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Who Controls the Family?

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[img]http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/09/06/PH2005090601641.jpg[/img]
Chen Guangcheng, a blind farmer shown last month speaking with women in
Linyi, China, was seized in Beijing in an apparent effort to block him from
meeting with senior government officials who had expressed support for his
cause.

Photo Credit: By Philip P. Pan -- The Washington Post
Related Article: Rural Activist Seized in Beijing, page A22

Who Controls the Family?
Blind Activist Leads Peasants in Legal Challenge To Abuses of China's
Population-Growth Policy

By Philip P. Pan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, August 27, 2005; Page A01

LINYI, China -- A crowd of disheveled villagers was waiting when Chen
Guangcheng stepped out of the car. More women than men among them, a mix of
desperation and hope on their faces, they ushered him along a dirt path and
into a nearby house. Then, one after another, they told him about the city's
campaign against "unplanned births."

Since March, the farmers said, local authorities had been raiding the homes
of families with two children and demanding at least one parent be
sterilized. Women pregnant with a third child were forced to have abortions.
And if people tried to hide, the officials jailed their relatives and
neighbors, beating them and holding them hostage until the fugitives turned
themselves in.

Chen, 34, a slender man wearing dark sunglasses, held out a digital voice
recorder and listened intently. Blind since birth, he couldn't see the tears
of the women forced to terminate pregnancies seven or eight months along, or
the blank stares of the men who said they submitted to vasectomies to save
family members from torture. But he could hear the pain and anger in their
voices and said he was determined to do something about it.

For weeks, Chen has been collecting testimony about the population-control
abuses in this city of 10 million, located about 400 miles southeast of
Beijing, beginning in his own village in the rural suburbs, then traveling
from one community to the next. Now he is preparing an unlikely challenge to
the crackdown: a class-action lawsuit.

"What these officials are doing is completely illegal," Chen said. "They've
committed widespread violations of citizens' basic rights, and they should
be held responsible."

It might appear a quixotic crusade -- a blind peasant with limited legal
training taking on the Communist Party's one-child policy, which has long
been considered a pillar of the nation's economic development strategy and
off-limits to public debate. But the Linyi case marks a legal milestone in
challenging the coercive measures used for decades to limit population
growth in China.

While there have been scattered cases of individuals suing family planning
officials, legal scholars say the Linyi farmers appear to be the first to
band together and challenge the state's power to compel people to undergo
sterilization or abort a pregnancy since the enactment of a 2002 law
guaranteeing citizens an "informed choice" in such matters.

"The population and family planning law affects everyone's individual
rights, so a case like this is an important test," said Zhan Zhongle, a law
professor at Beijing University who helped draft the legislation. "By suing
the government, the Linyi peasants are merely asserting their legal rights.
Whether the courts accept the case, and how they handle it, will be a test
of China's justice system and of whether China can govern according to law."

Forced abortions and compulsory sterilization, though never openly endorsed
by the government, have been an element of China's family planning practices
since at least 1980, when the national population topped 1 billion and the
party concluded that unchecked growth could undermine economic development
and launched the one-child policy. But resistance has always been
widespread, especially in the countryside, where farmers depend on children
to help in the fields and support them in their old age.

As rural anger mounted and international criticism of such practices grew,
the party began experimenting in the mid-1990s with less coercive methods,
expanding health services for women, providing more information about
contraception and implementing regulations barring involuntary sterilization
and abortion. The government adopted the law granting citizens the right to
make an "informed choice" in family planning, and in recent years it has
moved toward a system of economic rewards for couples with only one child
and fines or fees for those with more.

But many local officials continue to rely on forced abortion and
sterilization, in part because the ability to limit population growth
remains a top consideration in party deliberations about promotions and
raises. In much of China, an official who misses a population target, even
if he or she excels in other fields, is dismissed, according to researchers
and family planning officials.

In Linyi, residents said local officials ordered couples to come in for
sterilization even if they had been given permission to have a second child.
Women with intrauterine birth-control devices were not exempt.

Du Dehong, 33, a corn farmer in Yinghu village, said seven officials showed
up at her home on the night of May 9, pushed her into a small white van and
took her to the county family planning station. They ordered her to fill out
a form, and when she refused, one of the men grabbed her hand and forced her
to leave a fingerprint.

"He said, 'Even if you stay here and resist for three days, we're going to
operate on you eventually,' " Du recalled. She said she relented, and the
operation took just 10 minutes.

A few days later, she and her husband sought out Chen. Over the years, their
blind neighbor had earned a reputation as someone who understood the law --
and would stand up to the government.

In 1996, he had traveled to Beijing with a complaint about his family's
taxes. He won a refund and admission to a university to study acupuncture
and massage, the only higher education courses available to the blind in
China. He took law classes on the side, and then began campaigning for the
rights of the disabled and farmers.

When neighbors told him about the family planning abuses, he proposed a
lawsuit. Word spread quickly, and Chen emerged as the leader of the battle
against the forced abortion and sterilization campaign.

On a recent visit to Maxiagou village, in another rural part of Linyi, he
interviewed Feng Zhongxia, 36. She recounted that she was seven months
pregnant and on the run when she learned that local officials had detained
more than a dozen of her relatives and wouldn't release them unless she
returned for an abortion.

"My aunts, uncles, cousins, my pregnant younger sister, my in-laws, they
were all taken to the family planning office," she said. "Many of them
didn't get food or water, and all of them were severely beaten." Some of the
relatives were allowed to call her, and they pleaded with her to come home.

Feng called the family planning officials. "They told me they would peel the
skin off my relatives and I would only see their corpses if I didn't come
back," she said. The next day, she turned herself in. A doctor examined her,
then stuck a needle into her uterus. About 24 hours later, she delivered the
dead fetus. "It was a small life," she said quietly.

Afterward, she said, the family planning workers insisted on sterilizing
her, too. "I'm a human being. How can they treat me like that?" she asked.

Chen sat listening to and recording the peasants' stories for several hours.
Some described midnight raids on their homes involving as many as 30
officials and hired thugs. Others recalled being held in rooms crowded with
more than 50 other villagers, including children, adding that the officials
charged them exorbitant fees for food and "study sessions" when they were
released.

The last to speak was Mei Shouqin, 42, who can no longer walk up a flight of
stairs because of a botched tubal ligation. When the doctor explained what
had gone wrong, he didn't apologize, she recalled. He just said she needed
to return in a month so he could try again.

Liu Chuanyu, a Linyi family planning official reached by phone, denied
knowledge of the abuses. "All of our work is done according to national
policy and the demands of upper-level officials," he said. Other local
family planning officials reached by phone declined to give their names and
also denied any wrongdoing.

But Yu Xuejin, a senior official with the national family planning
commission in Beijing, said his office had received complaints about abuses
in Linyi and asked provincial authorities to investigate. He said the
practices described by the farmers, including forced sterilization and
abortion, were "definitely illegal."

Yu emphasized that the central government had led the nation toward more
humane family planning practices over the past decade. "If the Linyi
complaints are true, or even partly true, it's because local officials do
not understand the new demands of the Chinese leadership regarding family
planning work," he said.

Yu also applauded the farmers for asserting their rights. If officials in
Linyi violated the law, he said, "I support the ordinary people. If they
need help, we'll help them find lawyers."

But back in Linyi, Chen said progress had been slow. State media have been
afraid to report on the crackdown, and without the publicity, he has been
unable to raise funds.

At the same time, he said, local officials have visited him three times and
urged him to persuade the farmers to drop the lawsuit. He said one warned
him that "offending the government isn't good," and said if any officials
were fired because of his lawsuit, "they might try to take revenge."

But Chen said he wasn't backing down. "If you've violated the law, you must
take responsibility," he said. "If we withdraw the lawsuit, then they'll
just violate the law again next time."

[img]http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/08/26/PH2005082602081.jpg[/img]
Chen Guangcheng, who has organized a class-action lawsuit against forced
abortion and sterilization in China, listens as women describe their
experiences.

Photo Credit: By Philip P. Pan -- The Washington Post
Related Article: Who Controls the Family?, page A01

Rural Activist Seized in Beijing
The detention of Chen Guangcheng, 34, a blind peasant who has been ... Chen
Guangcheng, a blind farmer shown last month speaking with women in Linyi,
China ...

Who Controls the Family?
Chen Guangcheng, who has organized a class-action lawsuit against forced
abortion and sterilization. Chen Guangcheng, who has organized a
class-action ...

China Terse About Action on Abuses of One-Child Policy
... statement and accused local authorities of continuing to hold Chen
Guangcheng, the activist leading the lawsuit, under house arrest without due
process. ...

Detained Chinese Activist Put Under House Arrest
Chen Guangcheng, 34, who is preparing a class-action lawsuit challenging
abuses of population control in Shandong, was detained in Beijing on Tuesday
before ...

Rural Activist Seized in Beijing
The detention of Chen Guangcheng, 34, a blind peasant who has been preparing
a class-action lawsuit to challenge population-control abuses in the eastern
...

Who Controls the Family?
LINYI, China -- A crowd of disheveled villagers was waiting when Chen
Guangcheng stepped out of the car. More women than men among them, ...

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Blind Social Activist, Lawyers Beaten in China

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Blind Social Activist, Lawyers Beaten in China
10/4/2005 From: Newsblaze.com
By: Radio Free Asia
Submitted by Leon Gilbert

HONG KONG-A social activist who blew the whistle on official abuses under
China's one-child policy in the eastern province of Shandong was beaten by
local officials Tuesday, while lawyers attempting to mediate with local
government were set upon by unidentified thugs, residents and lawyers told
Radio Free Asia (RFA)

Chen Guangcheng, who is blind, was left bleeding from his injuries on the
main street of his native Dongshigu village following clashes between
villagers and local officials, a local resident told RFA's Mandarin service.

The clashes were sparked after the arrival of three out-of-town lawyers-Xu
Zhiyong, Li Subin, and Li Fangping, who were hoping to meet with Chen and
mediate between the activist, who is under effective house arrest-and local
authorities, an eyewitness said.

Chen was escorted from his home to where the lawyers had been prevented from
entering the village, by around 20 fellow villagers from Yinan County, near
Shandong's Linyi City, where around 60 people were waiting, including
government officials.

"Chen Guangcheng was bleeding from several cuts and injuries to his arms,
and also sustained an injury to his leg," a Dongshigu villager surnamed Chen
told RFA reporter Ding Xiao.

"One of his teeth was loose, too. The government officials refused to take
him to seek medical attention, but they sent a doctor to get his blood
pressure checked," said the villager, who saw Chen shortly after the attack.

According to Chen's Beijing-based lawyer Teng Biao, the three lawyers
managed to see Chen for only a few minutes before they were taken away for a
"chat" by local judicial officials. The lawyers tried mediate in the
conflict between Chen and family planning authorities, but with no result.

Teng spoke to RFA shortly after telephoning the three lawyers. "They got
back to the village at around 4:30 p.m. They were on the main street around
300 meters from Chen's house, when they were grabbed by a group of
unidentified men and beaten up."

"Li Fangping narrowly escaped being thrown in the river, and was pinned to
the ground while others set upon him. Some his attackers looked as if they
had just drunk a lot of alcohol. Xu Zhiyong was also pushed to the ground
and beaten," Teng said.

"At 5:28 p.m., they were all taken to the nearby township police station. At
the moment, they are still in Shuanghou Township police station. They said
things looked pretty dangerous because there are a lot of people in the
village who look like gangsters."

Chen is becoming widely known for exposing violence against women by Linyi
municipal authorities in pursuit of family planning targets under China�s
one-child policy, with his work against forced abortions and sterilizations
featured in the Washington Post in August.

His writings, which blew the whistle of the use of forced abortions and
other abuses in Linyi city and his home county of Yinan, were widely
distributed on the Internet and read by many in China.

In an interview with RFA earlier this year, a township-level family planning
official from Linyi admitted that "illegal actions" had taken place in
pursuit of draconian population targets.

"If people have more than the allotted number of children it affects the
overall family planning results. Here in Shandong, each level of government
has responsibility for overseeing the level below it...From the city level
upwards, you start getting fines for exceeding the target," the official said.

He said pressures on village officials exerted by the system of fines and
quotas had led to beatings in the past, but denied that violence was
sanctioned at every level of the family planning bureaucracy.

Chen fled harassment by Yinan officials last month, hiding at a friend's
house in Beijing, before being abducted for 38 hours by unidentified
officials and taken back to Yinan. He was threatened with spying charges for
his role in highlighting abuses in the region, but later released.

Original reporting in Mandarin by Ding Xiao. RFA Mandarin service director:
Jennifer Chou. Translated and written for the Web in English by Luisetta
Mudie. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.

Radio Free Asia (RFA) is a private, nonprofit corporation that broadcasts
news and information to listeners in those East Asian countries where full,
accurate, and timely news reports are unavailable. RFA adheres to the
highest standards of journalism and strives for accuracy, balance, and
fairness in its editorial content. RFA is funded by an annual grant from the
Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG).

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Thursday, October 06, 2005

SMiles Lewis and Mack White to be Guests on The Freeman Perspective Next Tuesday

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[img]http://photos21.flickr.com/28631156_57373af7c7_m.jpg[/img]
The Freeman Perspective is beginning its new season. The new time will be
8pm Tuesdays on channel 10. It looks like my first guests might be Mack
White and SMiles Lewis . It will be a great show! We'll be discussing
parapolitics, ET's, occultism, and everything these two can dream up. it
should be the best time looking at a dark topic.

Other guests include Texe Marrs for November, Omega (O.T.O/freemason) to
give us an insider's perspective, and Erik Fortman author of webs of power.

Hopefully this list will grow to include people like Gaylon Ross (ex-NSA)
researcher into the NWO, David Hatcher Childress author/ancient astronaut
researcher and many more!

So, tune in at the more friendly hour of 8pm Tuesdays on Channel 10.

for questions or comments contact me at

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China's Forced Sterilization Tyranny Hits Home

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Chinese activist fighting forced sterilisations beaten
(AFP) 5 October 2005
[img]http://gaytoday.badpuppy.com/images2k1/probertsonchina.jpg[/img]*
A few days ago I saw the typical headlines from China, "Chinese abortion
activist beaten". Sensing nothing new I failed to read the news articles.
This morning I was informed that the person in question is a blind doctor
whom I met through my day job a year or so ago. Reading the articles now
(and knowing the horrors** that await political dissidents there and our own
govt's disinfo about such horrors as "urban legends"***) makes me want to
despair, but instead I am enraged. -- Miles

BEIJING - A blind social activist who blew the whistle on an east China
county, which forced villagers to undergo sterilisations and detained those
who refused, has been badly beaten, sources said on Wednesday.

Chen Guangcheng, 34, has been under house arrest since mid-August for
speaking out against violations of family planning rules by Shandong's Yinan
county and filing a class-action suit on behalf of villagers.

On Tuesday Chen was beaten and punched by several thugs allegedly hired by
the county government when he tried to leave his home in Dongshigu village,
one friend, Xu Zhiyong, told AFP.

"Several of the people guarding him beat him when his family members tried
to help him out of his house," Xu said. "He suffered broken teeth and was
bleeding."

A villager surnamed Zhao confirmed Chen had been beaten.

"No one can see him and he can't see anyone," said Zhao.

Xu and Li Fangping, both Beijingers, had gone to the village to try to help
Chen mediate with the local government to release him from house arrest.

They were prevented from seeing him and were also punched and kicked by
around 20 to 30 thugs, they said.

Xu and Li were heading back to Beijing Wednesday after being forced to spend
the night at a local police station.

The clashes are the latest incidents in a long battle between farmers in
Dongshigu village and the local government over their method of enforcing
China's controversial "one-child policy".

The case was recently exposed by Time magazine and the Washington Post,
prompting an investigation by China's family planning agency which confirmed
forced abortions were conducted.

Time last month reported that at least 7,000 people in Yinan underwent
forced abortions and sterilisations earlier this year as officials were
under pressure to limit the growth of the country's massive population.

It further reported that lawyers alleged that several villagers were beaten
to death while under detention for trying to help family members avoid
sterilisation.

Many people in his village, Chen told Time, had been imprisoned for defying
the sterilisation order.

Chen later filed a class action against Linyi officials accusing them of
contravening national family-planning law.

County government officials on Wednesday refused to comment.

Concerns grow for �beaten� activist
By Mure Dickie in Beijing

A blind legal activist seized for revealing abuses by Chinese population
control officials has been beaten near his home in the eastern province of
Shandong, and lawyers seeking to help him have also been attacked,
supporters said yesterday.

The high-profile plight of Chen Guangcheng, who had been organising legal
action against compulsory sterilisation and forced abortions, has
highlighted doubts about China's commitment to the rule of law.

Mr Chen has been confined to his home near the Shandong city of Linyi since
being seized by plain clothes officials during a visit to Beijing last month.

Local authorities have declined to comment on the legality of the action
against Mr Chen but supporters say they have been told he is under
investigation on suspicion of leaking state secrets a charge often levelled
at critics of the government.

An attempt by a group of three Beijing-based legal experts to discuss the
case with Mr Chen was blocked on Tuesday by unidentified people guarding his
home, said Xu Zhiyong, one of the lawyers.

Mr Chen was beaten after villagers helped him push his way out of his home
to meet the lawyers, Mr Xu said. The activist, who had been trying to
organise a lawsuit against family planning authorities, lost a tooth and was
hurt in the legs, he said.

The lawyers were also targeted by assailants. �They pushed us back . . .
then followed us and beat us,� Mr Xu said. �It seemed to be organised.�

Officials in Linyi could not be reached for comment yesterday, a national
holiday in China.

None of the lawyers was seriously hurt but the beatings highlight concerns
about Mr Chen's welfare.

Chinese citizens have the right to sue the government over abuses of
official power but challenging local authorities can be dangerous.

The central government's National Population and Family Planning Commission
last week acknowledged that there had been violations of the law in family
planning work in the Linyi area and said some officials had been detained or
sacked.

However, Beijing has made no comment on the treatment of Mr Chen, who was
instrumental in bringing the problems in Linyi to light.

China has long been the subject of international scrutiny over its
population control policies.

Find this article at:

* = The beauty products from the skin of executed Chinese prisoners
Cosmetics firm targets UK market � Lack of regulation puts users at risk
Ian Cobain and Adam Luck / The Guardian

A Chinese cosmetics company is using skin harvested from the corpses of
executed convicts to develop beauty products for sale in Europe, an
investigation by the Guardian has discovered.

** = Pot, Kettle, Black: State Department Tells Us How to Identify
Misinformation
Steve Watson | August 31 2005

How can a journalist or a news consumer tell if a story is true or false?
There are no exact rules, but the following clues can help indicate if a
story or allegation is true.

We all need to be extremely grateful that the State department has it's own
advice section on what we should and should not believe. I for one find it
incredibly difficult to believe straight facts, even when they put the
government in a bad light. Thank goodness that everything the government
does and says is accurate. It is important to have a bench mark of truth
against which we can formulate our beliefs.

Dissident who fought one child policy is beaten up Telegraph.co.uk, United
Kingdom - 12 hours ago By Peter Goff in Beijing. A blind activist who
highlighted the practice of forced abortions and other abuses of China's one
child ...

Concerns grow for �beaten� activist Financial Times, UK - 13 hours ago By
Mure Dickie in Beijing. A blind legal activist seized for revealing abuses
by Chinese population control officials has been beaten ...

Activist's rescuers beaten Sydney Morning Herald (subscription), Australia
- Oct 5, 2005 By Hamish McDonald Herald Correspondent in Shanghai. Three
lawyers who travelled this week to help a blind social activist confined ...

Blind abortion activist beaten up in China Independent Online, South Africa
- Oct 5, 2005 Beijing - A blind Chinese activist trying to call attention to
forced abortion and other abuses of China's one-child policy was beaten and
left bleeding on the ...

China abortion activist 'beaten' BBC News, UK - Oct 5, 2005 A blind Chinese
activist who raised concerns about forced abortion and sterilisation in
Shandong province has been beaten up, media reports said. ...

Lawyers beaten up for visiting activist AsiaNews.it, Italy - 46 minutes ago
Two Beijing lawyers are escorted out Shandong province and taken back to
Beijing before they can talk to Chen Gauncheng, a well-known anti-government
and anti ...
Chinese Authorities Assault Forced Abortion Activist, His ... LifeNews.com,
MT - 21 hours ago by Steven Ertelt. Dongshigu, China (LifeNews.com) -- A
Chinese activist who blew open a scandal involving population control
staffers ...

Chinese anti-abortionist, lawyers beaten Monsters and Critics.com, UK - 22
hours ago DONGSHIGU, China (UPI) -- A blind Chinese activist who drew
international attention to forced abortion and sterilization in Shandong
province was beaten and ...

Chinese peasants jailed to enforce 1-child rule Monterey County Herald, CA
- Oct 5, 2005 BY EVAN OSNOS. NIGOU, China - (KRT) - Above a shuttered
fertilizer store in this eastern China town, men and women are locked up ...

Blind Social Activist, Lawyers Beaten in China Radio Free Asia, D.C. - Oct
4, 2005 HONG KONG�A social activist who blew the whistle on official abuses
under China�s one-child policy in the eastern province of Shandong was
beaten by local ...

Lawyers beaten for helping activist The Age (subscription), Australia - Oct
5, 2005 By Hamish McDonald. THREE Beijing lawyers who are protecting a blind
social activist confined to his village after exposing forced ...

Blind Social Activist, Lawyers Beaten in China NewsBlaze, CA - Oct 4, 2005
Chen Guangcheng, who is blind, was left bleeding from his injuries on the
main street of his native Dongshigu village following clashes between
villagers and ...

Chinese anti-abortionist, lawyers beaten Science Daily (press release) - 22
hours ago Chinese activist held in own house (September 10, 2005) -- A blind
Chinese activist against the country's rigid population control policies has
been placed ...

Detained Chinese Activist Put Under House Arrest Washington Post, United
States - Sep 9, 2005 ... 9 -- A blind activist leading a judicial campaign
against forced abortions and sterilizations ... Chen said police had beaten
him but had not charged him with ...

More than 100 anti-eviction activists arrested in Shanghai AsiaNews.it,
Italy - Sep 20, 2005 ... Detainees who refused to cooperate were beaten;
some were told they ... Last week a Chinese activist campaigning against
government land requisition and forced ...

The Almanac: Today is Monday, Oct. 10 Monsters and Critics.com, UK - Oct 4,
2005 ... Vaughn Williams in 1872; comedian and activist Dick Gregory ... the
21-year-old gay man was beaten, robbed and ... A Thought for the Day:
Chinese Educator, Writer and ...

Tempers Flare In China Chemical & Engineering News - Sep 25, 2005 ... were
overturned, several peasants were beaten during the ... For environmental
and social activist Huo Daishan, there ... Huai River in the central Chinese
province of ...

: Chinese Police Beat Up AIDS Activist During UN Rights Visit
NewsReleaseWire.com (press release) - Sep 8, 2005 HONG KONG�Chinese national
security officers scuffled with AIDS patients and severely beat a prominent
... AIDS activist Hu Jia was beaten by national ...

Prepared for EU-China Summit 5 September 2005 Amnesty International USA -
Sep 6, 2005 ... year, foreign news photographers were beaten by Chinese ...
sentencing of citizens by the Chinese authorities for ... Zhang Lin, an
activist who had submitted articles ...

Smear campaign pushed me out, Latham says ABC Online, Australia - Sep 16,
2005 ... Now such an activist would be laughed out of court. ... Joel
Fitzgibbon onto me - this is the Chinese whisper ... were up against
something you could never have beaten. ...

Enemies Of the State? TIME - Sep 11, 2005 ... But at least the Chinese now
possess a modicum of ... says Tu Bisheng, a Beijing legal activist who has
... Several villagers, the lawyers allege, were beaten to death ...

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