Insights from Hong Kong

Posts Tagged ‘Human Rights’

Chen Leaves US Embassy; China Denounces USA for ‘Meddling’

In China on 2 May 2012 at 6:20 PM

The pundits were wrong. Blind human rights activist Chen Guangcheng did not leave for the United States. Six days ago he fled the compound where he was under house arrest and was spirited to the US Embassy in Beijing. Today he walked free – in China.

This is good news for Cheng in the immediate term. He stated his desire to stay in China. Early reports say he will be relocated and will be allowed to work. The US Government will “monitor” his condition.

No one expected Cheng to remain in China. Usually those who seek refuge n foreign embassies are put under death sentence penalties if they exit. It is treason to seek such help. It was understood he would be whisked abroad on “medical” grounds and then his family would be resettled in the United States.

Cheng is staying in China to continue his work on human rights.

Upon his exit Cheng was escorted by US Ambassador Gary Locke – the first Chinese-American ambassador for the USA to China. Many said this case was the first real test of his leadership. He was taken to hospital for medical checks. Where he goes next has yet to be fully reported.

China meanwhile released its bluster. The government demanded the US apologise for allowing a Chinese citizen to enter its embassy.

Before Hillary’s Arrival in Beijing, a Chinese Activist is Locked in the US Embassy

In China, Public Affairs on 30 April 2012 at 9:40 AM

This week US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is due in Beijing. Her visit is part of a high-level series of talks on trade, politics and strategy. But space inside the US Embassy will be tight. Activist Cheng Guangcheng is holed up within causing more than an accommodation issue.

No room at the inn?

Cheng has a long history of standing up for human rights in his home province of Shandong. He was once lauded by the national press in China. Despite an illness at age five that led to his total blindness, Cheng learned law and used his knowledge to help the poor and marginalised. His compassion and charity were applauded.

Later Cheng focused his attention on the human rights abuses by local officials in pursuit of their population control methods. He stood up for women who were forced to undergo sterilisations and abortions. He brought to the fore severe abuse by authorities as they sought to maintain their population control quotas.

Until last week, Cheng was under house arrest in his village of Dongshigu. Locals tell of around the clock guards, security cameras and a concrete wall enclosing the home. He had spent time in prison, and he and family members reported they were beaten by police. He had been under house arrest since September 2010 when he finished a four year prison sentence.

Then he escaped.

The details are sketchy and Cheng is not offering facts. Apparently he left his compound and fled on foot. He fell “at least 200 times.” He was then picked up by supporters and driven to Beijing. Those who have admitted to helping Cheng have been arrested or are in hiding. He is purported to be in the US Embassy yet there has been neither confirmation or denial of this from American officials.

Now there’s a dilemma.

On Thursday Clinton is due in Beijing for high-level talks. Clearly the sheltering of a high-profile activist will be an impediment to open dialogue. Yet given the sensitivity of Cheng’s work it’s unwise for the US to eject him from the Embassy. The “right to life” movement is politically influential in the US. Should Obama’s Administration eject an anti-abortion activist from the US Embassy in an election year the tale of Cheng will become political fodder.

According to a video released by Cheng at the weekend he seeks to stay in China. He asks for an end to beatings and a return to normalcy for himself and his family.

In February this year Chongqing police chief Wang Lijun also sought refuge in a US representative office in China – that time the USA Consulate of Chongqing. “The Wang Lijun Incident” ended after 24 hours when Wang left the Consulate – and was promptly arrested by local authorities. He faces death penalty charges. His near-defection led to the unravelling of Bo Xilai’s career and the single biggest scandal to rock China’s political system since 2006. (Read my earlier post on these incidents.)

That was then. This is now. Wang was a possibly crooked cop trying to escape an even crookeder politician. Cheng is a blind lawyer who supported women forced into abortions and sterilisations. Politically it is easy to step away from a corrupt public official. It’s a lot harder to abandon a birth rights activist.

On Thursday Hillary touches down. She had hoped to dive straight into talks on trade, politics, strategy. Instead she has an uninvited house guest to deal with. How this is resolved will play a big role in near term relations between the United States and China.

Watch this space. Or if you’re blind like Cheng Guangcheng, listen closely. Things are going to get interesting.

One of a series of spoof montages

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