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Discussione: Il regime Cinese

  1. #441
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    Questo regime fa' veramente cagare.....

    » 02/01/2009 10:14
    CINA
    Liu Xiaobo, di Carta 08, sorvegliato in luogo sconosciuto, contro le stesse leggi cinesi
    Liu rischia di rimanere sequestrato per un anno e mezzo, senza alcuna accusa e senza processo. Crescono le adesioni (almeno 5 mila) alla Carta 08 per trasformare la Cina in un Paese che difende i diritti umani.


    Pechino (AsiaNews/Chrd) – L’intellettuale Liu Xiaobo, fra i primi firmatari di Carta 08, continua ad essere detenuto in un luogo sconosciuto e soggetto a “residenza sorvegliata”, in violazione alle stesse leggi cinesi.
    Liu è detenuto dall’8 dicembre scorso, da quando lui e altri 300 intellettuali, accademici, attivisti hanno reso pubblico un documento in cui, senza sfidare il potere del Partito comunista, esigono l’attuazione di tutti i diritti umani che la Cina ha sottoscritto nelle convenzioni Onu.
    Ieri la polizia ha permesso alla moglie di Liu, Liu Xia, di vedere il marito a Xiaotangshan, nel distretto di Changping, vicino a Pechino. Liu Xia ha dichiarato di aver trovato il marito in salute e tranquillo. La pubblica sicurezza continua comunque a mantenere Liu Xiaobo in “residenza sorvegliata” in un luogo sconosciuto. La polizia non ha nemmeno detto ai Liu il crimine per cui il firmatario di Carta 08 è detenuto, né la durata dell’arresto.
    “Residenza sorvegliata” (in cinese: jinshi juzhu) è una forma di detenzione prima di un processo. Ma secondo l’articolo 57 del codice penale cinese, un incriminato è soggetto a residenza sorvegliata a casa sua o in un luogo designato se egli non ha residenza permanente. Liu è residente di Pechino. Tenerlo in un luogo sconosciuto viola la stessa legge cinese.
    L’art. 58 dello stesso codice penale pone a 6 mesi il limite della residenza sorvegliata. Ma la pubblica sicurezza, il procuratore, la corte possono imporre la residenza sorvegliata allo stesso individuo in modo consecutivo. Ciò significa che Liu rischia di essere sequestrato per un anno e mezzo senza alcuna accusa o processo.
    Il governo cinese sta lottando come un disperato contro la diffusione di Carta 08, cancellandola dai siti internet e arrestando i firmatari. Ma le adesioni al programma di trasformazione della Cina in Paese che difende i diritti umani aumentano ogni giorno. Ad oggi vi sono almeno 5 mila sottoscrittori.
    http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=it&art=14120&size=A

  2. #442
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    Codice:
     
    
    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da Laowai confuso Visualizza Messaggio
    ma che palle. Il sistema cinese e' talmente crudele che l immigrazione di cinesi in Italia e' nell ultimo anno e' diminuita:e non di poco. Mentre l immigrazione di stranieri in Cina sta' aumentando, anno dopo annomoltre a cio mentre ghli americani soffrono,i cinesi si vedono sempre piu ricchi....haha:-0008n:-:-01#19
    AIAIAIAI,moooooolto confuso....
    Millions of Migrants Exploited and Left Jobless


    Even though the Chinese New Year will take place on January 26, it is estimated that over 10 million migrant workers have already lost their jobs and have returned home from the cities as thousands of companies are closing due to the economic downturn in China.
    According to the World Bank, gross domestic product in China will grow only 7.5% next year, the slowest in almost two decades. This will create massive unemployment. Economists estimate that up to 20 million people may return to the countryside in 2009. According to the Chinese Ministry of Human Resources, China must create 24 million jobs annually to maintain social stability.
    Over the past thirty years, about 130 million peasants left the countryside for the factories and construction sites of the cities in what the U.N. described as the biggest migration to have ever taken place in history. These migrants, the "floating population," faced discrimination and severe residency rules in the cities. Many of them were clandestine. They always managed to return home, at least for the Chinese new year, the most important Chinese holiday. Now millions are returning home to an uncertain if not tragic future, as the biggest migration in human history is going into reverse. Millions of workers who had been used by the merciless communist machine are now being abandoned by that same machine.
    The communist leadership must now face not only the problem of unemployment, but their worst nightmare - the social unrest this high level of unemployment will create. Social instability is the communist leadership’s greatest fear. There will be millions of unemployed people in the countryside, in addition to the unemployed who choose to remain in the cities. Further, many extremely poor families in the countryside depended upon financial support from family members who worked in the cities – not to mention the millions of young people seeking their first jobs, only to discover a stagnant and corrupt society which has nothing to offer them.
    "The redistribution of wealth through theft and robbery could dramatically increase and menaces to social stability will grow," Zhou Tianyong, a leading Communist Party scholar, wrote this month in a newspaper article.
    Andy Xie, independent analyst and former chief Asia economist for Morgan Stanley, explains: "It’s unlikely there will be enough work in the countryside. Big groups of unemployed workers hanging around are bound to be trouble."
    "The government is quite nervous about the situation among migrant workers and the rural population. The legitimacy of the regime is based solely on its ability to improve people’s living standards. If it can’t deliver improvement, its legitimacy could be fractured." says Professor Wo-Lap Lam of the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
    One factory worker who lost his job may have eloquently summed the attitude of the dictators: "No one cares about the workers in China. There’s too many of us."
    Sources:
    http://www.forexfactory.com/news.php?do=news&id=142308
    http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-01/05/content_10606970.htm
    http://uk.reuters.com/article/burningIssues/idUKTRE5040IU20090105?sp=true
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&sid=awmwBKgkvcj8&refer=asia
    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hP4RRkNj5BH3kxePSAgX1tvJTMJg
    http://uk.reuters.com/article/marketsNewsUS/idUKPEK10141020081230

    Defend Human Rights - Boycott Chinese products
    http://www.unmadeinchina.org/contStd...g=en&idPag=596

  3. #443
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    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da zen34 Visualizza Messaggio
    Questo regime fa' veramente cagare.....

    » 02/01/2009 10:14
    CINA
    Liu Xiaobo, di Carta 08, sorvegliato in luogo sconosciuto, contro le stesse leggi cinesi
    Liu rischia di rimanere sequestrato per un anno e mezzo, senza alcuna accusa e senza processo. Crescono le adesioni (almeno 5 mila) alla Carta 08 per trasformare la Cina in un Paese che difende i diritti umani.


    Pechino (AsiaNews/Chrd) – L’intellettuale Liu Xiaobo, fra i primi firmatari di Carta 08, continua ad essere detenuto in un luogo sconosciuto e soggetto a “residenza sorvegliata”, in violazione alle stesse leggi cinesi.
    Liu è detenuto dall’8 dicembre scorso, da quando lui e altri 300 intellettuali, accademici, attivisti hanno reso pubblico un documento in cui, senza sfidare il potere del Partito comunista, esigono l’attuazione di tutti i diritti umani che la Cina ha sottoscritto nelle convenzioni Onu.
    Ieri la polizia ha permesso alla moglie di Liu, Liu Xia, di vedere il marito a Xiaotangshan, nel distretto di Changping, vicino a Pechino. Liu Xia ha dichiarato di aver trovato il marito in salute e tranquillo. La pubblica sicurezza continua comunque a mantenere Liu Xiaobo in “residenza sorvegliata” in un luogo sconosciuto. La polizia non ha nemmeno detto ai Liu il crimine per cui il firmatario di Carta 08 è detenuto, né la durata dell’arresto.
    “Residenza sorvegliata” (in cinese: jinshi juzhu) è una forma di detenzione prima di un processo. Ma secondo l’articolo 57 del codice penale cinese, un incriminato è soggetto a residenza sorvegliata a casa sua o in un luogo designato se egli non ha residenza permanente. Liu è residente di Pechino. Tenerlo in un luogo sconosciuto viola la stessa legge cinese.
    L’art. 58 dello stesso codice penale pone a 6 mesi il limite della residenza sorvegliata. Ma la pubblica sicurezza, il procuratore, la corte possono imporre la residenza sorvegliata allo stesso individuo in modo consecutivo. Ciò significa che Liu rischia di essere sequestrato per un anno e mezzo senza alcuna accusa o processo.
    Il governo cinese sta lottando come un disperato contro la diffusione di Carta 08, cancellandola dai siti internet e arrestando i firmatari. Ma le adesioni al programma di trasformazione della Cina in Paese che difende i diritti umani aumentano ogni giorno. Ad oggi vi sono almeno 5 mila sottoscrittori.
    http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=it&art=14120&size=A
    sembra la storia del Processo di Kafka.....

  4. #444
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    Le promesse per ottenere le Olimpiadi della vergogna sono state puntualmente mantenute:et voila'......

    5
    Gen
    2009

    Pechino “moralizza” Internet


    Il governo cinese ha deciso un inasprimento della censura contro i più importanti motori di ricerca online, compresi Baidu e Google, accusandoli di diffondere pornografia e di attentare alla moralità della nazione. Un rapporto apparso sul sito d’informazione ufficiale www.china.com.cn annuncia che saranno puniti e oscurati quei siti che esercitano una “influenza malefica”.
    Il ministero della Pubblica Sicurezza, di concerto con altri sei dipartimenti governativi, ha lanciato la nuova campagna di “moralizzazione” a cui è stata data ampia pubblicità anche nei notiziari televisivi. L’annuncio delle autorità di governo descrive una “campagna nazionale per fare pulizia delle correnti di volgarità su Internet che danneggiano la salute fisica e mentale delle giovani generazioni”. 19 siti Internet sono stati denunciati pubblicamente per avere omesso di ripulire i contenuti “volgari” nonostante i ripetuti avvertimenti delle autorità. Tra questi figurano Baidu, leader assoluto con i due terzi dei visitatori nazionali, e Google che è il numero due con la sua versione in mandarino.
    Il giro di vite su Internet coincide con altre operazioni repressive come i numerosi arresti di firmatari dell’appello Carta 08 in favore dei diritti umani. Si inserisce in un clima di nervosismo dovuto alla crisi economica internazionale che rallenta la crescita cinese. Il governo teme che l’aumento della disoccupazione giovanile possa provocare tensioni nelle fasce più evolute della società, proprio nell’anno del ventennale di Tienanmen.
    http://rampini.blogautore.repubblica.it/2009/01/05/

  5. #445
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    vale sempre la norma per cui si rischia il laogai se provi a cercare Tienanmen su internet?

  6. #446
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    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da perplesso666 Visualizza Messaggio
    vale sempre la norma per cui si rischia il laogai se provi a cercare Tienanmen su internet?
    Per il popolo cinese si':hanno una sola tv di stato(la cctv)che gli fa' vedere solo quello che vuole il regime;google stesso,per entrare in Cina,si e' dovuto "piegare" eliminando parole come democrazia,dittatura,ecc.;insomma,non e' cambiato assolutamente niente!

  7. #447
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    Melamine - from Chinese Fish Feed to Your Table


    Toxic Melamine is Suspected in Seafood from China
    L.A. Times
    by Don Lee and Tiffany Hsu
    24 December 2008
    China is the world's largest producer of farm-raised seafood. The U.S. imported about $2 billion of seafood products from China in 2007, almost double the amount of 2003. Scientists and advocates are concerned it may be contaminated with melamine.
    New research suggests that edible flesh in fish contains residues of melamine. Laboratory studies by the FDA's Animal Drugs Research Center found melamine concentrations of up to 200 parts per million, 80 times the maximum "tolerable" amount set by the FDA.
    Industry experts and businesspeople report that melamine has been routinely added to fish and animal feed to boost protein readings. Some scientists believe that farm-raised fish from China should be obligatorily tested for melamine. "… No one has a clue how much concentration and for how long" fish from China have ingested melamine, said Jim Riviere, director of chemical toxicology research at North Carolina State University.
    U.S. importers have been testing Chinese fish for a variety of antibiotics and substances, including the carcinogen malachite green, which some fish farms use to control disease. Since last year, the FDA has restricted entry of shrimp, catfish, dace, eel and basa from China unless they produce an independent lab report certifying the seafood is free of such additives. Melamine isn't included on that list. An FDA representative in Washington wouldn't comment on why Chinese seafood didn't have to be analyzed for melamine.
    Shipments of filthy and contaminated fish from China continue to be detained at U.S. ports, exposing holes in the system. Corrupt businesses sometimes mislabel or reroute goods through other countries. "They're so understaffed at the borders that despite whatever orders they have, we can't be sure that products aren't just coming through anyway," said Jean Halloran, food policy initiatives director for Consumers Union.
    Iddya Karunasagar, the U.N.'s fishery expert, said "More than the fish, we should monitor melamine in the feed."
    Melamine has "infected the whole system in China," he said.
    Read the entire article at:
    http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-melamine24-2008dec24,1,1730515,full.story

    Defend Human Rights - Boycott Chinese products
    http://www.unmadeinchina.org/contStd...g=en&idPag=597

  8. #448
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    Millions of Migrants Exploited and Left Jobless
    Si chiude e si emigra!!!Quali provvedimenti intendera' prendere il nervosissimo regime?Forse una "pulizia" di massa?Massi',in fondo anche i dipendenti dei Laogai devono guadagnarsi la pagnotta......


    Even though the Chinese New Year will take place on January 26, it is estimated that over 10 million migrant workers have already lost their jobs and have returned home from the cities as thousands of companies are closing due to the economic downturn in China.
    According to the World Bank, gross domestic product in China will grow only 7.5% next year, the slowest in almost two decades. This will create massive unemployment. Economists estimate that up to 20 million people may return to the countryside in 2009. According to the Chinese Ministry of Human Resources, China must create 24 million jobs annually to maintain social stability.
    Over the past thirty years, about 130 million peasants left the countryside for the factories and construction sites of the cities in what the U.N. described as the biggest migration to have ever taken place in history. These migrants, the "floating population," faced discrimination and severe residency rules in the cities. Many of them were clandestine. They always managed to return home, at least for the Chinese new year, the most important Chinese holiday. Now millions are returning home to an uncertain if not tragic future, as the biggest migration in human history is going into reverse. Millions of workers who had been used by the merciless communist machine are now being abandoned by that same machine.
    The communist leadership must now face not only the problem of unemployment, but their worst nightmare - the social unrest this high level of unemployment will create. Social instability is the communist leadership’s greatest fear. There will be millions of unemployed people in the countryside, in addition to the unemployed who choose to remain in the cities. Further, many extremely poor families in the countryside depended upon financial support from family members who worked in the cities – not to mention the over 7 million college graduates who will be seeking jobs, only to discover a stagnant and corrupt society which has nothing to offer them.
    "The redistribution of wealth through theft and robbery could dramatically increase and menaces to social stability will grow," Zhou Tianyong, a leading Communist Party scholar, wrote this month in a newspaper article.
    Andy Xie, independent analyst and former chief Asia economist for Morgan Stanley, explains: "It’s unlikely there will be enough work in the countryside. Big groups of unemployed workers hanging around are bound to be trouble."
    "The government is quite nervous about the situation among migrant workers and the rural population. The legitimacy of the regime is based solely on its ability to improve people’s living standards. If it can’t deliver improvement, its legitimacy could be fractured." says Professor Wo-Lap Lam of the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
    One factory worker who lost his job may have eloquently summed up the attitude of the dictators: "No one cares about the workers in China. There’s too many of us."
    Sources:
    http://www.forexfactory.com/news.php?do=news&id=142308
    http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-01/05/content_10606970.htm
    http://uk.reuters.com/article/burningIssues/idUKTRE5040IU20090105?sp=true
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&sid=awmwBKgkvcj8&refer=asia
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&sid=aG8JAH3FwkmY&refer=asia
    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hP4RRkNj5BH3kxePSAgX1tvJTMJg
    http://uk.reuters.com/article/marketsNewsUS/idUKPEK10141020081230

    Defend Human Rights - Boycott Chinese products
    http://www.unmadeinchina.org/contStd...g=en&idPag=596

  9. #449
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    Our 30 Year Anniversary Party!!!


    The 30th anniversary of the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between the "People’s" Republic of China and the United States on January 1, 2009 was celebrated by releasing thousands of peace doves in Tiananmen Square at dawn as the Chinese flag was raised. U.S. President George Bush and PRC President Hu Jintao talked on the phone a few days later and congratulated one another on all their wonderful and fantastic achievements.
    What they were actually celebrating was not the thirty year anniversary of official high-level visits and contacts between the two nations, which had been going on for five years (U.S. President Nixon’s trip to China took place in 1972), but the fact that on 1 January 1979 the U.S. transferred diplomatic recognition from their democratically governed ally Taiwan to the "People's" Republic. The U.S. reiterated the PRC position that there is only one China and that Taiwan is part of it. but the fact that on 1 January 1979 the U.S. transferred diplomatic recognition from their democratically governed ally Taiwan to the "People's" Republic. The U.S. reiterated the PRC position that there is only one China and that Taiwan is part of it.
    The two Presidents complimented themselves and each other as follows:
    President Bush said: "The peoples of the United States and China have come to know each other well over the last 30 years. Together, we have built bridges between our two nations in every conceivable field – from commerce and trade to education, science, sports, and the arts. Over the last eight years, the relationship between our two governments has become more constructive and cooperative, and we have made progress in addressing global challenges such as terrorism, pandemic disease, and the proliferation of nuclear weapons. We have worked as global leaders to promote open markets as the best way to foster economic dynamism and development."
    President Hu made this declaration: "For 30 years, thanks to the concerted efforts of generations of Chinese and American leaders and people of vision from all walks of life, we have made historic achievements in growing these relations. Our two countries have fruitful exchanges and cooperation in a wide range of areas. Our two peoples are increasing mutual understanding and friendship day by day. The strategic significance and global implications of China-U.S. relations have become all the more evident. These facts have proven that the establishment and development of normal state-to-state relations between China and the United States serves the fundamental interests of our two peoples and go along with the trend of the times. They have not only delivered enormous benefits to our two peoples, but have also greatly contributed to peace, stability and development of Asia and the world at large."
    The poisoned populations of both the U.S. and the PRC would like to congratulate these two great men on their handiwork, with special thanks from exploited Chinese workers, Tibetans, Uyghurs, Mongols, and all other oppressed ethnic and religious groups currently subjected to Chinese rule.
    And let us not forget! The most heartfelt best wishes from the millions of legally and illegally imprisoned in China who work so hard under unsafe conditions to make all those dangerous and harmful export products!!!

    Defend Human Rights - Boycott Chinese products
    http://www.unmadeinchina.org/contStd...g=en&idPag=598

  10. #450
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    Quanti sono!!!!Meno male......

    Over 7,200 Courageous Citizens Sign Charter 08


    Chinese Authorities Continue to Suppress Charter 08 - Number of Signers Exceeds 7,200
    Human Rights in China
    Press Release
    9 January 2009
    In the month since Charter 08 was first issued on December 9, 2008, the Chinese authorities, in addition to detaining one of its signers, independent intellectual Liu Xiaobo, have mobilized police forces across the country to summon, threaten, harass and monitor other signers. The signers include not only well-known scholars, writers, professors, lawyers and dissidents, but also peasants, workers, evictees, and petitioners. Further, the authorities are going all out to shut down any websites or blogs that reprint the charter and public email boxes that collect charter signatures; they are also intimidating those who show interest in the charter and blocking any linkage between the charter and rights defense activists and petitioners in different regions.
    'The Chinese government’s overreaction not only fails to address the serious problems confronting China, but is in fact pouring oil onto fire, intensifying conflicts and deepening the social crisis,' said Sharon Hom, executive director of Human Rights in China.
    Charter 08 is a major undertaking at a historic juncture of China’s current social transformation. Premised on universal human rights norms, the charter presents 19 proposals to the Chinese government on constitutional reform, judicial independence, freedom of expression, and human rights protection. It appeals to all Chinese citizens with a sense of duty – whether they are inside or outside government and regardless of their social status – to push for social change in China. To date, more than 7,200 people have responded to the call and signed the charter, 80 percent of whom are individuals within mainland China. As the authorities continue an intensified crackdown on rights defense activities, the willingness of people to sign the charter using their real names is a potent expression of the yearning for fundamental social and political change in China.
    Human Rights in China (HRIC) has learned from various sources in China that the police and other authorities in different localities have repeatedly summoned charter signers, stating that they are following orders from higher authorities to investigate Charter 08’s drafting process. The way in which the summonses are served, the tone of the questioning, the characterization of the charter, and the manner in which the threats are delivered are largely the same across the country. The authorities warn that the charter seriously violates the law, destroys social harmony, and endangers state security, and is "a violation of the constitution and an egregious challenge to the bottom line – the leadership of the Communist Party and the 'Four Cardinal Principles' (adherence to the Socialist road, and upholding the people's democratic dictatorship, the leadership of the Communist Party of China, and Marxism-Leninism and Mao Zedong thought)."
    Unfortunately, the government authorities appear to be reacting to the charter with great anxiety, as though they fear that Charter 08 could become the banner around which social discontent could converge. They call the charter "illegal" and "counter to political principles," and vow not to follow this "deviant path under a different banner."
    The Chinese government's actions not only violate its own constitution and undermine the human rights promises it has made to the international community, but also betrays its deep insecurity in how to bring the country forward.
    "The Chinese government's overreaction not only fails to address the serious problems confronting China, but is in fact pouring oil onto fire, intensifying conflicts and deepening the social crisis," said Sharon Hom, executive director of Human Rights in China.
    China stands at a historic crossroads, facing an uncertain future. After 30 years of rapid development, the Chinese economy is obviously slipping, companies are closing down, workers are being laid off, and peasants are losing their land. Social conflicts are intensifying and are approaching a crisis point. In addition, the coming year is marked by many sensitive anniversaries: the 90th anniversary of the May 4 movement in 1919, the 50th anniversary of the great famine and the exile of the Dalai Lama in 1959, the 30th anniversary of the crackdown on the "Democracy Wall" in 1979, the 20th anniversary of the June 4 incident in 1989, the 10th anniversary of the crackdown on Falun Gong, and the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China.
    Judging from government actions in the past, these anniversaries are likely to lead to increased social control and crackdown. But these anniversaries also provide important opportunities for the Chinese government to redress past and present injustices, and for the international community to support the people of China in their call for reform.
    Source:
    http://www.hrichina.org/public/contents/press?revision%5fid=108011&item%5fid=107728

    Over One Hundred Signatories Harassed Since Launch of Charter 08
    Chinese Human Rights Defenders
    Press Release
    9 January 2009
    One month after it was issued on December 9, 2008, Charter 08 continues to vex the Chinese authorities, who have continued to pressure signatories of the Charter. CHRD has documented one- hundred-and-one cases of individuals who have been harassed, called in for questioning, or summoned (chuanhuan) by police across seventeen provinces and three municipalities. It is very likely that the actual number is higher as CHRD is aware that some individuals do not wish to make their harassment public. Over 7,200 people have signed the Charter.
    A full list of the one-hundred-and-one signatories harassed is available below. Some of them are scholars who have been questioned and warned by superiors at their academic institutions regarding their support for Charter 08.
    CHRD has learned from those called in by the police that the questioning seems designed to determine the authors of the Charter as well as to identify their methods for disseminating information. Interrogations often end with the authorities demanding an individual publicly renounce his or her support for the Charter. If this request is not met, police have accused signatories of joining "an illegal association", being "suspected of plotting to overthrow the regime" or otherwise intimidated or threatened them.
    One signatory, the prominent dissident writer Liu Xiaobo, has been held in custody since December 8, 2008, and is now subjected to "residential surveillance" (jianshi juzhu) at an undisclosed location in Beijing.
    Efforts by officials to stifle freedom of expression and repress the Charter have increased online. Beginning the evening of December 26, 2008, searches for "Charter 08" on Baidu, Google.cn and Yahoo, three main search engines in China have returned no relevant results. However, the Charter continues to spread. Chinese netizens are still signing the Charter, debating it on the internet and circulating the text on blogs, message boards, and through instant messaging devices.
    Chinese Human Rights Defenders reiterates its protest against the intimidation and harassment of Charter 08 signatories, who are being targeted solely for the peaceful activities of expressing their views about democratic reform and human rights in China. The Chinese government is willfully and blatantly violating the rights to freedom of expression and association guaranteed in both its own constitution and international treaties of which it is a signatory. China is also acting in contradiction to its own interest in building a good international reputation, as it will soon face international scrutiny on its human rights records during the UN Human Rights Council "Universal Periodical Review" in February 2009.
    Full list of Charter 08 signatories subjected to detention, interrogation and/or intimidation:
    Beijing Municipality:
    Liu Xiaobo
    Zhang Zuhua
    Pu Zhiqiang
    Jiang Qisheng
    Gao Yu
    Liu Di
    Teng Biao
    Yu Jie
    Li Hai
    Zeng Jinyan
    Zhou Hongling
    Li Zhiying
    Yu Haocheng
    Xia Yeliang
    Xu Youyu
    Cui Weiping
    Li Xianting
    Mo Zhixu
    Chen Yongmiao
    Wang Junxiu
    Liu Junning
    He Weifang
    Liang Xiaoyan
    Xu Xiao
    Zhu Jiuhu
    Guo Yushan
    Jiang Tianyong
    Chongqing Municipality:
    Yang Yunhong
    Shanghai Municipality:
    Zheng Enchong
    Jiang Danwen
    Feng Zhenghu
    Duan Chunfang
    Dong Guojing
    Jing Yuehua
    Ma Yalian
    Zhang Junling
    Liaoning Province:
    Huang Dachuan
    Zhejiang Province:
    Wu Baojian
    Zou Wei
    Wang Xue'e
    Gao Haibing
    Zhuang Daohe
    Wen Kejian
    Zan Aizong
    Mao Qingxiang
    Xu Guang
    Guo Weidong
    Yang Jianmin
    Liu Jincheng
    Fujian Province:
    Fan Yanqiong
    Lin Huanhui
    Hainan Province:
    Qin Geng
    Guangdong Province:
    Ye Du
    Zhao Dagong
    Guo Yongfeng
    Tang Jingling
    Ye Huo
    Zhang Jinjun
    Li Tie
    Chen Shaohua
    Ai Xiaoming
    Guangxi Province:
    Jing Chu
    Li Xiaolong
    Yunnan Province:
    Wei Wanying
    Zhang Zhengxiang
    Liu Zhengshan
    Wang Yuwen
    Guizhou Province:
    Chen Xi
    Du Heping
    Liao Shuangyuan
    Xu Guoqing
    Chen Defu
    Zhang Zhongfa
    Wang Yuwen
    Shen Youlian
    Han Xin
    Hunan Province"
    Xie Fulin
    Li Dongzhuo
    Zhang Shanguang
    Li Deming
    Wang Fengzhi
    Liu Jianan
    Chen Zuoyong
    Hubei Province:
    Liu Yiming
    Su Zuxiang
    Yao Lifa
    Shaanxi Province:
    Du Yilong
    Zhang Jiankang
    Yang Hai
    Zhao Changqing
    Wu Qi
    Yang Hai
    Jiangxi Province:
    Xu Gaojin
    Jiangsu Province:
    Lu Wen
    Hebei Province:
    Li Jinfang
    Shandong Province:
    Li Changyu
    Sichuan Province:
    Liu Zhengyou
    Liu Xianbin
    Chen Wei
    Heilongjiang Province:
    Zhao Jingzhou
    Chen Huijuan
    Source:
    http://crd-net.org/Article/Class9/Class98/200901/20090108141140_12945.html


    Defend Human Rights - Boycott Chinese products
    http://www.unmadeinchina.org/contStd...g=en&idPag=599

 

 
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