Ahead of International Human Rights Day, authorities across China prevented rights lawyers and their family members from leaving their homes, in an effort to deter them from participating in human rights-related activities.
House Arrests
Lawyer Jiang Tianyong has been placed under house arrest at his parents’ home in Xinyang city, in central China’s Henan Province, since Feb. 28, 2019, after serving a two-year-prison sentence.Jiang was convicted of “inciting subversion of state power”—a catch-all charge the Chinese regime often uses against dissidents—in 2017.
“At 6 a.m., our doorbell rang. I opened the door and found this group of people blocking the doorway, saying that we couldn’t leave our home,” Li wrote.
Xu said she believed the police presence was to ensure that she would not attend any human rights activities organized by the U.S. embassy or European countries’ embassies.
Concern for Gao Zhisheng
Also on Wednesday, the Falun Gong Human Rights Lawyers Group sent out greetings to Gao Zhisheng, Jiang Tianyong, Wang Quanzhang, and all other Chinese human rights lawyers who have defended Falun Gong practitioners in China.The Falun Gong spiritual practice has been severely persecuted since 1999, with millions arrested for their faith.
The group, which advocates for the legal rights of practitioners who face charges, asked for the information about lawyer Gao Zhisheng, who has gone missing for over 1,200 days since August 2017.
Gao, a self-taught lawyer and devoted Christian, has defended different vulnerable groups who have persecuted by Chinese authorities.
Because of his work, authorities closed Gao’s law firm in Beijing in 2005, stripped Gao’s lawyer license in 2006, and persecuted Gao and his family by monitoring, harassing, and detaining them.
Gao has been in and out of prison in the past decade, where he is often tortured. In August 2017, Gao disappeared again. Rights activists believe that he is being held by authorities.
Gao has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize three times, and has received at least eight human rights awards.
Theresa Chu, lawyer and spokesperson for the Falun Gong Human Rights Lawyers Group, expressed the group’s appreciation to Gao and other human rights lawyers.
“During the darkest moments for China’s rule of law, you [lawyers] have spent your spirit, health, and energy to defend kind-hearted [Falun Gong] cultivators, and helped China to move toward a moral future. We believe that your spirit will remain in the history of human rights in China forever,” Chu said in an interview with The Epoch Times.
US Embassy Message
On Wednesday, the U.S. Embassy in China posted on its official Weibo account—a popular Chinese social media platform—that it would host a discussion panel on Facebook, discussing the importance of free speech, at 8 p.m. on Dec. 10, Beijing time.The U.S. embassy enjoys relatively more freedom of speech than the average Chinese citizen. The regime does not allow protests or public displays of dissent.
Facebook is also censored in mainland China. It remains to be seen how many Chinese can attend the discussion panel.