Sure. I guess I'll start.
My name is Maran Turner. I'm the executive director of Freedom Now. Freedom Now is a non-partisan, non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C. Our mission is to work on behalf of prisoners of conscience all over the world. Those are individuals who are imprisoned or detained because of what they say or what they believe or who they're associated with. Our mission is to work on their behalf individually, mobilizing legal, political, and public relations elements to help secure their release.
I'll give you just a little bit of our background and what makes it especially special to sit next to Dr. Yang. Our organization got involved in Dr. Yang's case. Unfortunately, Dr. Yang, as a long-time human rights activist who was at Tiananmen Square himself, found himself imprisoned in China, serving a five-year sentence--for spying, I think, for Taiwan, which at the time was a very common charge.
Dr. Yang stands today as a prominent human rights activist based in the United States, and works tirelessly for human rights in China still. I believe his experience gives him a special insight into what it's like to be imprisoned in China as well as to be a human rights activist.
I'll give you a little bit of background on the situation in China with respect to dissidents as well as to the rule of law. The climate for individual thinkers in China is bleak. Activists, religious practitioners, lawyers, and journalists more and more are operating at their peril, and unfortunately also at peril to their families.
Many say that the situation in China has worsened, that the government is in full crackdown mode. Human rights defenders are being harassed, intimidated, and surveilled; their families also are being targeted. More and more are being arbitrarily detained and, frighteningly, “disappeared”, as in the case of Gao Zhisheng, which I'll speak about.
As all of this happens, unfortunately, China's image has changed dramatically over the last few years. They've made impressive strides economically, and as the world watches its improvement in its stature, sadly the debate over the human rights situation diminishes. Unfortunately, it continues as it has before. Although there has been some human rights progress, it's generally mostly lip service, and when it does come to pass, it's when it's convenient to the government and when the world is watching.
The rule of law has been said for a while now to be in full retreat. As I said, individual activists and dissidents are targeted; they're being arrested; they're being put on trial. They're generally being charged, with very few exceptions, under article 105 of the Chinese criminal code, which deals with subversion or “splitism”. More often they're charged with merely inciting subversion or splitism. For neither one of those is there any judicial or legislative interpretation. The law is incredibly vague, and of course “inciting” is even more vague.
The evidence used against dissidents such as Dr. Yang and Liu Xiaobo and Gao Zhisheng, whom I'll speak about, is their words, their expressions, things they have written. To us, prosecuting free expression is anathema to our values and our culture, and it is to the Chinese as well. The Chinese government claims also to respect freedom of expression. It's contained in their constitution; China signed on to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which contains provisions requiring that freedom of expression, freedom of association, the prohibition of arbitrary detention are to be upheld. China has yet to ratify the ICCPR, but having signed it, and considering that their own law contains many of the same provisions, without question China is bound by it.
Unfortunately, the claim by the Chinese government is not that they're breaking any laws—not their own, not international law. Rather, they say they're adhering to it, that they are respecting freedom of expression, except when it endangers security. And unfortunately the people who are targeted, the people who are arrested and accused of endangering security, are those who are actually just speaking out against the one-party state and calling for democratic reform, which is to say that the security the government is concerned about is not the security of the people but the security of the party.
What this suggests to us, to me, is that the government is becoming increasingly paranoid about its own security, and as a consequence they're cracking down on dissidents even more.
Thousands are being watched, harassed, imprisoned, and unfortunately disappeared. Two emblematic cases--two cases that we are here today to highlight--are two cases that Freedom Now is proud to be involved in. We represent both Gao Zhisheng and Liu Xiaobo.
They're both emblematic cases in that neither one of them, Gao nor Liu, are radical figures. Gao Zhisheng is a human rights lawyer, or was a human rights lawyer, at one point heralded to be one of the top ten lawyers in China. Unfortunately, because he took on too many cases on behalf of people who were marginalized, people who were persecuted in particular religious minorities, such as Falun Gong, he found himself bearing the brunt of attacks by the Chinese government. He was arrested and harassed on numerous occasions. He suffered torture that one can't even imagine, including being beaten with a baton, having lit cigarettes held to his face, and being electrocuted, all because he represented people. He himself was not an outspoken critic of the government. He was representing others who were merely trying to express themselves and to believe in what they wanted to believe in.
He tried to work through the judicial system in China. When he found that he couldn't, when he found that his clients were still being tortured and imprisoned, he then called out and became public, and wrote open letters to the government calling for an end to torture. He ultimately provided information to the U.S. Congress regarding the human rights situation in China.
Unfortunately, what's happened to him is that he has disappeared. This is incredibly alarming because over the years, certainly, there have been many who have disappeared, but nowhere near the numbers that are actually charged and imprisoned. The fact that we're talking about a human rights lawyer who has disappeared is very worrying.
He was arrested on February 4, 2009, and disappeared. No one knew where he was. We know that he was last seen in government custody. After some inquiries were made, ominously, the foreign minister publicly came out and said that Gao is where he should be. Nobody quite knew what that meant. Everybody, after that, stepped up international attention and their inquiries, and it was only because there was so much international attention that the Chinese government felt compelled to “reappear” Gao.
He reappeared and stayed reappeared for less than a month. In that month he was able to speak to press, he was able to speak to family members, but sadly, in less than 30 days, he disappeared again. That was in April, the last time that anybody had any contact with him. We now don't know where he is, and know nothing about his condition.
Next, I will talk about Liu Xiaobo, who of course is now a celebrated Nobel Peace Prize laureate. We're of course delighted. I know that Dr. Yang is delighted with the Nobel committee's decision to award it to such an incredible man as Dr. Liu, who for years has used his intelligence and his charisma to seek human rights in China and some democratic reforms. He himself has been punished for it.
He's a literature professor in Beijing. He spent time in the United States as a visiting professor at Columbia. He, like many others, like Dr. Yang, went back to China during Tiananmen Square. He was one of four intellectuals who negotiated for the peaceful removal of some of the students. He advocated for nothing but peace to the students. He was able to negotiate with security officers there to help get them out of harm's way.
For his activities, he served 20 months in prison. He remained in China, and continued to work on initiatives and speaking for democratic reform. He of course was also harassed on many occasions and was imprisoned. Ultimately, in 2008, he was a principal drafter of Charter 08, which I'm sure Dr. Yang can speak more to.
This document was quite something, and one that a number of intellectuals were involved in. Dr. Liu was certainly the one who was most out front and outspoken, as a signatory. It mirrored itself on the Czech Charter 77. What it called for was no radical revolution in China, by any means, but democratic reforms. It called on China to commit itself to act. What it was saying that it was providing, which is really respecting freedom of expression, really respecting individual rights—that’s what it called for.
Because of his association with Charter 08, he was arrested on December 8, 2008. Charter 08 was released two days later.
Initially there were approximately 300 signatories to Charter 08. When it was eventually taken down from the Internet, there were approximately 10,000 people who had signed on and endorsed Charter 08.
Dr. Liu, like so many others, was held for a period of about six months, incommunicado for the most part. He wasn't charged. It wasn't until after about six months that he was charged with, of course, inciting subversion, in violation of article 105.
During his trial, for which his lawyer had had very little time to prepare, he was given 14 minutes before the court cut his defence off. So suffice it to say there was no respect of due process rights, or international respect for fair trial rights. He received a sentence of 11 years.
The crime, inciting subversion, carries a maximum penalty of 15 years; however, Dr. Liu received the longest sentence that anyone has ever received for this particular crime. His wife was barred from the trial. She wasn't allowed to observe the trial. Journalists were prohibited from entering the courtroom, as were diplomats who also attempted to enter the courtroom. So it was by no means an open trial.
At sentencing, through a statement released by his lawyer--I think it's incredibly eloquent, and I want to read it to all of you--Dr. Liu said:
I have long been aware that when an independent intellectual stands up to an autocratic state, step one toward freedom is often a step into prison...and true freedom is that much nearer.
Dr. Liu took that step, and he knew he was taking that step. What he didn't know was that he would win the Nobel Prize.
This was an opportunity for China to step up and embrace one of its own--not someone who was seeking any sort of radical reform but someone who was seeking progress for his country and wanted to see China flourish. Unfortunately, instead of embracing him and instead of embracing that one of their own was recognized by the Nobel committee, they instead immediately cordoned off his wife, Liu Xia, and put her under de facto house arrest, where she remains today. She was permitted to see Dr. Liu a couple of days after the announcement was made. We were in touch with her only briefly within the hour that the announcement was made before they came in and cut off her phone and cut off her ability to communicate. We know they then removed her to Beijing and then the following day took her to see Dr. Liu. I think she spent about an hour with her husband.
Upon hearing the news of the award, he was moved to tears and immediately said that this award was not his, but that he dedicated it to the martyrs of Tiananmen.
Since then the situation has worsened. The Chinese government is still holding Liu Xia, his wife, under house arrest. We're no longer getting any news of her situation. We're not sure; as far as we know, she's still being kept in her home, but that's all we know. They've cut off her phone. They've cut her Internet access.
So this is where we are today. We have one client, a human rights lawyer, who has disappeared. And we have another one who is a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who has been recognized by the world as a man to be celebrated, and instead he sits in prison somewhere and his wife is under house arrest.
Our concern is with the alarming trend of the Chinese government to continue to act so unabashedly, the greatest sign of which is taking a prominent human rights lawyer and just disappearing him. It's outrageous. Equally outrageous is the fact that they have now moved in and have his wife under house arrest. She has been charged with nothing. Her only crime is that she is the wife of a Chinese man who won the Nobel Peace Prize. This is of incredible concern to us.
Before I turn it over to Dr. Yang, I will just say that I'm delighted that world leaders are calling for Dr. Liu's release, as well as the release of his wife, Liu Xia, and also for the reappearance of Mr. Gao Zhisheng.
I'm happy to know that the Canadian Prime Minister, Prime Minister Harper, spoke on behalf of Liu Xiaobo, and celebrated his award of the Nobel Prize as well. I also know that Foreign Minister Cannon has raised his case with the Chinese government.
I think it's critical that we now speak louder and more forcefully than ever and that world leaders come together and unite and take the case to President Hu. Again, no one is trying to impose any values on President Hu, but we're merely asking them to respect the rights and freedoms they already proclaim to do.
So I hope that the Canadian government will reach out to President Hu, and I hope that members of Parliament will urge your own government to do so. Certainly a great opportunity is the upcoming G-20 summit in November. I think that's a perfect opportunity for the world leaders gathering there to come together and have a unified voice.
With that, I will turn it over to Dr. Yang.