Mainland Affairs Council
In order to win the right to host the 2008 Olympic Games, China made many
promisesincluding the improvement of Chinas human rights record, freedom of
the press, and the protection of the environmentto the international community
when it submitted its Olympic bid in 2001. What makes the public still vividly
remember is the fact that Liu Qi, president of the Beijing Organizing Committee
for the Games of the XXIII Olympiad and the then Beijing City Mayor, guaranteed
in front of all the members of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) during
a meeting held in Moscow that, "if Beijing wins its bid to host the Olympic
Games, it will be conducive to Chinas economic and social progress; at the same
time, it will also make further progress on the promotion of human rights. Wang
Wei, Secretary- General of Beijing 2008 Olympic Bid Committee, also made
promises to accelerate the improvement of Chinas human rights situation and
indicated as well that, "We will grant full freedom of the press to the
journalists coming to China; they will be able to visit Beijing and other
Chinese cities and cover any news event before and during the Olympic Games. We
will also allow demonstrations." However, the facts prove that six and a half
years after it successfully won the Olympic bid, there has not only been no
signs of any improvement in China's human rights record, but it can be even said
that there is a serious retrogression in Chinas human rights situation.
Beijing's 1.5 million residents were forced to relocate due to constructions
for the Olympic Games
In August 2007, the Geneva-based human rights organization Center on Housing
Rights and Evictions (COHRE) indicated in a report that the Beijing government
has implemented a large-scale urban reconstruction to welcome the Olympic Games.
Residents are often forced to evacuate without receiving any notice or with a
very meager amount of compensation. As of April 2007, various constructions for
the Olympic Games have affected at least 1.25 million residents and have caused
countless homes to be forcefully demolished. Before the start of the Olympic
Games next year, it is also estimated that at least 250,000 more people will
have to relocate. The COHRE report also indicated that approximately 33,000
people have been left homeless every year due to constructions for the Olympic
Games and they have thus become poor. Those who were dissatisfied with the
forced evictions and called for the protection of human rights have mostly been
suppressed, persecuted, and even brought into custody.
Nevertheless, in facing the criticisms from various sectors of society,
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu refuted by saying that these
allegations "do not have any factual evidence" and even argued that "residents
affected by the construction of facilities for the Olympic Games have been
properly taken care of; none of them have been forced to relocate outside of
Beijing." Beijing human rights activist Hu Jia's analysis indicates that Olympic
host nations have always implemented relocations to give way to the construction
of Olympic facilities, but Beijing has committed the most number of human rights
violations, which are also considered the most inhumane. The very reason for
this is that the Chinese government is neither being constrained nor monitored.
The Beijing authorities forcefully demolish Shangfang Village and drive away
visitors
Shangfang Village, located in Fengtai District in Beijing, used to be the
home of large batches of petitioners from all over China who went to Beijing to
petition the Chinese authorities due to land expropriation, demolition and
relocation, as well as land disputes in their provincial hometowns. They were
viewed by the Chinese authorities as disharmonious and destabilizing elements.
The Village was plain-looking and the petitioners shabbily-dressed, which
created a strong contrast between one of Chinas slogans for the gamesa new
Beijing, a new Olympics; under such circumstances it naturally became a target
for the municipal government's plans for reconstruction. In August 2007, the
Beijing authorities conducted another large-scale check on the Village and
ordered all the petitioners to relocate. The government decreed that hostels and
inns taking in any petitioner will be fined RMB 20,000. The media also took
coordinated action by reporting how several of them were sent back to their
hometowns to receive punishment or undergo reeducation through labor, clearly
serving as a warning to others. In the end of September 2007, hundreds of
Beijing police and officials forcefully demolished the Village and large groups
of public security officials have continued to drive away petitioners who still
refuse to leave or who just arrived there from all over China.
The Chinese government wantonly accuses people of "National Security" crimes
In November, the British Broadcasting Corporations (BBC) Chinese language
webpage reported that the San Francisco-based Dui Hua Foundation quoted the Law
Yearbook of China 2007, an official Chinese document, as saying that there were
604 people arrested in China in 2006 for endangering and threatening national
security, and that 561 of these cases have entered the litigation process. Of
all the cases, only a handful have been made public by the Chinese government or
by international human rights organizations, and more than 90 percent of the
cases are unknown to the various sectors of society. Kang Yuan, executive
director of the said Foundation, indicated that the figures announced in the
yearbook are the only official figures revealed concerning the political crimes
handled by the Chinese judicial system. Based on these figures, the number of
people arrested in 2006 for "threatening and endangering national security" has
more than doubled over 2005. These developments show that the Chinese
authorities have wantonly accused people of crimes against the "national
security." Its motive is to quell any opposing opinions from coming out in the
rapidly-transforming society of China, to ensure that the 2008 Beijing Olympic
Games will not be disturbed.
China blacklists 11 categories of people from attending the Olympic Games
In November 2007, the China Aid Association (CAA), a Christian organization,
revealed a confidential document released in April by China's Ministry of Public
Security, namely, the Notice on the Strict Implementation of a Background Check
on Applicants for the Olympic Games and the Olympic Test Event. The document
requires a strict background check on personnel applying to participate in the
Olympic Games, including members of the International Olympic Committee (IOC),
athletes, journalists, and sponsors, and clearly lists down the 43 types of
persons grouped into 11 categories that are banned from participating in the
Olympic Games. These 11 "blacklisted" categories include hostile elements, Falun
Gong adherents and members of other cults and harmful religious organizations,
religious extremists and infiltrators, ethnic secessionists, media employees who
may harm the Olympic Games, illegal organizations that may pose actual threat to
the Olympic Games, dangerous elements, people under investigation by the
judicial agencies, criminals under surveillance, on probation, and under parole,
terrorists, and members of illegal organizations.
The Olympic Games is a major international sports event that becomes the
focus of the world's attention every four years. Every individual regardless of
ethnic background, religious beliefs, and nationality, has the right to
participate in such an event. Terrorism is plaguing the world today; under such
circumstances, it is just natural to reinforce security measures during the
Olympic Games. However, the legal system in China has not yet been perfect, and
the various names of charges like hostile, opposing, dangerous, violent,
illegal, secessionist, and threat, are defined in arbitrary manner, which not
only seriously encroaches on basic human rights, but also clearly violates the
core principles of "protection of human dignity" and "respect for universal
ethics" that are stipulated under the Olympic Charter; this is especially so
with regard to the restrictions imposed on religious sects and organizations.
China's declaration to respect press freedom is only to create a false
impression
Due to international pressure, China has started to implement the
Regulations on Reporting Activities in China by Foreign Journalists During the
Beijing Olympic Games and the Preparatory Period since January 2007. The
Regulations stipulate that foreign journalists stationed in China are allowed to
freely cover news events across the country during the Olympic Games, and the
scope of coverage is not limited to the Olympic Games, it is extended to
activities in the areas of politics, technology, culture, and economy. However,
the Beijing-based Foreign Correspondents Club of China (FCCC) revealed a survey
report on August 1, 2007 indicating that 95 percent of the 163 foreign
journalists surveyed believed that the coverage environment for news media in
China has not reached the acceptable international standards, and that 67
percent of the respondents believed that the Chinese government has not
fulfilled their promise to grant greater freedom to foreign journalists to cover
news events in China. Around 40 percent of reporters indicated that since
January 2007, they have encountered certain interferences and restrictions
imposed by the Chinese government during the coverage process, which includes
being trailed and monitored, threatened and harassed, and illegally detained;
what's more, violent infringement upon the reporter and the information sources
also happens. Some foreign journalists also believed that they have not only
been forbidden by government authorities from covering sensitive issues such as
public demonstrations, but have also encountered several obstacles imposed by
administrative entities when they make in-depth coverage of sensitive issues
such as those on ethnic minorities.
On the surface, China's formulation of the regulations on reporting
activities of foreign media during the Olympic Games seems to abide by the
promise China has made during its bid to host the Olympic Games. But there is no
need to do such a thing in any country where its citizens enjoy press freedom.
Moreover, based on the aforementioned survey results and the fact that Tibet and
Xinjiang remain listed as restricted areas for travel, as well as the frequent
occurrence of restrictions imposed on news coverage, the prohibitions against
covering news events related to religious and social incidents and the frequent
reports on Chinese suppression of press freedom, it can be seen that China does
not have any intention to respect press freedom, and its declaration of
so-called "full freedom of the press" is only aimed at creating a false
impression. The "regulations" formulated by China are only expedient measures
that serve to mitigate criticisms.
Constant criticisms from international organizations
Recently, Chinas incessant human rights violations have clearly laid bare
the promises China made during its bid to host the Olympic Games, and this has
triggered serious concerns among the international community. For example, in
January 2007, the Human Rights Watch released its World Report 2006 indicating
that since Chinese leaders Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao took office in 2003, the
human rights situation and the freedom of the press in China have retrogressed.
In March 2007, the U.S. State Department released its 2006 Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices indicating that "certain human rights conditions in
China are gradually deteriorating."
In June 2007, a total of nine international human rights organizations in the
world, namely, Reporters Without Borders, Amnesty International, the
International Federation for Human Rights, the International Federation of
Action by Christians for the Abolition of Torture, the International Society for
Human Rights, Solidarity China, Human Rights In Action, the Committee for the
Support of Tibetan People, and Together Against the Death Penalty, gathered in
Paris to jointly launch a movement raising an eight-point demand to ask Beijing
to obey, in the hope of improving the human rights situation in China.
On August 6, 2007, Reporters Without Borders held a press conference and
staged a demonstration in front of the headquarters of the Beijing Organizing
Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG) to demand the release of
about one hundred Chinese reporters and internet dissenters. On August 7, 42
Chinese intellectuals including Bao Tong, Liu Xiaobo, and Chen Ziming sent an
open letter to Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao demanding the implementation of the
promises China made during its bid to host the Olympic Games and the
facilitation of human rights improvements in China, hoping that aside from
having "the same world and the same dream" the Chinese nationals will also have
"the same human rights." In the beginning of August, democratic activists
including Wei Jingsheng and Wang Dan wrote to Dr. Jacques Rogge, president of
the International Olympic Committee (IOC), calling for attention on the human
rights situation in China. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) also
convened a press briefing in Beijing to condemn the Chinese government for
having failed to keep its promises.
The Human rights situation in China is entirely in violation of the Olympic
spirit
The Chinese authorities have racked their brain and spared no effort in
organizing the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, hoping that through the holding of
the Olympic Games, they will be able to promote China's economic, social, and
cultural development, and shape a new image for its "rise" into a major power.
However, behind the pageantry of the Olympics preparations, the human rights
situation in China entirely runs counter to the sublime ideals advocated by the
Olympic Games, namely, humanitarianism, freedom, equality, and harmony, forming
a strong contrast that is extremely sarcastic.