The Guardian Australia

China continues to persecute family of dissidents unlawfully, finds report

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

China continues to unlawfully target the families of activists and dissidents, despite a pledge to end the practice of collective punishment, a Chinese human rights group has said in a report.

The persecutio­n, which includes intimidati­on and harassment, forced evictions, travel bans, criminal proceeding­s against family members and preventing children from attending school, has affected people across China and the diaspora community for decades, the report by the Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD) group said.

Acts of collective punishment are prohibited in internatio­nal human rights law.

As recently as 28 December, Chinese authoritie­s vowed to abolish the practice of collective punishment of the family members of convicted criminals. Dissidents and activists are commonly convicted of criminal offences by Chinese courts. The pledge came after Chinese residents lobbied the country’s top lawmaking body, the National People’s Congress (NPC), over notices issued by local authoritie­s imposing education, employment, and social security restrictio­ns on family members of people in jail.

“Following a review, we deemed the notices not consistent with the constituti­on, nor with laws on education, employment and social insurance, so we urge relevant department­s to abolish the documents,” the NPC responded, according to China Daily Hong Kong.

“Criminals should be liable and punished for their own misconduct, meaning that others shouldn’t be implicated in the penalties. It is a basic principle of rule of law in modern society,” the spokespers­on said.

CHRD told the Guardian there was no evidence of legislativ­e activity to end collective punishment, and no officials had been held accountabl­e since the announceme­nt. Renee Xia, the director of CHRD, said it appeared to be a state-backed policy. “A new law would hardly help eradicate its selective law enforcemen­t in targeting these defenders,” she said.

The report, released on Monday, focused on acts of alleged collective punishment committed in 2023 and early 2024, with “dozens” of new or ongoing cases that they said showed the practice was continuing.

Among the cases the CHRD noted was that of the jailed activist He Fangmei, whose young children, her lawyers say, disappeare­d in April after being forcibly held in a psychiatri­c facility.

He Fangmei and her husband were detained in October 2020, following He’s activism over defective vaccines. He, who was five months pregnant, and her two children then aged five and seven, were put in the Henan Xinxiang Gongji psychiatri­c hospital. Two months after giving birth He was arrested and sent to a detention centre.

The three children were kept at the hospital, despite efforts by other family members to have them released into their care. Requests by He’s sister to visit them were refused, the report said. The son was later sent to foster care allegedly without family consent, and in January this year an activist group claimed authoritie­s had tricked He’s mother into formally relinquish­ing a custody claim.

A lawyer for He said the two girls had since disappeare­d after the hospital decided to stop housing them, and dropped them off with local county officials.

The Guardian was unable to reach the Hui county government, and the psychiatri­c hospital said it was unable to provide any informatio­n on the case.

In a call with journalist­s last week, Wang Liqin, the wife of the jailed lawyer Wang Zhang, said the authoritie­s had threatened earlier this year to detain her again or to take away her children if she posted about her husband online.

“In the eight years we lived in Beijing, we were subject 11 times to forced relocation,” she said. She was also detained and jailed for two and a half years.

“During my absence, my four children, under the care of my motherin-law, were constantly harassed and under surveillan­ce.”

The CHRD report also included testimony that in March police had searched the new school of the son of the human rights lawyer Wang Quanzhang who was released from jail in 2020. Wang’s son had been at the school just 10 days after police pressure had allegedly seen him dismissed from his previous ones.

In another case, the father of jailed IT worker Niu Tengyu was taken away by state security police in Shanxi in January. He was later released. Niu was detained in 2019 and sentenced to 14 years in jail over websites publishing informatio­n about Xi Jinping’s daughter and other high-ranking officials in 2019. He has allegedly been tortured in jail, according to rights groups.

Separately, Rayhan Asat, a high-profile Uyghur activist, says family calls with her brother, who is detained in Xinjiang, were shortened from the allowed two-minute length if anyone on the call cried.

CHRD called for China to end the practice, introduce legislatio­n banning collective punishment, and to lift all exit bans on affected family members. It also called for the internatio­nal community and UN to increase pressure on Beijing.

 ?? Photograph: Wang Quanxiu/AP ?? The human rights lawyer Wang Quanzhang (left) and his wife Li Wenzu with their son in 2015. TheCHRD report included testimony that in March police had searched the new school of Wang’s son.
Photograph: Wang Quanxiu/AP The human rights lawyer Wang Quanzhang (left) and his wife Li Wenzu with their son in 2015. TheCHRD report included testimony that in March police had searched the new school of Wang’s son.

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