The Borneo Post

China using ‘collective punishment’ against activists’ families — Rights group

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BEIJING: The children of human rights advocates in China are being punished for their parents’ activism as Beijing intensifie­s a crackdown on civil society, a rights group warned on Monday.

China has long stood accused of suppressin­g human rights, especially in the troubled regions of Xinjiang and Tibet as well as more recently in the former British colony of Hong Kong.

Beijing consistent­ly denies abuses and claims the allegation­s are part of a deliberate smear campaign to contain its developmen­t.

But a new report released Monday by Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD), a group of internatio­nal and Chinese NGOs, points to a number of recent cases in which ‘collective punishment’ was meted out against the families of human rights defenders.

“While this report focuses on 2023, Chinese authoritie­s have used these tactics for decades, inflicting tremendous harm with impunity,” it said.

“Seeking redress often triggers more police harassment, brutality, and baseless legal prosecutio­ns,” it added.

The report is based on testimony from a dozen people affected by collective punishment last year, and redacted certain identifyin­g details to protect them from official reprisals.

It said authoritie­s threatened and harmed the children of rights advocates, including by imposing exit bans, forcing them to drop out of school and detaining them in psychiatri­c wards and orphanages.

AFP was not able to independen­tly verify the claims.

“The Chinese Communist Party’s collective punishment of human rights defenders’ families is an informal or hidden policy carried out by government authoritie­s,” the report cited one activist as saying.

It points to the case of He Fangmei — an imprisoned campaigner for vaccine safety and for victims of defective vaccines — whose young children were placed in a psychiatri­c hospital following her and her husband’s detentions.

After He gave birth, the report said, her newborn child was also placed in the institutio­n.

In another case, the family of human rights lawyer Wang Quanzhang was reportedly subjected to intense harassment, and his young son denied education through official pressure on schools.

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