China is violating human rights at an intensity that is unprecedented in its recent history, a top watchdog group said yesterday.
The Chinese Communist Party has “unleashed an extraordinary assault on basic human rights and their defenders with a ferocity unseen in recent years,” the New York-based group Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in its annual report.
The group added that recent developments in China are “an alarming sign given that the current leadership will likely remain in power through 2023.”
Since taking office as party chief in 2012, Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) has overseen a campaign against government critics with hundreds detained or jailed.
“China remains an authoritarian state, one that systematically curbs fundamental rights, including freedom of expression, association, assembly and religion, when their exercise is perceived to threaten one-party rule,” HRW said.
Xi’s much-publicized anti-corruption campaign “has been conducted in ways that further undermine the rule of law, with accused officials held in an unlawful detention system, deprived of basic legal protections, and often coerced to confess,” the group said.
Activists and other rights defenders in China increasingly face retaliation, Human Rights Watch said, citing a number of cases, including that of dissident Cao Shunli (曹順利), who died in detention last year.
Cao had been detained in 2013 shortly before she was due to travel to Geneva to attend a UN session on China’s rights record.
China says that it safeguards its citizens’ rights, including freedom of assembly, expression, religion and the press.
The ruling party had made “positive steps in certain areas,” HRW said, such as the official abolition of re-education through labor camps and the reform of the hukou household registration system, which has barred China’s hundreds of millions of migrants from equal access to healthcare and other benefits.
However, the Human Rights Watch report also voiced concern about Beijing’s decision in August “denying genuine democracy in Hong Kong,” which sparked a wave of pro-democracy protests in the former British colony.
The watchdog criticized the use of “excessive force” by Hong Kong police, including the use of pepper spray, as well as the erosion of press freedoms and physical attacks on independent journalists.
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