[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 49 (Friday, April 12, 2013)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E438-E440]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




        CHEN GUANGCHENG AND GAO ZHISHENG: HUMAN RIGHTS IN CHINA

                                 ______
                                 

                       HON. CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH

                             of new jersey

                    in the house of representatives

                         Friday, April 12, 2013

  Mr. SMITH of New Jersey. Mr. Speaker, I recently held a hearing in 
which we listened

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and learned from brave men and women from China who have been and are 
at the forefront of advocating for freedom and human rights and against 
the tyranny and oppression of the state.
   We sought advice and counsel as to what can--and must--be done by 
Congress, the President, and the American people, and all people of 
goodwill worldwide, to mitigate the hate and gross mistreatment meted 
out by the government of China against its own citizens.
   We appealed to Beijing--ease up, respect fundamental human rights 
and the sanctity of human life and honor your commitments and the rule 
of law.
   Chen Guangcheng and his equally courageous wife Yuan Weijing have 
paid, and continue to pay an extraordinary high price for their benign 
defiance of a dictatorship that violates human rights with impunity and 
crushes human dignity.
   Not only have the Chens endured numbing isolation and unspeakable 
torture over the course of several years, but now as we all know, in a 
pathetic display of PRC governmental revenge Chen's nephew Chen Kegui 
languishes in a Chinese prison while other family members remain at 
risk. Shockingly, young Chen Kegui has been brutally tortured and 
threatened, as Guangcheng noted, with life imprisonment if he appeals 
his conviction.
   Undeterred, Mr. Chen Guangcheng continues to gently raise his clear 
and consistent voice on behalf of all victims while pushing systemic 
reform of egregiously flawed political institutions and people who 
persecute and repress.
   Blind since childhood, Mr. Chen bore all the burdens and 
disadvantages that a disabled person faces in rural China. Confronted 
with the denial of his rights, he developed an intense interest in law 
and challenged the local government, winning his case. Hearing of Mr. 
Chen's success, other individuals in Shandong Province were inspired to 
seek his legal assistance in securing redress and vindication.
   Almost everywhere, corrupt officials made, and continue to make, 
life miserable for those struggling to survive. Mr. Chen informed many 
of their rights and helped them seek durable remedies. He helped many 
to see that the rule of just and compassionate law wasn't just for the 
privileged few, but for everyone.
   Victimized yet unbroken by beatings and torture, 51 months of 
nightmarish incarceration, preceded by house arrest and followed by 18 
months more cut short only by his escape, Chen Guangcheng tenaciously 
defended Chinese women and babies oppressed by China's draconian one 
child policy.
   Mr. Chen's brilliant mind, indomitable spirit and unimaginable 
courage exposed pervasive forced abortion, deemed a crime against 
humanity at the Nuremberg Nazi War Crimes Tribunal, and was relentless 
in using his self-taught legal skills to protect the innocent.
   Unfazed by both the difficulty of the task or the inherent risks, 
Mr. Chen employed legal strategies to combat this insidious government 
cruelty towards women and children and argued that his clients in 
Linyi--and all women in China for that matter--have rights that 
prohibit such violence. They deserve better.
   Chen became, and remains their hero.
   It took a blind man to really see the injustice of a population 
control program that makes most brothers and sisters illegal and to 
hear the desperate cries of Chinese women.
   It took a blind man, the great Chen Guangcheng, to open the eyes of 
a blind world to these human rights violations systematically inflicted 
on Chinese women.
   Mr. Chen's daring escape to the U.S. Embassy, his miraculous evasion 
of China's ubiquitous secret police en route is the stuff of legend and 
superheroes. His dramatic testimony by telephone from a hospital to two 
emergency hearings I chaired was heard around the world.
   Ms. Geng He appeared in order to remind us, and the world, of 
another brave extraordinary hero, her husband Gao Zhisheng. With great 
love and a broken heart, this remarkable woman has worked unceasingly 
to secure the freedom of her husband.
   Gao Zhisheng is an attorney who played a leading role among Chinese 
human rights lawyers that defend those the Chinese government 
persecutes most harshly, conducting their defense by demanding that the 
prosecution conform to the law.
   Mr. Gao is the quintessential example of a human rights defender.
   In 2005, after he took on politically sensitive cases, Mr. Gao wrote 
open letters to both the National People's Congress and the leadership 
of the Chinese Communist Party, calling for an end to the torture of 
members of persecuted religious groups. Mr. Gao's license to practice 
law was subsequently revoked, his law firm shut down, and his family 
placed under police surveillance. In August, 2006, Mr. Gao was 
apprehended and then charged with ``inciting subversion.'' He was 
convicted and given a suspended three-year sentence with five years' 
probation, effectively placing him under house arrest.
   In September 2007, Mr. Gao wrote an open letter to the United States 
Congress in which he described widespread human rights abuses in China, 
called ``China's birth control policy the largest genocide in the 
history of mankind'' and related the government's harsh treatment of 
him and his family. He was consequently detained and tortured for 50 
days. His captors called him a ``traitor,'' and they warned him he 
would be killed if he told anyone about being abducted and tortured.
   In February 2009, Gao was forcibly taken away from his home in 
Shaanxi province by public security personnel. He briefly resurfaced 
only in late March of 2010, more than a year later. During his brief 
reappearance, however, Mr. Gao gave several interviews to foreign 
media, disclosing the details of his torture. The next month, Mr. Gao 
disappeared again.
   In testimony at a China Commission hearing that I chaired on 
February 14th of last year, Geng He said of her daughter Grace: 
``Zhisheng's absence has caused my daughter severe emotional anguish. 
She often dreams that her father is dead.''
   Geng He added: ``My son has tears in his eyes on Father's day . . . 
we were forced to endure rumors that the guards had tortured Zhisheng 
to death.''
   In late 2011, Gao was secretly transferred to a distant Shaya County 
Prison in the Aksu district of Xinjiang. He has seen his family only 
twice in the last 16 months and for only 30 minutes each visit. Police 
have prohibited family members from asking him any information about 
himself.
   In an account of Mr. Gao's torture, made public by the Associated 
Press in January 2011, Mr. Gao disclosed to a reporter the excruciating 
details of his detention: ``The police stripped Gao Zhisheng bare and 
pummeled him with handguns in holsters. For two days and nights, they 
took turns beating him and did things he refused to describe.'' He 
recalled, ``for 48 hours my life hung by a thread.'' Authorities 
reportedly threatened to kill Mr. Gao and to dump his body in a river. 
And, authorities taunted him by saying ``you must forget you're 
human.''
   To President Xi, we will not forget Gao Zhisheng. Not now, not ever. 
We appeal to you to release him.
   Below are several excerpts from the hearing I recently chaired.
   Q: Rep. Weber (to Mr. Chen and Pastor Fu)--``Would you all agree 
that part of your reason for being here is to stop those atrocities and 
that we would include those as a basic human right as well?''
   A: Mr. Chen ``Forced abortion is certainly a basic human rights 
issue; no mother would willingly kill their own children. This is a 
doing of the Chinese Communist Party, acting above the law. They want 
to be as the Emperors and exercise absolute power.''
   Q: Mr. Smith Referencing Mr. Chen's interview with the press about 
the brutality of the one-child policy, specifically quoting Mr. Chen's 
statement about how forced abortion does not occur only for those who 
are having a second child, but also for those who are having their 
first child but without a birth permit; Mr. Smith asked Mr. Chen for 
any further comments on that.
   A: Mr. Chen ``China's population planning agency has become a 
powerful for-profit institution. On the papers, this institution 
comprises of 500,000 personnel, but in reality, as much as 2,000,000 
personnel are involved in enforcing China's population planning 
policies.''
   ``In China, there is a zero-tolerance policy where if a party 
secretary does not implement one particular policy well, he is ruled to 
be incompetent and would be removed from his post, even if he performs 
well in implementing other policies. As a result, party secretaries 
enforce the one-child policy ruthlessly and aggressively.''
   ``So now, in addition to forcibly aborting 'extraneous' pregnancies 
(i.e. any pregnancy beyond the first child), couples also must acquire 
a birth permit from the population planning office even for first 
pregnancies. Once pregnancy occurs without this permit, local 
authorities will also force an abortion--unless you're able to pay a 
large amount of money to the local authorities for them to look the 
other way and provide you with an ex post facto permit. But in most 
cases where they are being stringent, they will force you to go through 
with the abortion no matter what.''
   Amnesty International's T. Kumar, International Advocacy Director 
said forced abortion is a major human rights violation in China.
   ``As a consequence of the government's one-child policy, women are 
still compelled to undergo forced abortion and sterilization, 
notwithstanding official assurances that such practices violate 
Beijing's wishes,'' Kumar said.
   Fu said bloody cases in China's forcibly enforced ``one-child'' 
family planning policy and in forced demolition of residential homes 
and relocation of residents continue to take place; the Chinese 
people's basic right to life cannot be guaranteed at all.

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   Fu, of ChinaAid, decried the violence of forced ``family planning.''
   ``Last month, the Ministry of Public Health publicly announced the 
`achievements' of the family planning policy in the past 40 years: 330 
million abortions performed on Chinese women,'' Fu said. ``What is 
really distressing is that these bloody numbers continue to climb and 
that the majority of these abortions were forced on the women by the 
government.'' Fu said that on March 13, a woman in Henan province 
(Daxuzhai town, Taikang county) who was forced to have an abortion 
against her will, was found hanged at the local family planning office 
with suspicious injuries all over her body. On March 22, he testified, 
a woman in her seventh month of pregnancy in Anhui province (Chuzhou, 
Fengyang county) was kidnapped by family planning cadres and taken to a 
hospital where she was forced to receive a lethal injection that killed 
her seven-month-old unborn baby and caused her to deliver a dead fetus.

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