HUMAN RIGHTS hrw.orgDefending Human Rights Worldwide
WATCH

Human Rights News FrenchSpanishRussianKoreanArabicHebrewspacer
RSSPortugueseGermanChinesePersianMore Languagesspacer
   

China: Activist’s Jailing Spotlights Olympics’ Negative Effect on Rights

Governments, IOC Must Press for Hu Jia’s Release

(Washington, DC, April 3, 2008) – The jailing of China’s leading human rights activist, Hu Jia, reflects a further hardening of Beijing’s stance towards dissent in the lead up to the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Human Rights Watch said today.

" Hu Jia’s sentence shows that you can’t defend human rights in China without becoming a case yourself. His arrest was unjustified, his trial unfair, and his sentence unwarranted. "
Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch.
  
Contribute

Related Material

Chronology of Hu Jia’s Case
Background Briefing, February 26, 2008

China: Trial of Leading Activist a Sham
Press Release, March 17, 2008

China: Hu Jia’s Fate a Test of Beijing’s Human Rights Stance
Press Release, February 26, 2008

The Real China and the Olympics
Letter, September 10, 2007

China: Letter to Ethics Commission of International Olympic Committee
Letter, March 31, 2008

Hu, 34, was sentenced to three and half year in prison and one additional year of deprivation of political rights for “incitement to subvert state power,” a crime regularly leveled against critics and dissidents. China’s subversion laws effectively criminalize criticisms of the party and the government.  
 
Human Rights Watch has previously said that Hu’s arrest was politically motivated and that his trial had not met minimum standards of fairness and due process. Hu’s lawyers indicated that they had pleaded not guilty and that they intended to appeal the sentence.  
 
“Hu Jia’s sentence shows that you can’t defend human rights in China without becoming a case yourself,” said Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch. “His arrest was unjustified, his trial unfair, and his sentence unwarranted.”  
 
Hu’s wife, Zeng Jinyan, is herself a noted activist. She was selected as one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people globally in May 2007. She was not allowed to testify in court during Hu’s trial. Their daughter Qianci was born in November 2007, a few weeks before Hu’s arrest.  
 
Human Rights Watch strongly urged the international community, and particularly Beijing-based diplomats, to visit Zeng and Qianci, and to insist on an end to their harassment by police.  
 
Human Rights Watch said the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) failure to raise Hu Jia’s case with the Chinese government was at odds with the letter and the spirit of the Olympic Charter. Hein Verbruggen, chairman of the IOC coordination commission, did not mention Hu Jia’s sentence at a Beijing press conference today, but did note that, “[The IOC] can easily prove that bringing the Games here has led to improvements.”  
 
“If the Chinese government had betrayed its commitments to the IOC on infrastructure, logistics, or air quality for the Games, you can bet we would hear about it,” said Richardson. “Why can’t the IOC find its voice when the Chinese government so clearly fails in its human rights commitments?”
 

 
Suggest This Page to a Friend
Your Email (required)
Your Friend's Name
Friend's Email (required)
Email addresses are not stored.
Your Message



Enter Security Code
(case sensitive)




Please read the HRW Privacy Policy

HRW Logo Contribute to Human Rights Watch

Home | About Us | News Releases | Publications | Info by Country | Global Issues | Campaigns | Community | Bookstore | Film Festival | Search | Site Map | Contact Us | Press Contacts | Privacy Policy

© Copyright 2006, Human Rights Watch    350 Fifth Avenue, 34th Floor    New York, NY 10118-3299    USA