|
| Home Search Printer Friendly | Subscribe/Unsubscribe to Commission Email & Newsletter |
|
*ROOM CHANGE* Representative Christopher Smith, Chairman and Senator Sherrod Brown, Cochairmanof the Congressional-Executive Commission on Chinaannounce an emergency hearing on Recent Developments and History of the Chen Guangcheng CaseThursday, May 3, 2012
2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. 2172 Rayburn House Office Building The recent escape of self-trained legal advocate Chen Guangcheng from illegal house arrest has attracted international attention and concern. On April 22, Chen escaped from his home in Dongshigu village, Linyi city, Shandong province, where he and his family had been detained without charge for 19 months. After escaping from home confinement, Chen met the U.S. Ambassador and Administration officials at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing and received medical treatment. Recent reports suggest that U.S. and Chinese officials have negotiated an agreement that would permit Chen and his family to remain in China with assurances from the Chinese government that they can live a normal life. The Commission hearing will address ongoing developments in the Chen Guangcheng case and reported prospects for himself, his family and his supporters. Witnesses will discuss details of the previous detention of Chen and his family under an illegal form of "house arrest," as well as his escape to seek safety at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. In addition, witnesses will also address Chen's legal advocacy work. Chen, a self-trained legal advocate who has represented farmers, the disabled and other groups, is perhaps best known for the attention he drew to population planning abuses, particularly forced abortions and forced sterilizations, in Linyi, in 2005. In deeply flawed legal proceedings, authorities sentenced him in 2006 to four years and three months in prison. Following his release in September 2010, Chen, his wife Yuan Weijing, and their six-year-old daughter were subjected to beatings, home confinement and constant surveillance. Throughout the detention, Chinese authorities undertook forceful measures to prevent and harass journalists and supporters who attempted to visit the family. Witnesses: Pastor Bob Fu, Founder and President, ChinaAid Association Sophie Richardson, Ph.D., China Director, Human Rights Watch T. Kumar Director, International Advocacy for Amnesty International USA Wang Xuezhen, human rights advocate Cao Yaxue, Human Rights Advocate, Blogger Michael Horowitz, Senior Fellow, Hudson Institute Reggie Littlejohn, President, Women's Rights Without Frontiers Statement submitted for the Record by Chai Ling, President and Founder, All Girls Allowed A complete transcript of this CECC Hearing is available in PDF and TEXT.
Click here to download a copy of the Commission's full 2011 Annual Report. The Congressional-Executive Commission on China, established by the U.S.-China Relations Act of 2000 as China prepared to enter the World Trade Organization, is mandated by law to monitor human rights, including worker rights, and the development of the rule of law in China. The Commission by mandate also maintains a database of information on political prisoners in China-individuals who have been imprisoned by the Chinese government for exercising their civil and political rights under China's Constitution and laws or under China's international human rights obligations. All of the Commission's reporting and its Political Prisoner Database are available to the public online via the Commission's Web site, http://www.cecc.gov.
|
| |
|
||