|
| Home Search Printer Friendly | Subscribe/Unsubscribe to Commission Email & Newsletter |
|
CHINA:
ENFORCED EXILE OF DISSIDENTS Introduction The
existence of confidential Chinese government blacklists barring overseas-based
pro-democracy and human rights activists from returning to China has long been
suspected by the exiled Chinese dissident community and other concerned
observers. Until now, however, no conclusive documentary evidence confirming the
operation of such a policy has ever come to light. In this report, Human Rights
Watch/Asia and Human Rights in China provide details of a document they obtained
that was issued secretly by China's Ministry of Public Security in May 1994. The
document is titled "A List of Forty-Nine Overseas Members of Reactionary
Organizations Currently Subject to Major Control." All those named on the list
are identified by the security authorities as being subject to government
decrees currently banning them from re-entering China. The overwhelming majority
of those on the re-entry blacklist have consistently advocated the use of
peaceful means for achieving greater democracy and human rights in China. Almost
50 percent of those listed were placed on police "most wanted" notices after
June 4, 1989, all in connection with alleged offenses arising from their
exercise of internationally recognized rights to free speech and association
during the protest movement of that year. None of those on the blacklist is
known to have committed any act, which could be construed as criminal under
international law. Prominent
among those listed are a number of former political prisoners who, in response
to sustained diplomatic pressure from the United States government over the
question of China's Most Favored Nation (MFN) status, were finally granted
passports or exit permits and allowed to leave China for temporary study or
medical purposes in the U.S. Prior to August 1991, when the majority of the
banning orders were issued, China, for the most part, had prevented such people
or their relatives from leaving the country. The banning orders, coming as
public debate in the United States over China's MFN status was increasing,
indicated a policy shift that enabled the Chinese government to achieve two
objectives at once. The authorities allowed dissidents to leave, thereby
appearing to appease human rights critics in the U.S., while at the same time,
they secretly pursued a policy of sending former political prisoners and other
dissidents into involuntary exile abroad. Others
named on the re-entry blacklist had their passports canceled by Beijing or
confiscated by Chinese consular officials while still living overseas, thereby
rendering them effectively stateless. None have ever been formally notified that
they are no longer permitted to return to China; some only learned of the
prohibition when they attempted to go back. The
illegality of the Chinese government's behavior in imposing these bans is amply
demonstrated by a series of United Nations documents. According to Article 13
(paragraph 2) of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a document so
fundamental to the operation of the U.N. that all member states are deemed to
fully endorse it simply by virtue of their participation in the organization,
"Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return
to his country." The principle is reinforced in Article 12 (paragraph 4) of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR): "No one shall be
arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his own country." As noted above,
moreover, China's re-entry blacklist in some cases rendered those concerned
effectively stateless, in cases where the individual's passport was canceled or
confiscated. According to Article 15 (paragraph 2) of the ICCPR, "No one shall
be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his
nationality." And Article 9 of the UN Convention on the Reduction of
Statelessness (1961) stipulates: "A Contracting State may not deprive any person
or group of persons of their nationality on racial, ethnic, religious or
political grounds." The
May 1994 Blacklist Included
on the re-entry blacklist are all of the principal student leaders of the
Tiananmen Square pro-democracy movement who subsequently escaped to the West,
together with numerous leading intellectuals, writers and former government
officials who likewise played leading roles in the movement and later arrived in
the West under similar circumstances. The full document provides details of each
person's name and date of birth; passport type (if any), together with serial
number and date of expirations and whether or not the passports have been
cancelled or confiscated; whether or not the person has been placed on a police
"wanted" list, and if so, the document's serial number; the date on which the
individual was secretly banned from re-entering China, together with the serial
number of the relevant PRC Border Control Notice; whether or not a photo of the
banned person may be found on police files; and the specific action to be taken
by the border authorities if the person is discovered trying to enter China.
The
banned individuals are grouped into three different categories, each of which is
to be handled by border control authorities in a different way.
For
"Category 1 Persons," comprising mainly those subject to still-active police
"most wanted" notices and who fled the country without passports after June
1989, the document specifies: "In accordance with relevant instructions from the
Party Center: if subject attempts to enter China, to be immediately detained,
investigated and dealt with by law." (In other words, such persons are to be
arrested and put on trial.) We
should note that there is nothing illegal in countries alerting their
immigration officials to "wanted" lists of citizens who have arrest warrants
pending against them so they can be picked up at airports if they attempt to
enter the country, or of foreign nationals legitimately barred from entering.
The list of "Category 1" people is in clear violation of international law,
however, since the charges pending against these individuals are for political
offenses that are in conflict with the rights to freedom of statement and
association. For
"Category 2 Persons," comprising mainly those who left China legally but later
became active in pro-democracy groups overseas, together with several former
political prisoners who were subsequently granted passports and allowed to
leave: "In accordance with relevant instructions from the Party Center: if
subject attempts to enter China, to be denied entry and returned [to country of
departure] immediately." For
"Category 3 Persons," comprising similar types of individuals as those listed
under the preceding heading but whose re-entry bans are in most cases more
limited in duration: "In accordance with relevant instructions from the Party
Center: if subject attempts to enter China, to be dealt with according to
circumstances of the situation." (That is, border authorities are to seek
immediate instructions from above on how to handle the case, while presumably
keeping their charges either in isolation or under close surveillance.)
For
at least thirty of the individuals included on the list, the re-entry ban is
described as being "of unlimited duration"; three persons have no specified
time-limit attached to the ban; most of the remainder are subject to bans of
five years' duration; and three others are ambiguously described as being
"currently not subject to control." Certain contradictions and anomalies are
clearly evident in the list: for example, that Fang Lizhi, the leading dissident
intellectual, and also several other prominent activists, all of whom are
described as being subject to "unlimited duration" re-entry bans, are
nonetheless listed as being "Category 3 Persons"-those ostensibly to be dealt
with more leniently than the rest. Similarly, Xu Jiatun, a senior Communist
Party official and former head of the Xinhua News Agency in Hong Kong, who
defected to the U.S. in May 1990, is among those listed as being "currently not
subject to control." (Here, as elsewhere in the document, certain obvious
"political" considerations appear to have intruded into the functioning of
"criminal justice with Chinese characteristics.") A translation of the document
is included below as Appendix I; in order to avoid unnecessary intrusion upon
the privacy of those concerned, passport numbers and certain other personal
details contained in the original are omitted here. In addition, brief details
of the current status and whereabouts of those named on the list appear below as
Appendix II. According to sources familiar with previous re-entry ban lists, hundreds of individuals have been named as not permitted to return. Moreover, a number of individuals not cited in any known lists have been refused entry to China. In May 1992, for example, Gong Xiaoxia, a veteran pro-democracy activist and currently a Harvard University doctoral candidate, was prevented by border guards from entering China to visit her family in Guangzhou, her hometown. Likewise, in November 1994, Bei Dao, an internationally renowned poet who played a leading role in the 1978-81 Democracy Wall movement, was detained by police at Beijing airport upon his first attempt to return home in more than five years, interrogated about his contacts in the overseas pro-democracy and human rights movement and then put on a plane back to the U.S. when he refused to cooperate with the authorities and inform against his friends. In short, the Chinese government seems to be finding it increasingly expedient to export its political dissident problem. Perhaps most explosive of all, however, the list published below shows that the "most wanted" notices issued by Chinese security authorities in respect of the top student, intellectual and worker leaders of the 1989 pro-democracy movement still remain in force, more than five years after their initial promulgation. Chinese government policy in practice thus runs counter to the spirit of its repeated exhortations to all citizens living overseas, particularly students, to return to China, stating that those who had participated in demonstrations and other activities would not be prosecuted. Implications of the
Ban The
case of Liu Qing, a veteran Chinese dissident who spent close to eleven years in
jail on political charges after 1979 and who currently heads the New York-based
Human Rights in China, serves to illustrate the deplorable consequences
typically created by this arbitrary exercise of China's immigration powers.
Released from prison in December 1989, Liu was granted a Chinese passport in
mid-1992 after the U.S. government had made it clear to Beijing that China's
continued enjoyment of MFN status would depend, under existing U.S. law, upon
its observance of the right to free emigration. Having been granted a one-year
U.S. visa in order to allow him to take up a visiting fellowship at Columbia
University, Liu departed China for New York with his wife on July 14, 1992. One
year later, on July 19, 1993, China's Ministry of Public Security secretly
issued Border Control Notice No. 971, banning Liu from re-entering China until
July 19, 1998. Acclaimed at the time as representing an MFN-related "concession"
by Beijing, Liu's departure from China now turns out to have been one of
numerous examples of involuntary exile carried out by the Chinese authorities
since June 1989. The
re-entry ban on Liu Qing effectively obliged U.S. immigration authorities either
to extend his visa, expel him from the country, or else somehow treat him as a
"non-person" (the latter clearly were not viable options.) Moreover, since Liu's
Chinese passport was due to expire in May 1997 but the re-entry ban was set to
last until July 1998, the Chinese government knew that he would be effectively
stranded in the U.S. after the former date, stripped of citizenship in all but
name, and therefore unable to avail himself of the putative opportunity to
return to his country once the ban expired. In the case of several other persons
named on the blacklist who left China bearing valid Chinese passports, the
re-entry ban is specified as being "of unlimited duration." No less than 80
percent of those named on the re-entry blacklist are currently resident in the
U.S. All, however, were in practice dumped on the West's doorstep by Beijing,
which then washed its hands of them and left the question of their immigration
and residency status entirely for the authorities in the receiving countries to
decide. No Basis for Bans in
PRC Law The
prohibitions in international law against such arbitrary denial of the right to
return have already been noted. It should also be stressed that nowhere in
China's domestic legislation can any justification be found for the government's
maintenance of lists-secret or otherwise-barring Chinese citizens from
re-entering the country. The 1980 PRC Nationality Law allows of no such action,
and neither does the 1985 Law on the Administration of Border Exit and Entry by
PRC Citizens. Moreover, Article 22 of the 1986 "Detailed Rules of
Implementation" pertaining to the latter law specifies that a citizen's passport
may only be canceled by the authorities under one of two circumstances: where
the person concerned has used the passport "to enter or reside illegally in a
foreign country and then been repatriated to China"; and where the passport has
been used by the holder within China "for purposes of swindling or deception."
Even the 1981 Internal Regulations on Implementation of the Nationality Law,
issued secretly by the Ministry of Public Security in 1981 and containing
numerous unpublicized qualifications and abridgements of PRC nationality rights,
fails to specify any circumstances under which Chinese citizens may be denied
the right of re-entry. Clearly,
it was inconceivable to the country's legislators that any such fundamental
denial of citizenship rights, even if privately envisaged or practiced by the
authorities, could ever respectably be inserted into Chinese law, whether of the
publicly released or "internal" (neibu) variety. Hence the highly
confidential nature of the blacklist appended below: according to informed
sources in China, the list was issued in May 1994 to border control officials
around the country for a period of several days only; during that time, they
were reportedly expected to memorize the contents, and all copies were then
retrieved by the central authorities. The most recent authoritative statement on
the question of expulsions from China can be found in a book written by a
professor at the China University of Public Security and published officially in
1994. According to the author, a government's entitlement to expel people from
its borders is subject, under international law, to two basic restrictions:
namely, "the principle of non-expulsion of one's own citizens" and "[the
principle of] non-expulsion of political offenders." While
the former principle is (or rather should be) self-explanatory, the author's
invocation of the latter-a reference to the prohibition on the refoulement of valid political-asylum
seekers as laid down in the U.N.'s Convention on the Status of
Refugees-contained an unintended irony. For in the case of certain of those
named on the re-entry blacklist, such as Han Dongfang and L Jinghua (see
Appendix II for details), who attempted to return to China in 1993 and were then
forcibly expelled, the government in effect managed to violate both of the
stated restrictions on its legitimate right of expulsion. A Failure of
"Commercial Diplomacy" The
timing of the government's issuance of the various re-entry ban orders, which
comprise the list, is also of interest. Han Dongfang, for example, was banned by
PRC Border Control Notice No.778 from re-entering the country on July 19, 1993,
less than one month before his U.S. visa was due to expire and shortly before
the publicly-announced approximate date of his intention to return to China
following urgent medical treatment for tuberculosis (which he had contracted in
a Chinese prison) in the United States. And Wang Ruowang and Guo Luoji, both
veteran intellectual opponents of the regime's anti-democratic policies, were
placed by the 1993 PRC Border Control Notices Nos. 246 and 879 under five-year
re-entry bans only days or weeks after the government, under strong MFN-related
pressure from Washington, had finally granted them passports and allowed them to
leave for one-year visiting fellowships in the U.S. Perhaps most significant of
all is the fact that no less than thirty of those named on the blacklist
presented below were placed by Ministry of Public Security secret telegram
No.1041 under "unlimited duration" re-entry bans on August 20, 1991, mid-way
between two crucial dates in China's diplomatic calendar for that year: its
successful acquisition, pace
President George Bush, of another year's re-extension of MFN status, and the
visit to Beijing in November 1991
of the then U.S. Secretary of State, James Baker-the highest-level such visit by
a U.S. government official since the June 4 Beijing Massacre. It was that visit
which opened up a period of vigorous diplomatic re-engagement of China with the
West. Again, the Chinese government managed to turn its release of dissidents
into enforced exile and get international credit in the process.
More
than two years later, in May 1994, with President Clinton's previously-stated
resolve to cancel China's MFN status unless the government improved its human
rights record visibly disintegrating, Beijing felt little need to observe such
subtleties of timing. The revised and updated version of the top re-entry ban
list was issued that very month, even before Clinton's anticlimactic
announcement formally severing the link between MFN and human rights and
inaugurating an alternative strategy of "commercial diplomacy." By then, a
renewed campaign of dissident arrests and detentions, including that of Wei
Jingsheng, had already begun, culminating at year's end in the passing of
sentences of up to twenty years' imprisonment on nine peaceful pro-democracy
campaigners in the Chinese capital just shortly after Secretary of Commerce Ron
Brown had welcomed yet another recycled pledge by Beijing to engage in "human
rights dialogue" with the United States. If it is back to "business as usual"
for trade relations between the West and China, the re-entry blacklist which
follows shows once again that the Chinese security authorities continue to
pursue their own business as usual, without fear of sanctions from the
international community. Human
Rights Watch/Asia (formerly Asia Watch) Human
Rights Watch is a nongovernmental organization established in 1978 to monitor
and promote the observance of internationally recognized human rights in Africa,
the Americas, Asia, the Middle East and among the signatories of the Helsinki
accords. Kenneth Roth is the executive director; Cynthia Brown is the program
director; Holly J. Burkhalter is the advocacy director; Gara LaMarche is the
associate director; Juan E. Mendez is general counsel; and Susan Osnos is the
communications director. Robert L. Bernstein is the chair of the executive
committee and Adrian W. DeWind is vice chair. Its Asia division was established
in 1985 to monitor and promote the observance of internationally recognized
human rights in Asia. Sidney Jones is the executive director; Mike Jendrzejczyk
is the Washington director; Robin Munro is the Hong Kong director; Zunetta
Liddell, Dinah PoKempner, Patricia Gossman and Jeannine Guthrie are research
associates; Mark Girouard is a Luce fellow; Diana Tai-Feng Cheng and Jennifer
Hyman are associates; Mickey Spiegel is a research consultant.
Human
Rights in China Appendix I
LIST B: "Category 2 Persons"
LIST C: "Category 3 Persons"
APPENDIX IIList #1 List #2 List #3 In mid-1991, dissidents began to be asked by the police whether they would not prefer to leave China rather than face further detention or imprisonment. During his several detentions in 1991, journalist Zhang Weiguo was repeatedly asked this question. In his brief months of freedom between September 1993 and April 1994, Wei Jingsheng, China's most prominent dissident, was told that his passport could be issued quickly if he wanted to leave the country. In April-May 1994, China tried to send both of the "black hands" of the 1989 movement, Wang Juntao and Chen Ziming, out of the country. Both were serving thirteen-year prison terms. In late April, Wang was informed that his only chance of freedom was to leave the country, and he was immediately put on a plane to the U.S. Chen was made the same offer, but he refused exile. He was released on May 14, but was immediately sent out of Beijing. He has been under virtual house arrest since his return to the capital. A "stateless person" is defined in Article 1 of the Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons (1954) as "a person who is not considered a national by any State under the operation of its law." If China bars entry to its nationals but does not strip them of their passports, other countries can still recognize their Chinese nationality. If the Chinese government cancels or confiscates passports, or allows passports to expire and denies any opportunity for renewal while the holders are overseas, these actions have the effect of rendering the passport holders stateless. China has not yet signed or ratified either the ICCPR or the Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness. The relevance of the latter document to China, however, was reinforced by the Chinese authorities themselves, who cited it in defense of their expulsion from China in August 1993, and subsequent cancellation of the passport, of independent labor leader Han Dongfang, one of those named on the re-entry blacklist. The authorities' citation of the convention served also to confirm that their expulsion of Han had amounted, in the official view, to stripping him of his nationality. (See "Denying Han Re-entry Conformed to Legal Principles," Wen Hui Bao, August 19, 1993, p.19.) According to Article 8 (paragraph 1) of the convention, "A Contracting State shall not deprive a person of his nationality if such deprivation would render him stateless." Paragraph 3 of the same article provides the following qualification to this rule: "Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1 of this article, a Contracting State may retain the right to deprive a person of his nationality if, at the time of signature, ratification or accession it specifies its retention of such right on one or more of the following grounds, being grounds existent in its national law at that time: (a) That, inconsistently with his duty of loyalty to the Contracting State, the person: (i) Has, in disregard of an express prohibition by the Contracting State rendered or continued to render services to, or received or continued to receive emoluments from, another State, or (ii) Has conducted himself in a manner seriously prejudicial to the vital interests of the State; (b) That the person has taken an oath, or made a formal declaration, of allegiance to another State, or given definite evidence of his determination to repudiate his allegiance to the Contracting State." Significantly, the convention only permits deprivation of nationality on such grounds-which conflict with the basic intent of the convention-in cases where contracting states expressly record a reservation to this effect at the time of accession. Moreover, Article 8 (paragraph 4) places the following absolute restriction on even this limited right of states: "A Contracting State shall not exercise a power of deprivation permitted by paragraphs 2 or 3 of this article except in accordance with law, which shall provide for the person concerned the right to a fair hearing by a court or other independent body." As discussed below, there is no provision in PRC law permitting deprivation of Chinese nationality. In addition, since the government's re-entry blacklist is secret, those concerned have not even been informed of the banning orders-let alone provided with "a fair hearing by a court or other independent body." In any event, as noted above, Article 9 of the convention in all cases forbids deprivation of nationality on "religious or political grounds." This phrase comes from the title of a book by the Lawyers' Committee for Human Rights, Criminal Justice with Chinese Characteristics: China's Criminal Process and Violations of Human Rights (New York, 1993.) The phrase adapts the official description for the system China adopted under Deng Xiaoping, "Socialism with Chinese Characteristics." Full details of sixty-two of the "most wanted" notices issued by the security authorities after June 4, 1989-including names of those targeted, police notice serial numbers, dates of promulgation, and whether or not the wanted notice was publicly or secretly issued-can be found in Two Years After Tiananmen: Political Prisoners in China-Cumulative Data, Asia Watch (now Human Rights Watch/Asia), July 1991, pp.155-160. The re-entry blacklist may also have disturbing implications for the future of civil freedoms in Hong Kong. In the wake of Han Dongfang's expulsion from China to the territory in August 1993, widespread concern was expressed in the Hong Kong media that leading local pro-democracy activists and politicians might face similar expulsions or denials of re-entry after the transfer of sovereignty to China in 1997. By demonstrating that the Han affair was the outcome of central government policy rather than an isolated case of overreaction by local officials, the re-entry blacklist can only serve to heighten such anxieties. The first three documents are widely available in Chinese legal compilations. The Internal Regulations on Implementation of the Nationality Law (Guanyu Shishi Guoji Fa de Neibu Guiding) appear in an internally published volume titled Manual of Law Enforcement, Vol.2 (Zhifa Shouce, Dierji), Qunzhong Chubanshe, 1982, Beijing, pp.10-17. Guoji Xingfa Yu Sifa Xiezhu ("International Criminal Law and Judicial Cooperation"), by Zhao Yongshen, Law Publishing House, Beijing, July 1994, pp.232-233. Perhaps in view of the international furor that accompanied the government's expulsion of labor leader Han Dongfang in August 1993, the book's author made the following attempt to qualify the "non-expulsion of one's own citizens" principle: "Except in those cases clearly stipulated by law concerning persons who commit certain criminal acts posing a serious threat to state security, and in which failure to expel the individual concerned would inevitably create a major threat to the state in question, citizens of one's own country should not, in general, be subjected to expulsion." The author made no attempt to clarify which particular "serious threats to state security" might allegedly justify such expulsions; as noted above, however, there are no "cases clearly stipulated" in Chinese law-even in the draconian 1993 PRC Law on State Security-which could do so. The one hypothetical example raised in support of the claim was the following: "The exception to the rule [of non-expulsion of one's own citizens] is where a given country undergoes revolution, and a new political authority replaces the old one; in such cases, the new political authority may sometimes, in order to consolidate its ruling position, expel from the country the top leaders and other relevant personnel of the overthrown regime." Whatever the merits or otherwise of this argument, it is clearly irrelevant to the cases at issue here. For background information on the nine recently-sentenced pro-democracy and labor organizers, including full text of the prosecution indictment against them and five other defendants, see Economic Reform, Political Repression: Arrests of Dissidents in China Since Mid-1992, Asia Watch, Vol.5 No.4, March 1993; Pressure Off, China Targets Activists, Human Rights Watch/Asia and Human Rights in China, Vol.6 No.7, July 1994; and Harsh Sentences For Chinese Dissidents, HRW/Asia, December 16, 1994. This document was issued confidentially by the Ministry of Public Security to all border control units in China in May 1994. The appearance of the letters "xxx" in the table indicate that the relevant details have been deleted from the original document in this translation in order to safeguard the privacy of those concerned.
|
| |
|
||