MEDICAL ACTION on Dr Yang Jianli
Amnesty International
Dec. 23, 2004
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
MEDICAL ACTION
E-mail. uan@aiusa.org
www.amnestyusa.org/urgent/
To: Health professionals
From: Health and Human Rights Team/Asia Program
Date: 23 December 2004
MEDICAL ACTION #MA 21/04
CHINA: Dr Yang Jianli
Amnesty International is concerned about the poor health of Dr Yang
Jianli, 41, who has been in detention since 2002.
Dr Yang, originally a mathematician, is a permanent US resident who was
detained during a visit to China in April 2002, having entering the
country illegally (using a friend's passport). He reportedly suffered a
stroke in late July 2004 in Beijing No. 2 Prison, where he is serving a
five-year sentence.
Dr Yang has reportedly applied to prison authorities for medical parole
-- a measure available to prisoners in China whose illness is
sufficiently serious as to benefit from conditional release to allow for
recovery outside the prison. However, as Dr Yang's case has been marked
by a series of procedural failures and irregularities on the part of the
Chinese judiciary, leading to extended delays in proceedings, there are
serious concerns his application will not be processed promptly, leading
to possible additional risks to his health.
According to members of Dr Yang's immediate family who visited him in
prison on 14 December 2004 -- the first family contact he has been allowed since
his detention in April 2002 -- Dr Yang is experiencing numbness down his
left side, and is himself extremely concerned for his health.
There were concerns for Dr Yang's condition and safety in March 2004
amid reliable reports that he had been beaten in detention, and had
staged a hunger strike to protest the serious legal shortcomings in the
case against him. He suffered bruising and lacerations on his wrists
when forced to wear handcuffs for a week following his hunger strike.
Background
Dr Yang Jianli, a research fellow at Harvard University, is the founder
of the Boston-based organization Foundation for China in the 21st
Century, which seeks to promote democratic reform in China. He was
detained in April 2002, having entered China on a friend's passport to
research labour unrest in China's northeast.
In an opinion adopted on 7 May 2003, the United Nations Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) concluded that Dr Yang's arrest and detention
are arbitrary, and infringed his right to a fair trial. This decision
was based on evidence that the Chinese authorities had detained Dr Yang
for more than two months without an arrest warrant or charge. They also
failed to formally acknowledge Dr Yang's arrest or give him access to a
lawyer throughout this time. The WGAD has asked the Chinese Government
to ''take the necessary steps to remedy the situation''.
Dr Yang Jianli was formally charged with illegal entry and ''espionage''
in July 2003, some 15 months after his initial detention. The espionage
charges reportedly relate to small research grants from a nationalist
Taiwanese political party in the early 1990s, which Dr Yang passed on to
researchers in China. He was tried in secret on 4 August 2003, but his
sentence of five years in prison was not announced by the court until 13
May 2004, over 9 months after his trial ? 164 days after the time-limit
prescribed in Chinese law. Against the advice of his lawyer and family,
Dr Yang refused to appeal against the sentence, claiming to do so would
give undue credibility to the court, laws and procedures used to convict
him.
Recommendations
Please write letters in Chinese if you are able ideally using
professionally-headed paper if you use this in your work:
- introducing yourself in your professional capacity and/or as a member
of Amnesty International concerned with human rights;
- expressing concern at reports that Dr Yang Jianli, currently held in
Beijing No. 2 Prison, has reportedly suffered a stroke, and that his
case requires prompt and effective investigation and management;
- urging the authorities to ensure that he is permitted to receive
whatever specialist care he requires including through transfer to a
specialist medical facility if this is necessary;
- noting that Chinese law permits medical parole in cases of serious
illness and urging the Chinese authorities to grant Dr Yang medical
parole with immediate effect;
- expressing concern that despite the imprisonment of Dr Yang being
considered arbitrary by the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
(WGAD), the Chinese government has so far failed to take steps to remedy
the situation, as recommended by WGAD.
Addresses
Prime Minister of the People's Republic of China:
WEN Jiabao Guojia Zongli
The State Council
9 Xihuangcheng Genbeijie
Beijingshi 100032
People's Republic of China
(No electronic addresses or fax numbers available)
Salutation: Your Excellency
Copies of appeals
Please send copies of your appeals to:
Minister of Justice of the People's Republic of China:
ZHANG Fusen Buzhang
Ministry of Justice
10 Chaoyangmen Nandajie
Chaoyangqu
Beijingshi 100020
People's Republic of China
Fax: 011 86 10 6472 9863
Email: pfmaster@legalinfo.gov.cn (Please forward to His Excellency the
Minister of Justice)
Salutation: Your Excellency
Director of the Beijing Municipal Justice Bureau:
WU Yuhua Juzhang
Beijingshi Sifaju
12 Xinjiekouwaidajie
Xichengqu
Beijingshi 100088
People's Republic of China
Email: webmaster@bjsf.gov.cn (Please forward to Wu Yuhua, Director of
the Beijing Municipal Justice Bureau.)
Salutation: Dear Director
Ambassador Jiechi Yang
Embassy of the People's Republic of China 2300 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington DC
20008
Fax: 1 202 328 2582
If you receive no reply from the government or other recipients within
six weeks of dispatch of your letter, please send a follow-up letter
seeking a response, referring to your previous letter(s). Please check
with the medical team if you are sending appeals after March 2005 and
send copies of any replies you do receive to the Health and Human Rights
Team at the International Secretariat (medical@amnesty.org).
Thank you for any appeals you are able to send.
Amnesty International's mission is to undertake research and action
focused on preventing and ending grave abuses of the rights to physical
and mental integrity, freedom of conscience and expression, and freedom
from discrimination, within the context of its work to promote all human
rights.
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Source: "ChinaEWeekly".
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