Bush Asked to Press China on Jailed ActivistJohn Pomfret Friday, October 17, 2003; Page A20
U.S. officials said China had failed to live up to promises made during bilateral talks in December, including a pledge to invite U.N. human rights investigators to examine allegations that China jails people without giving them due process of law, restricts freedom of religion and allows torture in prisons. U.S. officials said China also promised to allow a U.S. commission on religious freedom to visit. But that trip was postponed after China refused to allow the group to travel to Hong Kong, where churches helped organize mass anti-government protests this summer. Partly because of these pledges, the Bush administration decided not to introduce a resolution criticizing China at the annual session of the U.N. Human Rights Commission in April. The United States had introduced a resolution every year for most of the past decade. Yang was arrested while secretly contacting striking workers in China. In violation of Chinese law, Yang was held incommunicado for months, prompting his older brother, Yang Jianjun, to journey frequently to Beijing to conduct futile searches for him. Yang's attorney in the United States, Jared Genser, and Yang's wife, Christina Fu, said there are indications that Yang was tortured while in detention. For the first seven months in custody, they said, Yang was held in solitary confinement in a 8-foot-by-8-foot cell, was not allowed to leave his cell for exercise and was not given anything to read. "By any measure this is cruel and unusual punishment," said Genser, who runs Freedom Now, a U.S.-based group that helps prisoners of conscience. "This is torture." -------------------------- |