Rights Advocacy Groups Call for Investigation Into CCP’s Repression of Lawyers
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International advocacy groups are calling for an independent investigation into the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) clampdown on independent legal advocacy that the regime unleashed a decade ago.
As a result, the number of lawyers willing to challenge Beijing over its human rights abuses was significantly reduced, according to the statement.
Although most of the advocates have since been released, some continue to endure relentless surveillance and harassment, forcing them to move out of their homes or even quit their professions.
As the 10th anniversary of the incident—often referred to as the “709 crackdown”—approaches, the coalition of human rights groups urged concerned governments to take “urgent action.”
“No Chinese authorities have been held accountable for grave rights abuses against lawyers and human rights defenders, emboldening the government to commit increasingly widespread and systematic human rights violations,” read the statement..
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Resistance

Chinese human rights lawyer Xie Yang in a file photo. Courtesy of Xie Yang
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Despite the ongoing repression, some of these legal activists continue to speak out.
That includes Xie Yang, whose plight captured global attention in January 2017, when his lawyer publicized the transcripts of their meetings, shedding light on the days and nights of abuses Xie suffered in custody.
“They even warned, ‘Your wife and children better watch out when driving. Traffic incidents could happen at any time,’” Xie recounted the interrogator’s words.
Despite being disbarred and living under tight police surveillance for years, Xie maintained optimism, continuing to do similar work that doesn’t require a license.
Xie’s wife, Chen Guiqiu, said he was deprived of sunlight and communication and was tortured by detention guards.
“Despite all kinds of abuses, Xie Yang doesn’t submit,” Chen, who fled to the United States with their daughters in 2017, told The Epoch Times recently.
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A panel consisting of four wives speaking on behalf of their husbands, detained in China for advocating for human rights, on May 18, in a hearing room on Capitol Hill. (L-R) Ms. Lee Chin-yu, wife of Lee Min-che; translator; Ms. Wang Yanfeng, wife of Tang Jingling; translator; Ms. Jin Bianling, wife of Jiang Tianyong; Bob Fu, president of China Aid; Ms. Chen Guiqiu, wife of Xie Yang. Kitty Wang/NTD
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Maya Wang, associate China director at Human Rights Watch, said these right lawyers and their families have suffered tremendously for seeking to provide justice to people in China.
The group expects the immediate future of China’s rights defense lawyers to be grim but it cited an unnamed Chinese lawyer who said that there are still many lawyers willing to defend the rights of persecuted spiritual and religious groups, although they have toned down their approach.
“I think there are some lawyers who are forced to turn to a semi-underground approach, such as lawyers who defend Falun Gong and [underground] Christians. But no matter what, they still appear in court,” the lawyer was quoted as saying in the statement.
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