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Preface
It has been a long-cherished ideal of mankind to
enjoy human rights in the full sense of the term. Since this great term --
human rights -- was coined centuries ago, people of all nations have
achieved great results in their unremitting struggle for human rights.
However, on a global scale, modern society has fallen far short of the
lofty goal of securing the full range of human rights for people the world
over. And this is why numerous people with lofty ideals are still working
determinedly for this cause.
Under long years of oppression by the "three big
mountains" -- imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat-capitalism -- people
in old China did not have any human rights to speak of. Suffering bitterly
from this, the Chinese people fought for more than a century, defying
death and personal sacrifices and advancing wave upon wave, in an arduous
struggle to overthrow the "three big mountains" and gain their human
rights. The situation in respect to human rights in China took a basic
turn for the better after the founding of the People's Republic of China.
Greatly treasuring this hard-won achievement, the Chinese government and
people have spared no effort to safeguard human rights and steadily
improve their human rights situation, and have achieved remarkable
results. This has won full confirmation and fair appraisal from all people
who have a real understanding of Chinese conditions and who are not
prejudiced.
The issue of human rights has become one of great
significance and common concern in the world community. The series of
declarations and conventions adopted by the United Nations have won the
support and respect of many countries. The Chinese government has also
highly appraised the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, considering it
the first international human rights document that has laid the foundation
for the practice of human rights in the world arena. However, the
evolution of the situation in regard to human rights is circumscribed by
the historical, social, economic and cultural conditions of various
nations, and involves a process of historical development. Owing to
tremendous differences in historical background, social system, cultural
tradition and economic development, countries differ in their
understanding and practice of human rights. From their different
situations, they have taken different attitudes towards the relevant UN
conventions. Despite its international aspect, the issue of human rights
falls by and large within the sovereignty of each country. Therefore, a
country's human rights situation should not be judged in total disregard
of its history and national conditions, nor can it be evaluated according
to a preconceived model or the conditions of another country or region.
Such is the practical attitude, the attitude of seeking truth from
facts.
From their own historical conditions, the realities
of their own country and their long practical experience, the Chinese
people have derived their own viewpoints on the human rights issue and
formulated relevant laws and policies. It is stipulated in the
Constitution of the People's Republic of China that all power in the
People's Republic of China belongs to the people. Chinese human rights
have three salient characteristics. First, extensiveness. It is not a
minority of the people or part of a class or social stratum but the entire
Chinese citizenry who constitutes the subject enjoying human rights. The
human rights enjoyed by the Chinese citizenry encompass an extensive
scope, including not only survival, personal and political rights, but
also economic, cultural and social rights. The state pays full attention
to safeguarding both individual and collectivrights. Second, equality.
China has adopted the socialist system after abolishing the system of
exploitation and eliminating the exploiting classes. The Chinese citizenry
enjoys all civic rights equally irrespective of the money and property
status as well as of nationality, race, sex, occupation, family
background, religion, level of education and duration of residence. Third,
authenticity. The state provides guarantees in terms of system, laws and
material means for the realization of human rights. The various civic
rights prescribed in the Constitution and other state laws are in accord
with what people enjoy in real life. China's human rights legislation and
policies are endorsed and supported by the people of all nationalities and
social strata and by all the political parties, social organizations and
all walks of life.
As a developing country, China has suffered from
setbacks while safeguarding and developing human rights. Although much has
been achieved in this regard, there is still much room for improvement. It
remains a long-term historical task for the Chinese people and government
to continue to promote human rights and strive for the noble goal of full
implementation of human rights as required by China's socialism.
In order to help the international community
understand the human rights situation as it is in China, we present the
following brief account of China's basic position on and practice of human
rights.
I. The Right to
Subsistence--The Foremost Human Right The Chinese People Long Fight for
It is a simple truth that, for any country or
nation, the right to subsistence is the most important of all human
rights, without which the other rights are out of the question. The
Universal Declaration of Human Rights affirms that everyone has the right
to life, liberty and the security of person. In old China, aggression by
imperialism and oppression by feudalism and bureaucrat-capitalism deprived
the people of all guarantee for their lives, and an uncountable number of
them perished in war and famine. To solve their human rights problems, the
first thing for the Chinese people to do is, for historical reasons, to
secure the right to subsistence.
Without national independence, there would be no
guarantee for the people's lives. When imperialist aggression became the
major threat to their lives, the Chinese people had to win national
independence before they could gain the right to subsistence. After the
Opium War of 1840, China, hitherto a big feudal kingdom, was gradually
turned into a semi-colonial, semi-feudal country. During the 110 years
from 1840 to 1949, the British, French, Japanese, US and Russian
imperialist powers waged hundreds of wars on varying scales against China,
causing immeasurable losses to the lives and property of the Chinese
people.
-- The imperialists massacred Chinese people in
untold numbers during their aggressive wars. In 1900, the troops of the
Eight Allied Powers -- Germany, Japan, Britain, Russia, France, the United
States, Italy and Austria -- killed, burned and looted, razing Tanggu, a
town of 50,000 residents, to utter ruins, reducing Tianjin's population
from one million to 100,000, killing countless people when they entered
Beijing, where more than 1,700 were slaughtered at Zhuangwangfu alone.
During Japan's full-scale invasion of China which began in 1937, more than
21 million people were killed or wounded and 10 million people mutilated
to death. In the six weeks beginning from December 13, 1937, the Japanese
invaders killed 300,000 people in Nanjing.
-- The imperialists sold, maltreated and caused the
death of numerous Chinese laborers, plunging countless people in old China
into an abyss of misery. According to incomplete statistics, more than 12
million indentured Chinese laborers were sold to various parts of the
world from the mid-19th century through the 1920s. Coaxed and abducted,
these laborers were thrown into lockups, known as "pigsties," where they
were branded with the names of their would-be destinations. During the
1852-58 period, 40,000 people were put in such "pigsties" in Shantou
alone, and more than 8,000 of them were done to death there. Equally
horrifying was the death toll of ill-treated laborers in factories and
mines run by imperialists across China. During the Japanese occupation, no
less than 2 million laborers perished from maltreatment and exhaustion in
Northeast China. Once the laborers died, their remains were thrown into
mountain gullies or pits dug into bare hillsides. So far more than 80 such
massive pits have been found, with over 700,000 skeletons of the victims
in them.
-- Under the imperialists' colonial rule, the
Chinese people had their fill of humiliation and there was no personal
dignity to speak of. The foreign aggressors enjoyed "extraterritoriality"
in those days. On December 24, 1946 Peking University student Shen Chong
was raped by William Pierson, an American GI, but, to the great
indignation of the Chinese people, the criminal, handled unilaterally by
the American side, was acquitted and released. Imperialist powers
exercised administrative, legislative, judicial, police and financial
powers in the "concessions" they had set up in China, turning them into
"states within a state" that were thoroughly independent of the Chinese
administrative and legal systems. In 1885, foreign aggressors put up a
signboard at the entrance of a park in the French concession; in a blatant
insult to the Chinese people, it read, "Chinese and dogs not
admitted."
-- Forcing more than 1,100 unequal treaties on
China, the imperialists plundered Chinese wealth on a large scale.
Statistics show that, by way of these unequal treaties, the foreign
aggressors made away with more than 100 billion taels of silver as war
indemnities and other payments in the past century. Through the
Sino-British Treaty of Nanking, the Sino-Japanese Treaty of Shimonoseki,
the International Protocol of 1901 and five other such treaties alone,
1,953 million taels of silver in indemnity were extorted, 16 times the
1901 revenue of the Qing government. The Treaty of Shimonoseki alone
earned Japan 230 million taels of silver in extortion money, about four
and a half times its annual national revenue. The losses resulting from
the destruction and looting by the invaders in wars against China were
even more incalculable. During Japan's full-scale war of aggression
against China (1937-45), 930 Chinese cities were occupied, causing US$62
billion in direct losses and US$500 billion in indirect losses. With their
state sovereignty impaired and their social wealth plundered or destroyed,
the Chinese people were deprived of the basic conditions for
survival.
In face of the crumbling state sovereignty and the
calamities wrought upon their lives, for over a century the Chinese people
fought the foreign aggressors in an indomitable struggle for national
salvation and independence. The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom Movement, the
Boxers Movement and the Revolution of 1911 which overthrew the Qing
Dynasty broke out during this period. These revolutionary movements dealt
heavy blows to imperialist influences in China, but they failed to deliver
the nation from semi-colonialism. A fundamental change took place only
after the Chinese people, under the leadership of the Chinese Communist
Party, overthrew the Kuomintang reactionary rule and founded the People's
Republic of China. After its birth in 1921, the Communist Party of China
set the clear-cut goal in its political program to "overthrow the
oppression by international imperialism and achieve the complete
independence of the Chinese nation" and to "overthrow the warlords and
unite China into a real democratic republic"; it led the people in an
arduous struggle culminating in victory in the national democratic
revolution.
The founding of the People's Republic of China
eradicated the forces of imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat-capitalism
in the Chinese mainland, put an end to the nation's history of
dismemberment, oppression and humiliation at the hands of alien powers for
well over a century and to long years of turbulence characterized by
incessant war and social disunity, and realized the people's cherished
dream of national independence and unification. The Chinese nation, which
makes up one-fourth of the world's population, is no longer one that the
aggressors could kill and insult at will. The Chinese people have stood up
as the masters of their own country; for the first time they have won real
human dignity and the respect of the whole world. The Chinese people have
won the basic guarantee for their life and security.
National independence has protected the Chinese
people from being trodden under the heels of foreign invaders. However,
the problem of the people's right to subsistence can be truly solved only
when their basic means of livelihood are guaranteed.
To eat their fill and dress warmly were the
fundamental demand of the Chinese people who had long suffered cold and
hunger. Far from meeting this demand, successive regimes in old China
brought even more disasters to the people. In those days, landlords and
rich peasants who accounted for 10 percent of the rural population held 70
percent of the land, while the poor peasants and farm laborers who
accounted for 70 percent of the rural population owned only 10 percent of
the land. The bureaucrat-comprador bourgeoisie who accounted for only a
small fraction of the population monopolized 80 percent of the industrial
capital and controlled the economic lifelines of the country. The Chinese
people were repeatedly exploited by land rent, taxes, usury and industrial
and commercial capital. The exploitation and poverty they suffered were of
a degree rarely seen in other parts of the world. According to 1932
statistics, the Chinese peasants were subjected to 1,656 kinds of
exorbitant taxes and levies, which took away 60-90 percent of their
harvests. The people's miseries were exacerbated and their lives made all
the harsher by the reactionary governments who, politically corrupt and
impotent, surrendered China's sovereign rights under humiliating terms and
served as tools of foreign imperialist rule, and by the separatist regime
of warlords who were embroiled in endless wars. It was estimated that 80
percent of the populace in old China suffered to varying degrees of
starvation and tens of thousands -- hundreds of thousands in some cases --
died of it every year. A major natural disaster invariably left the land
strewn with corpses of hunger victims. More than 3.7 million lives were
lost when floods hit east China in 1931. In 1943, a crop failure in Henan
Province took the lives of 3 million people and left 15 million subsisting
on grass and bark and struggling on the verge of death. After the victory
of the War of Resistance Against Japan, the reactionary Kuomintang
government launched a civil war, fed on the flesh and blood of the people
and caused total economic collapse. In 1946, 10 million people died of
hunger countrywide. In 1947, 100 million, or 22 percent of the national
population then, were under the constant threat of hunger.
Ever since the founding of the People's Republic of
China in 1949, the Communist Party of China and the Chinese government
have always placed the task of helping the people get enough to wear and
eat on the top of the agenda. For the first three years of the People's
Republic, the Chinese people, led by their government, concentrated their
efforts on healing the wounds of war and quickly restored the national
economy to the record level in history. On this basis, China lost no time
to complete the socialist transformation of agriculture, handicraft
industry and capitalist industry and commerce, thus uprooting the system
of exploitation, instituting the system of socialism and, for the first
time in history, turning the people into masters of the means of
production and beneficiaries of social wealth. This fired the people with
soaring enthusiasm for building a new China and a new life, emancipated
the social productive forces and set the economy on the track of
unprecedented growth. Since 1979, China has switched the focus of its work
to economic construction, begun reform and opening to the outside world,
and set the goal of building socialism with Chinese characteristics. This
has further expanded the social productive forces and enabled the nation
to basically solve the problem of feeding and clothing its 1.1 billion
people.
Tilling 7 percent of the world's total cultivated
land -- averaging only 1.3 mu (one mu equals one-fifteenth of one hectare)
per capita as against 12.16 mu in the United States and the world's
average of 4.52 mu -- China has nevertheless succeeded in feeding a
population that makes up 22 percent of the world's total. Contrary to some
Western politicians' prediction that no Chinese government could solve the
problem of feeding its people, socialist China has done it by its own
efforts. The past 40-odd years have witnessed a marked increase in the
average annual per-capita consumption of major consumer goods despite a
yearly average population increase of 14 million. A survey shows that the
daily caloric intake of food per resident in China was 2,270 in 1952,
2,311 in 1978 and 2,630 in 1990, approaching the world's average.
The life-span of the Chinese people has lengthened
and their health improved considerably. According to statistics, the
population's average life expectancy increased from 35 years before
liberation to 70 years in 1988, higher than the average level in the
world's medium-income countries, while the death rate dropped from 33 per
thousand before liberation to 6.67 per thousand in 1990, which was one of
the lowest death rates in the world. China's 1987 infant mortality of 31
per thousand approached the level of high-income countries. The health of
the Chinese people, especially the physical development of youngsters, has
greatly improved as compared with the situation in old China. An average
15-year-old boy in 1979 was 1.8 centimeters taller and 2.1 kilograms
heavier than his counterparts living during the 1937-41 period; and an
average girl of the same age in 1979 was 1.3 centimeters taller and 1
kilogram heavier. Since 1979, the health of the Chinese people has
improved further. The label on old China, "sick man of East Asia," has
long been consigned to the dustbin of history.
The problem of food and clothing having been
basically solved, the people have been guaranteed with the basic right to
subsistence. This is a historical achievement made by the Chinese people
and government in seeking and protecting human rights.
However, to protect the people's right to
subsistence and improve their living conditions remains an issue of
paramount importance in China today. China has gained independence, but it
is still a developing country with limited national strength. The
preservation of national independence and state sovereignty and the
freedom from imperialist subjugation are, therefore, the very fundamental
conditions for the survival and development of the Chinese people.
Although China has basically solved the problem of food and clothing, its
economy is still at a fairly low level, its standard of living falls
considerably short of that in developed countries, and the pressure of a
huge population and relative per-capita paucity of resources will continue
to restrict the socio-economic development and the improvement of the
people's lives. The people's right to subsistence will still be threatened
in the event of a social turmoil or other disasters. Therefore it is the
fundamental wish and demand of the Chinese people and a long-term, urgent
task of the Chinese government to maintain national stability, concentrate
their effort on developing the productive forces along the line which has
proven to be successful, persist in reform and opening to the outside
world, strive to rejuvenate the national economy and boost the national
strength, and, on the basis of having solved the problem of food and
clothing, secure a well-off livelihood for the people throughout the
country so that their right to subsistence will no longer be
threatened.
II. The
Chinese People Have Gained Extensive Political Rights
While struggling for the right to subsistence, the
Chinese people have waged a heroic struggle for democratic rights.
The people did not have any democratic rights to
speak of in semi-feudal, semi-colonial China. The Revolution of 1911 led
by Dr. Sun Yat-sen, the great forerunner of bourgeois-democratic
revolution, overthrew the feudal Qing Dynasty and gave rise to the
Republic of China. He hoped to establish a Western-style democratic system
in China, but the fruits of the revolution were snatched by Yuan Shikai, a
feudal warlord. Then parliament became a mere instrument for warlords in
power struggle, and there occurred the scandal of the "parliament of pigs"
and bribery in electing a president. His dream unfulfilled, Dr. Sun died
in sorrow and indignation, which found expression in his famous
admonition: "The revolution has not yet succeeded." Many Chinese had
cherished illusions about the US-supported Chiang Kai-shek government.
However, Chiang turned out to be just another warlord under whose fascist
rule millions of democracy-seeking people perished in bloody massacres. He
adopted a non-resistance policy towards the Japanese invasion while
stepping up the civil war, ignoring opposition from the Chinese
Communists, patriots and democrats from all walks of life and the broad
masses of the people. He launched the all-out civil war after the victory
of the War of Resistance Against Japan, again violating the ardent wish
for peace, democracy and reconstruction of the Communist Party, the
democratic parties and the people throughout China. Driven beyond the
limits of forbearance, the people rose up in arms and in the end toppled
Chiang's reactionary rule.
Since the very day of its founding, the Communist
Party of China has been holding high the banner of democracy and human
rights. It encouraged and assisted Dr. Sun in reorganizing the Kuomintang,
effected the cooperation between the Kuomintang and the Communist Party
and launched the Northern Expedition against the reactionary rule of the
warlords. After Chiang Kai-shek betrayed the democratic revolution, the
Party united all patriots and democrats and led the people in a struggle
against civil war, hunger, autocracy and persecution. In the liberated
areas it established democratic governments, drew up laws which guaranteed
the people's democratic rights and resolutely implemented its own
democratic program. The democratic system in the liberated areas attracted
numerous patriotic and democratic fighters and became the hope of the
entire people. Under the Party's leadership, the Chinese people overthrew
the Kuomintang reactionaries' dictatorial rule and founded the democratic
and free People's Republic of China.
The Chinese people gained real democratic rights
after the founding of New China. In explicit terms the Constitution
stipulates that all power in the People's Republic of China belongs to the
people. That the people are masters of their own country is the essence of
China's democratic politics. By stating that the People's Republic of
China is a socialist state of the people's democratic dictatorship led by
the working class and based on the alliance of workers and peasants, the
Constitution has established the status of the workers, peasants and other
working people as masters of the country and thus invested the laboring
people who were at the bottom rung of the social ladder in old China with
lawful democratic rights. Equality of men and women, as provided by the
Constitution, has enabled women, who account for half of the Chinese
population, to gain the same rights as men in politics, economy, culture,
society and family life. The stipulation that all nationalities in China
are equal has ensured that all the nation's minority nationalities enjoy
equal democratic rights with the Han people.
To guarantee that the people are the real masters
of the country with the right to run the country's economic and social
affairs, China has adopted, in light of its actual conditions, the
people's congresses as the state's basic political system. Deputies to the
people's congresses at all levels are chosen through democratic elections.
The Constitution stipulates that all citizens of the People's Republic of
China who have reached the age of 18 have the right to vote and stand for
election, regardless of nationality, race, sex, occupation, family
background, religious belief, education, property status, or length of
residence, with the exception of persons deprived of their political
rights by law. Taking into consideration its vast territory, large
population, inconvenient transportation and relatively low economic and
cultural development, China has adopted an election system appropriate to
its actual conditions. That is, deputies to people's congresses at the
county level or below are elected directly, while those to people's
congresses above the county level are elected indirectly. This election
system makes it possible for the people to choose deputies whom they know
and trust. The election system has been improved in recent years on the
basis of past experience. For instance, more candidates are posted than
the number of deputies to be elected, instead of an equal number as
before. The right to vote has been widely exercised by the Chinese people.
According to statistics from the 1990 county- and township-level direct
elections, 99.97 percent of the citizens at 18 years of age or above
enjoyed the right to vote. Generally speaking, upwards of 90 percent of
the voters participate in the elections held in the various provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities. The most striking characteristic of
China's electoral system is that elections are not manipulated by money
and that deputies are not elected on the basis of boasting and empty
promises but according to their actual contributions to the country and
society, their attitude in serving the people and their close relations
with the people. It is clear from the election results that the elected
are broadly representative, that is, representative of people of all
social strata and all trades and professions. Of the 2,970 deputies to the
Seventh National People's Congress, 684, or 23 percent, are workers and
farmers; 697, or 23.4 percent, are intellectuals; 733, or 24.7 percent,
are government functionaries; 540, or 18.2 percent, are democratic party
members and patriots with no party affiliations; 267, or 9 percent, are
from the People's Liberation Army; and 49, or 1.6 percent, are returned
overseas Chinese.
The National People's Congress is the supreme organ
of state power. It has legislative power. It elects or removes president
and vice-president of the People's Republic of China, chairman of the
Central Military Commission, president of the Supreme People's Court and
procurator-general of the Supreme People's Procuratorate; and appoints or
removes premier, vice-premiers, state councilors, ministers, ministers in
charge of commissions, auditor-general and secretary-general. All
administrative, judicial and procuratorial organs of the state are created
by the National People's Congress, responsible to it and supervised by it.
Following the principle of democratic centralism, the National People's
Congress adopts major policy decisions after full airing of opinions; and
once adopted, these policies are carried out in a concerted effort. In
this way, the People's Congress can not only represent the people's common
will but also become instrumental for the people in running state,
economic and social affairs. Coming from among the people, the people's
deputies are responsible to the people and supervised by the people; their
close contact with the masses and wide knowledge of the actual situation
enable them to fully reflect the people's wishes, formulate laws suited to
reality and supervise the work of government organs.
The Chinese Communist Party is the ruling party of
socialist China and the representative of the interests of the people
throughout the country. Its leadership position has been the result of the
historical choice made by the Chinese people during their protracted and
arduous struggle for independence and emancipation. The leadership of the
Party is mainly an ideological and political leadership. The Party derives
its ideas and policies from the people's concentrated will and then turns
them into state laws and decisions which are passed by the National
People's Congress through the state's legal procedures. The Party does not
take the place of the government in the state's leadership system. The
Party conducts its activities within the framework of the Constitution and
the law and has no right to transcend the Constitution and the law. All
Party members, like all citizens in the country, are equal before the
law.
The system of multi-party cooperation and political
consultation under the leadership of the Communist Party is the basic
political system that gives expression to people's democracy. It
guarantees that all social strata, people's organizations and patriots
from various quarters can express their opinions and play a role in the
country's political and social life. There are in China eight democratic
parties apart from the Communist Party; they are the Revolutionary
Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang, the China Democratic League, the
China Democratic National Construction Association, the China Association
for Promoting Democracy, the Chinese Peasants and Workers Democratic
Party, the China Zhi Gong Dang (Party for Public Interest), the Jiu San
Society (September 3rd Society) and the Taiwan Democratic Self-Government
League. Cooperation between the Communist Party and these democratic
parties took shape during the democratic revolution before 1949, the year
New China was founded. The leading role of the Communist Party in the
cooperation is recognized by the democratic parties as it has been evolved
in long years of common struggle. These democratic parties shared with the
Communist Party the same basic political ideas whether in the struggle for
overthrowing the "three big mountains" or during the period of building
New China. Enjoying political freedom and organizational independence, all
these democratic parties have developed greatly. They are neither parties
out of office nor opposition parties, but parties participating in state
affairs. As China's ruling party, the Communist Party repeatedly asks
these democratic parties for their opinions on every major state affair
and consult with them for solutions. Relations between the Communist Party
and the democratic parties follow the guideline of "long-term coexistence
and mutual supervision, treating each other with full sincerity and
sharing weal or woe." Full play has been given to the role of the
democratic parties in participating in and discussing state affairs,
democratic supervision and uniting all the people. Many members of the
democratic parties have assumed leading posts in organs of state power,
government departments and judicial organs. Of the 19 vice-chairmen
elected by the Seventh National People's Congress at its First Session,
seven are members of democratic parties. Nearly 1,200 members of the
democratic parties and personages with no party affiliations are holding
leading posts in governments above the county level.
The Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference (CPPCC) consists of representatives of all the political
parties and people's organizations and from among patriots and democrats
who support socialism and the reunification of the motherland. New China's
first Central People's Government was elected by the First Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference. After the establishment of the
National People's Congress as the supreme organ of state power, the CPPCC
became an organization of the patriotic united front. It provides a forum
for discussions on major state policies and principles and big issues in
social life and plays a supervisory role through suggestions and
criticisms. The CPPCC usually convenes simultaneously with the people's
congress at the corresponding level. The system of political consultation
has played an important role in promoting democracy.
China attaches great importance to the promotion of
democracy at the grass-roots level so as to guarantee that citizens can
directly exercise their political rights. Neighborhood Committees are the
grass-roots democratic organizations in urban areas, and their
counterparts in rural areas are Village Committees. As self-governing
organizations established by the people, these committees deal with
matters concerning public welfare and residents' well-being while
assisting local governments in mediating family and neighborhood disputes,
conducting ideological education and maintaining public order. Most
Chinese enterprises have adopted the system of workers' congress, which is
the basic form of democratic management through which workers participate
in the decision-making and management of the enterprises and supervise the
enterprise leaders. Over the last few years, virtually all directors and
managers of large and medium-sized state enterprises have been examined
and their work appraised with the participation and supervision of the
workers' congresses.
The Constitution provides for a wide range of
political rights to citizens. In addition to the right to vote and to be
elected mentioned above, citizens also enjoy freedoms of speech, the
press, assembly, association, procession and demonstration. There is no
news censorship in China. Statistics show that of all the newspapers and
magazines in China, only one-fifth are run by Party and state
organizations, and the others belong to various democratic parties, social
organizations, academic associations and people's organizations. By law
citizens have the right to intellectual property, such as copy-right, and
the right to publication, patent, trademark, discovery, invention and
scientific and technological achievement. It is a matter of personal
freedom for a citizen to decide what book he will write, what point of
view he will use in writing it and which publishing house he will choose
to have his book published. Statistics show that an overwhelming majority
of the 80,224 titles of books printed in 1990 with a total impression of
5.64 billion copies were signed by individual authors. As to the freedom
of association, the 1990 statistics showed that there were 2,000
associations, including societies, research institutes, foundations,
federations and clubs. All these associations operate freely within the
framework of the Constitution and the law.
The Constitution also rules that citizens have the
right to criticize and make suggestions regarding any state organ or
functionary and the right to make to relevant state organs complaints or
charges against, or exposures of, any state organ or functionary for
violation of the law or dereliction of duty.
The Constitution provides that freedom of the
person of citizens of the People's Republic of China is inviolable.
Unlawful detention or deprivation of citizens' freedom of the person by
other means and unlawful search of the person of citizens are prohibited;
the personal dignity of citizens is inviolable, and insult, libel, false
accusation or false incrimination directed against citizens by any means
is prohibited; the residences of citizens are inviolable and unlawful
search of, or intrusion into, a citizen's residence is prohibited; freedom
and privacy of correspondence are protected by law, and those who hide,
discard, damage or illegally open other people's letters, once discovered,
shall be seriously dealt with, and grave cases shall be prosecuted.
The Constitution provides that China implements the
system of people's democratic dictatorship, which combines democracy among
the people and dictatorship against the people's enemies. To guarantee the
people's democratic rights and other lawful rights and interests, China
pays great attention to improving its legal system. It has promulgated and
put into effect a series of major laws, including the Constitution, the
Criminal Law, the Law of Criminal Procedure, the General Provisions of the
Civil Law, the Law of Civil Procedure and the Law of Administrative
Procedure. During the 1979-1990 period, the National People's Congress and
its Standing Committees made 99 laws and 21 decisions on legislative
amendments and passed 52 resolutions and decisions on legal matters; the
State Council formulated more than 700 administrative laws and
regulations; and the people's congresses and their standing committees of
various provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities and provincial
capital cities formulated numerous local laws and administrative rules and
regulations, of which more than 1,000 were about human rights.
The unity between rights and duties is a basic
principle of China's legal system. The Constitution stipulates that every
citizen is entitled to the rights prescribed by the Constitution and the
law and at the same time must perform the duties prescribed by the
Constitution and the law, and that in exercising their freedoms and
rights, citizens may not infringe upon the interests of the state, of
society or of the collective, or upon the lawful freedoms and rights of
other citizens. Legally citizens are the subjects of both rights and
duties. Everyone is equal before the rights and duties prescribed by the
Constitution and the law. No organization or individual may enjoy the
privilege of being above the Constitution and the law.
Practice of the past 40-odd years since liberation
proves that the socialist democracy and legal system adopted by China are
suited to the country's actual conditions and that the people is satisfied
with it. It goes without saying that the building of this democratic
politics and this legal system is no smooth sailing. There were times when
democracy and law were seriously violated, such as happened during the
"cultural revolution" (1966-76). Nevertheless, the Communist Party, backed
by the people, corrected these mistakes and set the nation's socialist
democracy and legal system back to the course of steady development.
Upholding the general policy of reform and opening to the outside world
and giving great attention to building socialist democratic politics,
China is striving to improve and strictly enforce the socialist legal
system and continuing the work to reform and improve the political system
-- all for the purpose of ensuring that the people can fully enjoy their
civic rights and better exercise their political right of running the
country.
III. Citizens
Enjoy Economic, Cultural and Social Rights
The human rights advocated by China encompass not
only the right to subsistence and the civic and political rights, but also
economic, cultural and social rights. The Chinese government pays due
attention to the protection and realization of the rights of the country,
the various nationalities and private citizens to economic, cultural,
social and political development.
Socialist China eliminated the system of
exploitation of man by man, thus making it possible for the first time in
history for all working people to secure the right to equal economic
development. China upholds the socialist system of public ownership of the
means of production as the mainstay while at the same time permitting and
encouraging the appropriate development of other economic sectors as
supplements to the socialist economy. It will neither adopt a unitary
public ownership system, which is divorced from the nation's current level
of development of productive forces, nor practice privatization, which
tends to shake the dominant position of public ownership in the national
economy. Public ownership of the means of production constitutes the basis
of China's socialist economic system. It guarantees that the major means
of production in society are possessed by all the working people through
the ownership by the whole people and the collective ownership by the
laboring masses. The working people enjoy the right to manage, control and
use the means of production. According to statistics, the total social
investment in fixed assets in China came to 444.9 billion yuan in 1990, of
which 291.9 billion yuan, or 65.6 percent, was invested in units owned by
the whole people, and 52.9 billion, or 11.9 percent, in collectively-owned
units. That is to say, the bigger share (77.5 percent) of the social
investment in fixed assets is owned by the state and the collectives of
the laboring masses.
The distribution system adopted in China is mainly
based on the principle of "from each according to his ability, to each
according to his work." At the same time, the government allows and
encourages some people to become rich first by the sweat of their brow and
though legitimate business activities. Those who get rich first can then
help others, so that common prosperity can be achieved. This brings into
play the enthusiasm of the laboring masses and at the same time prevents
polarization. China is one of the nations that register the lowest income
gap in the world. According to 1990 statistics, the 20 percent of urban
dwellers with the highest spendable incomes earn only 2.5 times as much as
the 20 percent with the lowest incomes. This very fact has made it
possible for China, an economically underdeveloped country, to guarantee
the livelihood of its 1.1 billion people and avoid social confrontation
resulting from polarization.
Economic equality has motivated the laboring people
to a great extent and brought about speedy growth of the Chinese
economy.
Over the past 40-odd post-liberation years and
particularly in the past decade and more since the adoption of the policy
of reform and opening to the outside world, China has all along been in
the front rank of the world in terms of the rate of economic growth. The
annual increase of GNP was 6.9 percent during the 1953-90 period and 8.8
percent during the 1979-90 period. China now leads the world in the output
of many important products, including grain, cotton, pork, beef, mutton,
cloth, coal, cement and television sets; and it has also emerged as one of
the world's biggest producers of steel, crude oil, electricity and
synthetic fibers.
With the growth of the national economy, the
overall living standards of the Chinese people have greatly improved.
Statistics show that in 1990 China's national income came to 1,442.9
billion yuan, or 11.9 times the 1952 figure of 58.9 billion yuan
calculated according to constant prices. A good part of the national
income was spent on consumer goods. In 1990, consumer spending amounted to
944.4 billion yuan, which was 8.4 times the 1952 figure of 47.7 billion
yuan according to constant prices. Of the total volume of consumption, 810
billion yuan was spent by individual consumers, which was 7.3 times the
43.4 billion yuan in 1952 according to constant prices. The per-capita
volume of consumption for the Chinese residents averaged 714 yuan in 1990,
3.7 times more than in 1952 according to constant prices, despite a 98.9
percent population increase in the intervening years. Now that the Chinese
people have solved the basic problems of food and clothing, they are
working their way toward a well-to-do life. According to statistics, in
1990 every hundred rural families owned 118.3 bicycles and 44.4 TV sets;
and every hundred urban house-holds owned 188.6 bicycles, 111.4 TV sets,
42.3 refrigerators and 78.4 washing machines. In addition, the housing
conditions of Chinese residents have improved, with the 1990 average
per-capita living space increased to 7.1 square meters from 3.6 square
meters in 1978 for urban dwellers and to 17.8 square meters from 8.1
square meters in 1978 for rural inhabitants. The speeds at which the
economy grows and the people's living standards improve in New China are
not only something inconceivable in old China, but also among the highest
in the world community.
The right to work is a basic right of the citizens.
In old China, people were deprived of the right to work according to their
own will. This right was controlled by the landlords and capitalists, the
owners of the means of production. The working people were constantly
threatened by the prospect of unemployment. When China was liberated in
1949, a total of 4.742 million, or 60 percent of the total labor force in
the cities, were jobless. It is stipulated in the Constitution that
Chinese citizens have both the right and the duty to work. The government
took all sorts of measures and solved the problem of unemployment, thereby
enabling the masses of the working people to take part in socialist
construction as masters of the society. In the 12 years between 1979 and
1990, a total of 94 million new jobs were created in urban areas. With the
expansion of the productive forces, the problem of rural surplus labor
emerged as a major issue. The Chinese government has adopted the policy
for some of the farmers to "leave the field but remain in the village,"
and, by vigorously developing rural enterprises and encouraging individual
households to run industrial and sideline occupations along specialized
lines, found the fundamental way out for the surplus labor force in rural
areas. Since 1985, the unemployment rate in urban areas has remained at
around 2.5 percent, which is fairly low as compared with other countries
in the world.
The Constitution provides that public property and
the legitimate property of citizens are protected. Public property owned
by the state, collective property owned by the working people, and the
legitimate property owned by individuals are all protected by law. Any
organization or individual is thus forbidden to occupy, seize, share out
or destroy such properties. It is also forbidden to seal up, withhold,
freeze or confiscate such properties by illegal means. The state protects
the citizens' ownership and inheritance rights to their legitimate income,
savings, housing and other legitimate properties. The rights of use and
contract management of state-owned land, forests, mountains, grassland,
uncultivated land, beaches and waters obtained by units under public
ownership and collective ownership and private citizens through legal
means are protected by law. Whoever infringes upon such rights shall be
dealt with by legal means. At present, there are more than 90,000 private
enterprises in China. Like the properties of units under public ownership
or collectively owned by the laboring people, the legitimate properties of
private enterprises are under the protection of law and shall not be
illegally seized, sealed up or confiscated. The Chinese government also
provides legal protection to foreign investment, joint ventures with
Chinese and foreign investment and solely foreign-owned enterprises in
China.
The right of education is an important prerequisite
for the overall, free development of human beings. In old China, the
majority of the working people did not have such a right. With only less
than 20 percent of school-age children going to school, more than 80
percent of the total population were illiterate. After the founding of New
China, the government took various measures to guarantee the citizens'
right of education by devoting great efforts to the development of
education. By 1989, China had set up 1.045 million schools at various
levels in urban and rural areas. Among them 1,075 were regular
institutions of higher learning. In 1990, about 99.77 percent of
school-age children in the cities and 97.29 percent of school-age children
in the countryside were attending school. The numbers of college, middle
school and primary school students were respectively 17.6 times, 40.3
times, and 5 times the 1949 figures. During the 1949-90 period, a total of
7.608 million graduate and undergraduate students completed their college
education, almost 40 times the total between 1912 and 1948 in old
China.
Since China adopted the policy of reform and
opening to the outside world, the number of students studying abroad has
been rapidly increasing. Since 1978, China has sent 150,000 students in
various disciplines of learning to study in 86 countries and regions. So
far almost 50,000 of them have returned after finishing their studies, and
over 100,000 of them are staying abroad. After the political incident of
1989, the number of Chinese going abroad to study has not decreased but
has increased to some extent. In 1990, China completed its plan of sending
3,000 government-sponsored students abroad for academic pursuits.
Meanwhile, about 6,000 students were sent to foreign countries by various
units, and 20,000 (not including those enrolled in Australian and Japanese
language schools) paid their own way to study abroad.
According to statistics of departments concerned in
Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, more than 3,000 students have returned
from overseas and have started work at their new posts during the past two
years. In the meantime, more than 5,700 students have returned to
countries where they study after coming home to visit relatives, take
vacation or do short-term jobs. According to international norm, Chinese
students who are sponsored by the government to study abroad have the duty
to return to serve their home country. The Chinese government, always
valuing returned students and creating favorable working conditions for
them upon return to China, has set up special organizations to take direct
responsibility in receiving and arranging suitable jobs for returned
students. More than 70 post-doctoral mobile research centers and
short-term working stations have been set up by the Chinese Academy of
Sciences and various universities, offering fine research and living
conditions for those who have returned. Moreover, the Chinese government
and related departments have set up a number of foundations to raise funds
for scientific research and to aid returned students in research and
teaching activities.
The Chinese citizens enjoy freedom of scientific
research and literary and artistic creation. In order to promote the
development of scientific research and to bring about cultural and
artistic prosperity, the Chinese government upholds the guideline of
"serving the people and socialism" and the principle of "letting a hundred
flowers blossom and a hundred of schools of thought contend." Since the
founding of New China, the contingent of scientists and technicians has
steadily expanded. In 1990, state-run units employed a total of 10.808
million natural scientists and technical workers, 24.4 times more than the
1952 figure of 425,000. The State Commission of Natural Science Foundation
has since its establishment in February 1986 accepted 34,847 applications
for scientific research projects which call for a total allotment of 2.31
billion yuan. Large numbers of outstanding achievements have been
registered in the field of science and technology. In biological science,
Chinese scientists succeeded in making synthetic bovine insulin and in
converting yeast alanine into synthetic ribonucleic acid (RNA); in
agricultural science, experiments in hybrid paddy rice have been
successful; in high-energy physics, an electron-positron collider was
constructed; other achievements in high technology are represented by the
successful explosion of atomic and hydrogen bombs, the making of
super-computers capable of 100 million calculations per second, the
launching of the Long March III carrier rocket and the research in
satellite telecommunications and superconductivity. In all these fields,
China has either reached or approached advanced world levels.
China has formed a legal system to protect
intellectual property rights. A trademark law and a patent law have been
promulgated and put in force. On June 1, 1991, a copyright law went into
effect. According to 1990 statistics, more than 270,000 valid trademarks
have been registered; and 66 countries and regions have applied for patent
rights in China. By the end of 1990, American enterprises alone have
applied for registration of 12,528 patent rights in China.
Public health facilities are a necessary guarantee
for the human rights of life and health. In old China, health
organizations and technicians were in short supply and at a low level and
the majority of them were concentrated in urban areas. After the founding
of New China, a public health network was gradually established. Covering
all the cities and countryside, this network includes many kinds of health
organizations at various levels and employs different types of public
health workers. In 1990, there were 209,000 health institutions across the
land, 56.9 times that of 1949. The number of hospital beds rose to 2.624
million, a 32.8-fold increase; and the number of professional health
workers reached 3.898 million, 7.7 times that of 1949. In the countryside
where the majority of Chinese people live, there are 47,749 hospitals at
the township level; health centers or clinics have been set up in 86.2
percent of all villages; the number of hospital beds has reached 1.502
million; and there are 1.232 million medical personnel and professional
health workers. In China, every doctor serves an average of 649 people
whereas in medium-income countries the figure is 2,390. With the
development of medical and public health undertakings, the incidence of
infectious and endemic diseases has been drastically reduced. Such highly
infectious diseases as leprosy, cholera, the plague, and smallpox have
been basically eradicated. Snail fever, Kaschin-Beck disease, the Keshan
disease and other endemic diseases have come under control. The
development of medical care and epidemic prevention has greatly improved
the health of the Chinese people. Impressed by what he called China's
"surprising" achievements in medical care, Dr. Bernard P. Kean, the World
Health Organization's representative in China, said that he could hardly
believe it was a developing country by looking only at such statistics as
life expectancy, infant mortality, and causes of death.
The Chinese nation has a fine tradition of
respecting elderly people. This tradition has been carried forward in New
China. Senior citizens have the right to material assistance from the
state and society. By the end of 1990, there had been 23.01 million people
in the whole country living on retirement pensions. The proportion of the
number of retired workers to the number of workers still in service is
1:6. In 1990, the pension for an average retired worker was 60 percent of
the average pay for a worker in service, which ensured the livelihood of
senior citizens in retirement, who also had the help and care of people
from all walks of life. In urban areas, one of the major tasks of
Neighborhood Committees is to help widowed senior citizens and safeguard
their rights and interests. Welfare institutions and senior citizen homes
have been set up respectively by the state and the collective enterprises
to provide board and lodging and other free services for senior citizens
without relatives to depend on. In rural areas, childless and infirm old
people are guaranteed food, clothing, housing, medical care and burial
expenses by society and collectives. The legal rights of senior citizens
are protected by law; it is forbidden to abuse, insult, slander, ill-treat
or abandon them. Adult offspring have the obligation to provide for their
parents.
China attaches great importance to guaranteeing the
rights of women, children and teenagers.
According to the Constitution, women share equal
rights with men in political, economic, cultural, social and family life.
Like men, they have the right to elect and to be elected. A considerable
percentage of people's deputies and officials at various levels are women.
Of the people's deputies elected in 1988 to the Seventh National People's
Congress, 634, or 21.3 percent, were women. At present, 5,600 women serve
as judges in the people's courts. The state lays special stress on
training and promoting women cadres. The number of women serving in
government offices has increased from 366,000 in 1951 to 8.7 million; this
accounts for 28.8 percent of the total number of civil servants. In China,
men and women get equal pay for equal work. Working women enjoy the right
of special labor protection and labor insurance. The total number of women
workers in China has increased from 600,000 in 1949 to 53 million. Women's
right to education is also duly respected. In 1990, the total number of
female students at school reached 78.81 million. These included 700,000
college students, 21.56 million middle-school students and 56.56 million
primary school students, accounting for 33.7 percent, 42.2 percent and
46.2 percent respectively of the total number of students at school and
college.
The state also pays special attention to protecting
women's right to freedom of choice in marriage and forbids mercenary and
arranged marriages and other acts of interference in other people's
freedom of marriage. The judicial departments have taken stern measures
according to law against criminals engaged in the sale of women.
The state has formulated laws and regulations to
protect children. It is strictly forbidden to ill-treat and sell children
and to use child labor. In order to safeguard the life and health of
children, the state has issued a decision on strengthening and improving
the health care in nurseries and kindergartens, and formulated special
regulations to prevent and treat diseases such as infantile paralysis,
smallpox, diphtheria and tuberculosis. China enjoys a relatively high rate
of health care for children and of schooling for school-age children
compared with other developing countries. The rate of inoculated children
in China has almost reached the average level of developed
countries.
However, China is still a developing country which
is marked for its backward economic and cultural development, and much
remains to be done to further expand the people's economic, cultural and
social rights. In the Ten-Year Program for the National Economy and Social
Development (1991-2000), concrete targets and measures are set forth for
the further improvement of the people's economic, cultural and social
rights.
IV. Guarantee of
Human Rights In China's Judicial Work
The aim and task of China's judicial work is to
protect the basic rights, freedoms, and other legal rights and interests
of the whole people in accordance with law, protect public property and
citizens' lawfully-owned private property, maintain social order,
guarantee the smooth progress of the modernization drive, and punish the
small number of criminals according to law. All this shows that China
attaches great importance to human rights protection in the administration
of justice.
China's public security and judicial organs follow
the following principles in carrying out their duties: (1) All citizens
are equal in regard to the applicability of law. In accordance with the
law, each citizen's legal rights and interests shall be protected, and any
citizen's offenses against the law and his criminal activities shall be
looked into; (2) China's public security and judicial organs shall base
themselves on facts and regard the law as the criterion in the conduct of
all cases; (3) The procuratorate and the court shall independently
exercise their respective procuratorial and judicial authority. They shall
only obey the law and not be interfered with by any administrative organ,
social organization or person. While dealing with criminal cases, the
people's court, the people's procuratorate and the public security organ
shall divide their work according to law, cooperate with and moderate one
another. They should exercise their authority only within the scope of
their own responsibilities and are not allowed to supersede one another.
Procuratorial organs shall oversee whether the activities in public
security organs, courts, prisons and reform-through-labor institutions are
legal. These principles of justice are clearly stipulated in China's law,
and they provide the legal guarantee for safeguarding human rights in the
state's judicial activities.
In every link of the work of public security and
judicial organs and in the judicial procedure, China's law provides
definite and strict stipulations to protect and guarantee human rights in
an effective way.
1. Detention and
Arrest
China's Constitution provides that it is
prohibited to take people into custody illegally or to deprive or limit
citizens' personal freedom in other illegal ways. Without the permission
or decision of the people's procuratorate or the decision of the people's
court, and the dispensation of public security organs, no citizen can be
arrested. In order to guarantee the proper use of the compulsory measure
of arrest and to prevent infringement of the right of innocent people, the
Constitution and the law vest procuratorial organs with the authority of
investigation and approval before any arrest is made. According to law,
public security organs have the authority to detain. If the internee is
not convinced by the detention, he may appeal to the public security or
procuratorial organs. If suspects detained by public security organs need
to be arrested, this should be approved by the people's procuratorate; if
the people's procuratorate does not approve the arrests, the public
security organs should release them upon receiving notice from people's
procuratorates. China's procuratorial organs and people's courts should
promptly investigate and deal with cases involving staff members in
governmental departments and other citizens depriving or limiting
citizens' personal freedom.
China's Law of Criminal Procedure provides specific
regulations on the deadline for handling criminal cases. At the same time,
special regulations have been formulated on the deadline for major and
complicated cases according to actual conditions. The Supplementary
Regulations on Deadline in Handling Criminal Cases, issued by the Standing
Committee of the National People's Congress in July 1984, provides
extension and calculation of the deadline for investigation and detaining,
the deadline for the first trial and second trial, and the deadline for
supplementary investigation of major and complicated cases.
2. Search and the Obtaining of
Evidence
China's Constitution provides that it is
prohibited to illegally search a citizen's body, and to illegally search
or intrude into citizens' houses. The Law of Criminal Procedure provides
that in order to search for criminal evidence and seize criminals, public
security organs can search the body, articles, residence and other places
concerned of the accused as well as those who may hide criminals or
criminal evidence, but should do it strictly according to legal procedure.
Procuratorial organs should strictly supervise law enforcement in the
investigating activities of public security organs.
As a matter of principle and discipline for China's
public security and judicial organs in handling cases, it is strictly
prohibited to extort confessions by torture. Whenever a case of violating
this principle and discipline occurs, it should be dealt with according to
law. In 1990, China's procuratorial organs filed for investigation 472
cases which involved extorting confessions by torture. This has not only
protected citizens' personal rights effectively, but also taught law
enforcement officials a lesson.
3. Prosecution and
Trial
Whether a case should be prosecuted after
investigation or exempt from prosecution should be decided by
procuratorial organs after overall and careful examination according to
legal procedure; this is to ensure the timeliness, accuracy, and legality
of a punishment, and at the same time, to prevent innocent citizens from
unjust prosecution and prevent citizens' rights from infringement. In
1990, after examining cases to be prosecuted or exempt from prosecution,
which were referred to them by investigating organs, the procuratorial
organs at various levels in the country decided to exempt 3,507 people
from prosecution.
The people's courts carry out a public trial
system. Cases should be tried publicly, except those involving state
secrets or individual privacy and involving minors, which according to law
shall not be heard publicly. The main points of a case, the name of the
accused, the time and place of the trial should be announced before the
hearing, and visitors should be allowed into the court. During the
hearing, all the facts and evidence on which the case on file is based
should be investigated and checked in court. All activities in court
should be carried out publicly except when the case is being reviewed
during court recession. These include issuing the indictment by the public
prosecutor, court investigation, questioning witnesses, debate and the
final statement by the accused. The verdicts in all cases, including cases
of non-public trial in accordance with law, should be pronounced
publicly.
During the judicial process the people's court
makes it a point to collect the evidence as comprehensively as possible
according to legal procedure. With no other evidence except the confession
of the accused as a basis, the accused cannot be pronounced guilty or
sentenced; without the confession of the accused but with ample and
reliable evidence, the accused can be pronounced guilty and
sentenced.
The accused has the right to defense. According to
the Law of Criminal Procedure, the accused, besides exercising his right
to defend himself, can also entrust a lawyer, or close relatives, or other
citizens to take up the defense on his behalf. When the public prosecutor
institutes a case before the court, if the accused does not entrust his
defense to a lawyer, the people's court can appoint one for him. During
the trial, the accused has the right to terminate a lawyer's action in his
defense and entrust another to take it up. After the people's court
decides to hear a case, a duplicate copy of the indictment should be made
available to the accused at least seven days before the opening session of
the court in order that he may learn what crime or crimes he is being
prosecuted for and the reasons why he is being prosecuted, and that he has
enough time to prepare his defense and get in touch with his lawyer.
During the prosecution, the people's court should strictly comply with the
regulations of the Constitution and the Law of Criminal Procedure, and
earnestly guarantee the right of the accused to defense.
The accused has the right to appeal to a higher
court and the right of petition. In deciding cases the Chinese courts
follow the system whereby the court of second instance is the court of
last instance. According to law, if a party refuses to accept the
judgement and ruling of the first trial, he may appeal to a higher
people's court; if he remains unconvinced by the judgement and ruling
which are legal in effect, he may petition to people's courts or
procuratorial organs. Appealing to a higher court will not increase the
punishment.
China's Criminal Law has special regulations on
juvenile crime and criminal responsibility. Those who have reached the age
of 14 but not of 16 should be responsible for crimes of murder, serious
injury, robbery, arson, hardened thievery and other felonies against
public order; those who have reached the age of 14 but not of 18 should
receive lenient punishment or mitigated punishment if they commit crimes;
as for those who are exempt from punishment because they have not reached
the age of 16, their parents or guardians should be ordered to subject
them to discipline, and if necessary the government can take them away for
custody and education.
Lawsuit procedures and judicial activities are
strictly supervised as to their legality. In 1990, China's procuratorial
organs put forward suggestions for the correction of illegal practice in
3,200 instances, thereby effectively guaranteeing citizens' legal rights
and interests in lawsuits and judicial activities.
China, like most countries in the world, maintains
capital punishment, but imposes very stringent restrictive regulations on
the use of this extreme measure. China's Criminal Law states, "Capital
punishment is applied only to criminals who are guilty of the most heinous
crimes." It also provides that capital punishment is not applied to
criminals who have not reached the age of 18 when they commit crimes or to
women who are pregnant when they are on trial. China's Law of Criminal
Procedure provides for a special review procedure in cases of capital
punishment. That is, the judgement in cases of capital punishment, except
for those made by the Supreme People's Court according to law, should be
reported to the Supreme People's Court or to a high people's court
authorized by it after the second, or final, instance; only after all the
facts, evidence, convictions, sentences and trial procedures are
comprehensively investigated and checked and approved can the judgement
take legal effect. After the examination and approval, if a lower people's
court finds that there may be mistakes in a judgement, it should stop
enforcement of the punishment and immediately report to a higher people's
court with the authority of examination and approval, or to the Supreme
People's Court, in order that a ruling may be made by it.
China's law also provides a system allowing a
two-year reprieve in carrying out a death sentence. That is, in cases
where criminals should receive the death penalty but the sentence need not
be carried out at once, capital punishment can be announced with a
two-year reprieve and reform through forced labor, in order to observe the
offender's behavior. If the offender sincerely repents and mends his ways,
after the twoyear reprieve expires, the punishment can be reduced to life
imprisonment; if a criminal really repents, mends his ways and performs
meritorious services after the two-year suspension expires, his punishment
can be reduced to a set term of imprisonment from 15 years to 20 years.
Practice has shown that most of the criminals who are given the death
penalty with reprieve have had their punishment reduced to life
imprisonment or a set term of imprisonment, after expiration of the
two-year reprieve. The system of announcing the death sentence with a
two-year reprieve and forced labor, as provided in China's Criminal Law,
is an original creation in the application of capital punishment. It is an
effective system by which strict control is exercised over the use of
capital punishment in China.
4. No "Political Prisoners" in
China
In China, ideas alone, in the absence of
action which violates the criminal law, do not constitute a crime; nobody
will be sentenced to punishment merely because he holds dissenting
political views. So-called political prisoners do not exist in China. In
Chinese Criminal Law "counterrevolutionary crime" refers to crime which
endangers state security, i.e., criminal acts which are not only committed
with the purpose of overthrowing state power and the socialist system, but
which are also listed in Articles 91-102 of the Criminal Law as criminal
acts, such as those carried out in conspiring to overthrow the government
or splitting the country, those carried out in gathering a crowd in armed
rebellion, and espionage activities. These kinds of criminal acts that
endanger state security are punishable in any country. In 1980, in
handling the case of the Lin Biao and Jiang Qing counterrevolutionary
cliques, the special court of the Supreme People's Court strictly
implemented this principle by prosecuting members of the cliques according
to law for their criminal acts while leaving alone matters concerning the
political line.
5. Prison Work and Criminals'
Rights
At present there are in all 680 prisons and
reform-through-labor institutions in China, holding 1.1 million criminals
in detention. The rate of imprisonment is 0.99 per thousand of the total
population. Compared with the rate of imprisonment of 4.13 per thousand in
one of the Western developed countries according to 1990 statistics of its
ministry of justice, China's rate is quite low.
China's prisons and reform-through-labor
institutions receive, strictly according to law, criminals sent to them to
enforce sentences passed by the courts. If they find the relevant legal
documents not complete or the judgement not yet in effect legally, they
have the legal right to refuse to take the persons in custody. Prisons and
reform-through-labor institutions should notify a prisoner's family
members of his whereabouts within three days after taking him into
custody. According to China's law, most prisoners are allowed to serve
their sentences in the area where they reside to make it convenient for
their family members to visit them and for the units where they used to
work to help educate them. The allegation that in China some citizens are
sent to labor camps without trial or sent away in some form of exile
within the country is a distortion of the system whereby prisons and
reform-through-labor institutions in China take criminals into custody; it
is a groundless fabrication.
In China, the rights of prisoners while serving
their sentences are protected by law.
According to China's law, all prisoners, with
exception of those who have been legally deprived of their political
rights, have the right to vote. Prisoners also have the right to appeal,
the right of defense, the right of immunity from insult to their dignity
and from infringement of personal security and of legal property, the
right of complaint, the right of accusation, and other civic rights which
have not been curtailed by the law.
Convicted criminals, while serving their sentences,
have the right to contact family members and other relatives regularly by
correspondence or visits. If an important event happens in a criminal's
family such as critical illness or the death of a directly-related family
member, and if it is really necessary for the criminal himself to go back
home to handle matters, he can be permitted to go home for a short period
of time.
While serving their sentences, prisoners can read
newspapers, magazines and books, watch television, listen to the radio,
and take part in recreational and sports activities that are beneficial to
the body and mind. In prisons and reform-through-labor institutions there
are libraries where criminals can go to read. Like ordinary citizens,
prisoners who are serving their sentences have the freedom of religious
belief. Prisoners with religious beliefs can maintain their beliefs, and
allowances are made for the customs and habits of prisoners of minority
nationalities.
Prisoners are accorded the material treatment
necessary in their daily lives. The state covers their living and medical
expenses, and their grain, edible oil and non-staple food rations are set
according to the same standards for local residents. All prisons and
reform-through-labor institutions are staffed with an appropriate number
of doctors; in professional medical institutions, medical facilities and
hospital beds are set aside in prisoners' exclusive service; on an
average, there are 14.8 hospital beds for every thousand prisoners, and
those critically ill are sent to hospitals outside the prison for
treatment or, on approval, may seek medical treatment on bail according to
law. Prisoners' needs for medical care are guaranteed.
The people's procuratorates provide legal
supervision of the protection of criminals' legitimate rights and
interests. They send full-time prosecuting attorneys to jails and other
places of surveillance to check whether the working and living facilities
and conditions and the surveillance work are legitimate, to hear the
opinions of those under surveillance, accept and look into their
complaints and appeals, and deal with violations of law promptly when
discovered.
The prisons and reform-through-labor institutions
in China are not designed merely to punish the criminals but to educate
them and turn them into law-abiding citizens by organizing them to take
part in physical labor, learn legal and ordinary knowledge and master
productive skills. Prisoners who have taken educational or technical
training courses and passed examinations given by local education or labor
departments are given certificates corresponding to their levels of
education or technical grades. The validity of such certificates is
recognized in society. By the end of 1990, about 720,000 certificates for
literacy or diplomas for completing courses up to the college level had
been issued to those serving terms in prisons and reform-through-labor
institutions; over 510,000 had attended various technical training
courses, and 398,000 received certificates of technical qualification.
Prisoners thus find it easier to find jobs on release after serving their
sentence.
China's law stipulates that prisoners who really
show repentance and have rendered meritorious service can, upon rulings of
the people's courts, have their sentences commuted or be put on parole. In
1990, 18 percent of the criminals in custody were accorded such
treatments.
Thanks to the humanitarian, scientific and
civilized management of the prisons and reform-through-labor institutions,
the recidivism rate has for many years stood at 6-8 percent. Many
prisoners have returned to society and become key members or engineers in
their enterprises, and some of them have become model workers or labor
heroes. Compared with the situation in one developed country in the West,
where, according to 1989 judicial statistics, 41.4 percent of exprisoners
returned to jail, China has come a long way in reforming and educating
criminals. China's prisons and reform-through-labor institutions have won
global acclaim for their achievements in turning the overwhelming majority
of criminals, including the last emperor of the feudal Qing Dynasty and
war criminals, into law-abiding citizens and qualified personnel helpful
to the country's development.
6. Prison
Labor
China's law stipulates that all prisoners
able to work should take part in physical labor. This is also the practice
adopted in many countries worldwide. China's policy of reforming criminals
through labor is designed to help those serving prison terms mend their
old ways by acquiring the labor habit and fostering a sense of social
responsibility, discipline and obedience to the law. This policy enables
criminals in custody to stay healthy through a regular working life and
avoid feelings of depression and apathy resulting from a prolonged
monotonous and idle prison life. It also helps them learn productive
skills and knowledge of one kind or another so that they can find a job
after being released from prison and avoid committing new crimes because
of difficulties in making a living. China's policy of reforming criminals
through labor is not simply for the purpose of punishment; it is a
humanitarian policy conducive to the reform, and the physical and mental
health, of the criminals.
By the Chinese law, criminals work for no more than
eight hours a day and take time off during holidays and festivals; they
are entitled to the same grain, edible oil, and non-staple food rations
and the same labor and health protection as accorded to workers of
state-run enterprises engaged in the same type of work; those who
overfulfill their production quotas are given bonuses and those holding
technical titles at and above the middle grade are entitled to monthly
technical allowances and opportunities of on-the-job vocational and
technical training.
Prison labor products are mostly used to meet the
needs within the prison system, and only a small quantity enters the
domestic market through normal channels. The export of prison products is
prohibited. China's foreign trade departments, which handle the export of
Chinese commodities in a unified way, have never granted foreign trade
rights to reform-through-labor institutions.
7. Education through Labor and
the Rights of Those Being Educated through
Labor
The work of education through labor in China
is based on the 1957 Decision on Education through Labor and other
regulations adopted by the Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress. Education through labor is not a criminal but an administrative
punishment. Education-through-labor administrative committees have been
set up by the people's governments of various provinces, autonomous
regions, municipalities as well as large and medium-sized cities, and the
work is under the supervision of the people's procuratorates. It is
stipulated that those eligible for education through labor should meet the
requirements of relevant laws and regulations. For example, they should be
at or above the age of 16 and have upset the public order in a large or
medium-sized city but refused to mend their ways despite repeated
admonition, or they have committed an offense not serious enough for
criminal punishment. The decision to put a person under
education-through-labor is made through a strict legal procedure and under
a system of legal supervision in order to avoid subjecting the wrong
person to the program.
After the education-through-labor administrative
committee has according to related regulations made the decision to put a
person an education-through-labor program ranging from one to three years,
the person and his family members are entitled to be informed about the
reasons for the decision and the duration of the program. If the person
takes exception to the decision, he may appeal to the administrative
committee or lodge a complaint with the people's court according to the
Law of Administrative Procedure. If the education-through-labor
institution finds that the person does not conform to the qualifications
for the education-through-labor program or that he should have been
sentenced to criminal punishment, it may report the case to the
reeducation-through-labor administrative committee for review.
Those undergoing education through labor are
entitled to civic rights prescribed by the Constitution and the law,
except that they must comply with the measures taken according to the
regulations on education through labor to restrict some of their rights.
For instance, they are not deprived of their political rights and have the
right to vote according to law; they have the freedom of correspondence
and the right to take time off during festivals and holidays; during the
period of education through labor they are allowed to meet with their
family members, those who are married can live together with their spouses
during visits, and they can be granted leave of absence or go home to
visit family members during holidays. Those who have acquitted themselves
well while being educated may have their term reduced or be released ahead
of time. Every year about 50 percent of the people undergoing the
education-through-labor program have their term reduced or are released
ahead of time.
The education-through-labor institutions follow the
policy of educating, persuading and redeeming the offenders, with the
emphasis on redeeming. Classes are opened, and instructors assigned, in
these institutions to conduct systematic ideological, cultural and
technical education. Offenders under the education-through-labor program
work no more than six hours every day.
An average of 50,000 people have been brought under
the education-through-labor program annually since it was instituted. The
overwhelming majority of those who have been reeducated have turned over a
new leaf, and many have become valuable participants in building the
country. According to surveys conducted over the last few years, only 7
percent of those released from the education-through-labor program have
lapsed into offense or crime. The program has done what families,
workplaces and schools cannot do: to prevent those who have dabbled in
crime from committing further anti-social actions and breaking the law and
to turn them into constructive members of society. Both the public and
family members of the offenders speak highly of the program for its role
in forestalling and reducing crime and maintaining public order.
China's public security and judicial organs have
carried out their responsibilities strictly according to law and played an
important role in protecting and guaranteeing the citizens' rights and
freedoms. That explains why China has long been one of the countries with
the lowest incidence of criminal cases and crime rate in the world. In
1990, the incidence of criminal cases and crime rate in China were 2 per
thousand and 0.6 per thousand respectively, considerably lower than the
figures in some developed Western countries, which ran as high as 60 per
thousand and 20 per thousand respectively.
V. Guarantee of the Right to Work
A citizen's right to work is the essential
condition for his right to subsistence. Without the right to work, there
will be no guarantee for the right to subsistence. The Constitution and
the law provide that citizens have the right to work, rest, receive
vocational training and be paid for their labor and that they have the
right to labor protection and social security.
Having a job is the direct embodiment of the right
to work. In China, with its large population and weak economy, employment
is an outstanding social issue. In old China, corruption on the part of
the Kuomintang government and the civil war it unleashed led the national
economy to overall collapse and the bankruptcy of large numbers of
industrial and commercial enterprises. By the beginning of 1948, 70-80
percent of the factories in Tianjin had shut down; in Guangdong, the
number of factories shrank from more than 400 to less than 100; and in
Shanghai, numerous factories were closed down and the 3,000-odd factories
that survived had to run at 20 percent of their normal capacity. Numerous
workers lost their jobs as a result of the massive number of industrial
and commercial closedowns. By 1949, the year the nation was liberated,
4,742,000 workers, or 60 percent of the nation's total, were jobless. Such
was the heavy social burden New China inherited from the old
society.
After the founding of New China, the people's
government attached great importance to this problem and took various
practical measures to ensure employment. In less than four years,
virtually all the unemployed left over from old China started work again.
Since then, with the annual population growth of 14 million, employment
has always been a cardinal issue in China's economic life. For a
considerably long period of time, job-waiting people in urban areas
basically counted on the government for job placements and most of them
were employed in public works. Since the policy of reform and opening to
the outside world was adopted in 1979, China has instituted a
multi-ownership economic system with public ownership of the means of
production taking the dominant position. The employment system whereby the
state assigns virtually all the jobs has been revamped and the principle
has been carried out to open up all avenues for job opportunities by
combining the efforts in three fields--job placements by labor
departments, employment in enterprises organized by those who need jobs,
and self-employment. Labor companies have been established in the service
of job-seekers, and vocational training has been expanded to improve the
laborer's qualities and provide them with as many job opportunities as
possible. To solve the problem of employment of the rural surplus labor
force resulting from the development of production and the improvement of
productivity, the government has devoted major efforts to setting up rural
enterprises and encouraged farmers to develop industrial and sideline
occupations along specialized lines and on a household basis. Thus those
farmers who have quit farming can have work to do without leaving their
villages. Meanwhile, plans have been made for some of the surplus laborers
to work in cities. In the economic rectification designed to raise the
economic efficiency of enterprises and deepen their reform, a number of
enterprises have been closed down, suspended, merged or switched to other
lines of production in the last couple of years. The government, attaching
great importance to the resettlement of the workers in these enterprises,
has provided short- or medium-term training so that they can adapt to
their new jobs quickly. In 1990, the number of workers in urban and rural
areas reached 567 million, about 3.1 times what it was in 1949; the number
of employees in cities and towns topped 147.3 million, 9.6 times that in
1949; and the urban and rural unemployment rate stood at only 2.5
percent.
In old China, women, who accounted for half of the
nation's total population, not only suffered class oppression, but also
had no right in the family, because of failure to gain economic
independence. Those who were able to find jobs in society were subjected
to every kind of discrimination. In New China, women enjoy the same right
to work as men. The government devotes major efforts to developing social
welfare, including nurseries and kindergartens, and encourages women to
take up jobs, enabling them to acquire economic as well as political
independence. The state law and policies provide special protection for
women's employment. The Constitution provides the principle of equal pay
for equal work to men and women alike. The government labor department
intervenes and ensures that the mistake is corrected promptly whenever
women are found to be discriminated against in their work units, and it
stipulates that women get their normal pay during maternity leave. As a
result, the number of employed women has been increased steadily, and
their field of employment constantly expanding. Nowadays, women's
employment rate has exceeded 96 percent in town and the countryside,
trailing behind that of men's by less than two percentage points.
College graduates' employment is fully guaranteed
in China. The situation is a far cry from old China, when graduation was
synonymous to unemployment for college students. Since the founding of New
China, the government has followed the policy of unified job assignment
for all college graduates and thus ensured that every one of them has the
opportunity to work. In the past 10 years, the government has reformed the
job assignment system by combining the students' own choices with the
state's guarantee of jobs. The state sees to it that, in light of the
needs of various areas in economic development, every college graduate is
provided with a suitable job on a voluntary basis. This is why
unemployment is out of the question for college graduates in China.
In socialist China, the government guarantees the
basic necessities of every worker and his family and sees to it that their
life gradually improves with economic growth. Although Chinese workers
have relatively low monetary wages, they enjoy a large amount of
subsidies, including financial subsidies for housing, children's
attendance at nursery and school and staple and non-staple foods, as well
as social insurance such as medical treatment, industrial injury and
retirement pension and many other welfare items, which are not counted in
the wages. Statistics indicate that urban residents in China pay only 3-5
percent of their living expenses for housing, communication and medical
treatment. Since China carried out reforms in 1979, past payment measures
have been modified. On the basis of economic growth and labor-productivity
increase, workers' wage levels have been raised proportionally. Therefore,
the wage levels of workers have increased rapidly, and there has been an
obvious improvement in the consumption level of all Chinese residents.
Statistics in 1990 showed that the average consumption level per capita of
urban residents had increased from 149 yuan in 1952 to 1,442 yuan, an
inflation-adjusted increase of 3.8 times.
China pays close attention to labor protection and
has issued 1,682 laws, rules and regulations in 29 categories in this
regard, while 28 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly
under the central government have their own local laws and regulations for
labor protection. In addition, 452 articles of state technical standards
regarding occupational safety and hygiene have been enacted throughout the
country. China has established a state supervision system insuring labor
safety, hygiene, protection for female workers and a work-hour and
vacation schedule. So far more than 2,700 labor supervision institutions
have been set up throughout China with some 30,000 supervisory personnel.
The duty of the supervision institutions is to monitor the work of
enterprises and their management with regard to labor safety and hygiene
so as to stimulate the enterprises to improve working conditions
constantly.
China adopts the policy of "safety first and
prevention first" in labor protection, and combines state inspection with
enterprise management and worker supervision. The government requires that
10 to 20 percent of the enterprise's annual renovation fund be used for
labor safety and hygiene. Labor protection is regarded by the state as an
important factor in appraising the management skill of an enterprise. In
cases of casualties, an investigation will be conducted to look into the
responsibility of the leaders and personnel concerned.
China provides free medical service in the urban
state institutions and undertakings and co-operative medical service in
most rural areas. Thus both urban and rural workers are assured of medical
care. Those wounded or disabled on the job are provided living expenses
from the state or the collective. In order to raise the level of labor
protection, China has set up many testing centers for occupational safety
and hygiene and labor-safety education offices. Dozens of universities
have established safety-engineering departments. Labor and industry
departments have set up scores of scientific research institutes which
attempt to strengthen labor safety and improve working conditions for
workers through scientific research, designing, production, usage and
management. Compared with the Sixth Five-Year Plan period (1981-85), these
efforts resulted in a 9.53 percent decrease in on-duty deaths and a 37.95
percent decrease in serious injury in state-owned and large collective
enterprises during the Seventh Five-Year Plan period (1986-90).
The Chinese government pays special attention to
the protection of female workers. In July 1988, the State Council
promulgated Regulations on Labor Protection of Female Workers, laying down
specific guidelines. For example, it is forbidden to make female workers
engage in particularly strenuous work or work harmful to their
physiological well-being. Also stipulated are concrete protections for
female workers during the menstrual period, and also during pregnancy,
maternity leave and breast-feeding, at which periods, their basic wages
must remain the same and their work-contracts cannot be terminated. In
recent years, a special fund has been established in many places to offer
living subsidies to women during breast-feeding and leave.
Chinese workers are the masters of their
enterprises. Workers' interests are closely connected with the
enterprises' prosperity, and there is no conflict of fundamental interests
between the managers and the workers. This reality determines that China's
system of protecting workers' rights is different from that under the
wage-labor system. According to China's Law Concerning the Industrial
Enterprises Owned by the Whole People, workers can directly participate in
the formulation and supervision of regulations concerning the enterprise's
operation, management, labor, personnel, wage, welfare, social security,
collective welfare, etc. through the workers congress. China's trade
unions play a particularly important role in the protection of workers'
right to work. Since China adopted the policy of reform and opening to the
outside world in 1979, trade unions have accomplished the following five
tasks: They have, first, actively practiced and improved the system of
workers' congresses; second, set up various workers' schools to perfect
the education system; third, organized labor emulation drives and
mobilized workers and staff to overfulfill state plans; fourth, protected
workers' material and spiritual interests and guaranteed their welfare;
and fifth, set up committees to deal with labor disputes.
In July 1987, the State Council issued the Interim
Rules on Labor Disputes in State-Owned Enterprises. Aimed at readjusting
labor relations in state-owned enterprises, this administrative law deals
with disputes arising from the implementation of labor contracts and the
dismissal of workers who violate discipline. Institutions specialized in
handling these disputes include the enterprise labor dispute mediation
committee, local labor dispute arbitration committee and the people's
court. Most disputes are resolved through mediation by the committees.
Only a minority of cases are settled through arbitration or by the
people's court. Incomplete statistics show that in 1990 enterprise labor
dispute mediation committees and local labor dispute arbitration
committees throughout China handled 18,573 labor dispute cases and settled
16,813, of which 15,881 were settled through mediation with a success rate
as high as 94 percent. Only 932 cases were settled through arbitration,
about 6 percent of the total decided cases. There were only 218 cases
settled through court suit after arbitration failed, accounting for about
1.2 percent of the total number of completed cases.
The Chinese government attaches great importance to
labor legislation. In accordance with the Constitution, the State Council
and state labor administration departments have promulgated laws and
regulations regarding wages, welfare, worker safety and health, as well as
vocational training and grading, working and resting hours, trade unions
and democratic management of enterprises. At present, the drafting of a
labor law is under way.
VI. Citizens Enjoy Freedom Of Religious Belief
here are many religions in China, such as Buddhism,
Daoism, Islam, Catholicism and Protestantism. Among them Buddhism, Daoism
and Islam are more widely accepted. It is difficult to count the number of
Buddhist and Daoist believers, since there are no strict admittance rites.
Minority nationalities such as the Hui, Uygur, Kazak, Tatar, Tajik, Uzbek,
Kirgiz, Dongxiang, Salar and Bonan believe in Islam, a total of 17 million
people. There are 3.5 million and 4.5 million people in China following
Catholicism and Protestantism respectively.
China's Constitution stipulates that citizens enjoy
freedom of religious belief. The state protects normal religious
activities and the lawful rights and interests of the religious circles.
The Criminal Law, Civil Law, Electoral Law, Military Service Law and
Compulsory Education Law and some other laws make clear and specific
provisions protecting religious freedom and equal rights of religious
citizens. No state organ, social organization or individual may compel
citizens to believe in, or not to believe in, any religion; nor may they
discriminate against citizens who believe in, or do not believe in, any
religion. State functionaries who illegally deprive a citizen of the
freedom of religious belief shall be investigated, and legal
responsibility affixed where due according to Article 147 of the Criminal
Law.
The government has established departments of
religious affairs responsible for the implementation of the policy of
religious freedom. During the "cultural revolution," the government's
religious policy was violated. After the "cultural revolution," especially
since China initiated the reform and opening to the outside world, the
Chinese government has done a great deal of work and made notable
achievements in restoring, amplifying and implementing the policy of
religious freedom and guaranteeing citizens' rights in this regard.
With the support and help of the Chinese
government, religious facilities destroyed during the "cultural
revolution" have gradually been restored and repaired. By the end of 1989,
more than 40,000 monasteries, temples and churches had been restored and
opened to the public upon approval of the governments at various levels.
Houses and land used for religious purposes are exempted from taxes.
Temples, monasteries and churches which need repair but lack money get
assistance from the government. Since 1980, financial allocations from the
central government for the maintenance of temples, monasteries and
churches have reached over 140 million yuan. The maintenance of the Potala
Palace in Tibet received 35 million yuan from the government. Local
governments also allocated funds for the maintenance of temples,
monasteries and churches.
There are now eight national religious
organizations in China. They are: the China Buddhist Association, the
China Daoist Association, the China Islamic Association, the Chinese
Patriotic Catholic Association, the National Administration Commission of
the Chinese Catholic Church, the Chinese Catholic Bishops College, the
Three-Self Patriotic Movement Committee of the Protestant Churches of
China and the China Christian Council. There are also 164 provincial-level
and more than 2,000 county-level religious organizations. All religious
organizations and all religious citizens can independently organize
religious activities and perform their religious duties under the
protection of the Constitution and the law. There are 47 religious
colleges in China, such as the Chinese Institute of Buddhist Studies, the
Institute of Islamic Theology, the Jinling Union Theological Seminary of
the Chinese Protestant Churches in Nanjing, the Chinese Catholic Seminary
and the Chinese Institute of Daoist Studies. Since 1980, more than 2,000
young professional religious personnel have been graduated from religious
colleges and more than 100 religious students have been sent to 12
countries and regions of the world for further studies. China has more
than ten religious publications and about 200,000 professional religious
personnel -- nearly 9,000 of them are deputies to the people's congresses
and members of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference at
various levels. Along with deputies and members from other circles, they
participate in discussions of state affairs and enjoy equal democratic
rights politically.
In China, because of these policies, different
religions and religious organizations as well as religious people and
nonreligious people respect each other and live in harmony.
The religious freedom that Chinese citizens enjoy
under the Constitution and the law entails certain obligations stipulated
by the same. The Constitution makes it clear that no one may make use of
religion to engage in activities that disrupt public order, impair the
health of other citizens or interfere with the state's educational system.
Those who engage in criminal activities under the subterfuge of religion
shall be dealt with according to law, whether they are religious people or
not. Law-breaking believers, like other law-breaking citizens, are dealt
with according to law. Among the religious people who were dealt with
according to law, some were engaged in subversion against the state regime
or activities endangering national security, some instigated the masses to
defy state laws and regulations, others incited the masses to infighting
that seriously disturbed public order, and still others swindled money,
molested other people physically and mentally and seduced women in the
name of religion. In short, none of them were arrested only because of
their religious beliefs.
Guided by the principles of independence, self-rule
and self-management, Chinese religions oppose any outside control or
interference in their internal affairs so as to safeguard Chinese
citizens' real enjoyment of freedom of religious belief. Before the
founding of the People's Republic of China, China's Catholic and
Protestant churches were all under the control of foreign religious
forces. Dozens of "foreign missions" and "religious orders and
congregations" carved out spheres of influence on the Chinese land,
forming many "states within a state." At that time there were 143 Catholic
dioceses in China, but only about 20 bishops were Chinese nationals -- and
they were powerless -- a good indication of the semi-feudal and
semi-colonial nature of the old Chinese society. Chinese Catholic and
Protestant circles resented this state of affairs and, as early as in the
1920s, some insightful people proposed that the Chinese church do its own
missionary work, support itself and manage its own affairs. But these
proposals were not realized in old China. After the founding of New China,
Chinese religious circles rid themselves of foreign control and realized
self-management, self-support and self-propagation. The Chinese people
finally control their own religious organizations.
The Chinese government actively supports Chinese
religious organizations and religious personnel in their friendly
exchanges with foreign religious organizations and personnel on the basis
of independence, equality and mutual respect. International relationships
between religious circles are regarded as part of the non-governmental
exchange of the Chinese people with other peoples of the world. In recent
years, Chinese religious organizations have established and developed
friendly relations with more than 70 countries and regions and sent
delegations to many international religious conferences and symposiums.
Chinese religious groups have joined world religious groups such as the
World Fellowship of Buddhists, the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs,
the World Conference on Religion and Peace, the Asian Conference on
Religion and Peace and the World Council of Churches. Since 1955,
excluding the "cultural revolution" period, the Chinese Muslims have never
stopped their pilgrimages to Mecca. The Chinese government has offered all
kinds of facility and assistance for these trips. Between 1955 and 1990
more than 11,000 Chinese Muslims participated in the Mecca pilgrimages,
several dozen times the total before the founding of New China. In recent
years the annual number of pilgrims has surpassed 1,000 -- 1,500 in 1987,
1,100 in 1988, 2,400 in 1989, 1,480 in 1990, and 1,517 in
1991.
VII. Guarantee of the Rights of The Minority Nationality
China is a unified, multi-national country, with 56
nationalities in all. The Han people take up 92 percent of the total
population of the country, leaving 8 percent for the other 55
nationalities. To realize equality, unity and common prosperity among the
nationalities is China's basic principle guiding relationships between
nationalities. The Constitution provides that all nationalities in the
People's Republic of China are equal. The state protects the lawful rights
and interests of the minority nationalities and upholds and develops the
relationship of equality, unity and mutual assistance among all of China's
nationalities. Discrimination against and oppression of any nationality
are prohibited, and any acts that undermine the unity and create splits
among the nationalities are also prohibited. The Constitution clearly
stipulates that in striving for unity among all its nationalities, China
opposes great-nation chauvinism, especially great-Han chauvinism, as well
as local nationalism.
In old China, severe national discrimination and
oppression existed over a long period of time. Many of the minority
nationalities, who were in straitened circumstances and not countenanced,
had to hide in the mountains and live a life of seclusion from the outside
world.
After the People's Republic of China was founded in
1949, discrimination against and oppression of minority nationalities were
abolished and their condition underwent a thorough change. In the 1950s,
the Chinese government organized a large-scale investigation for
identification of the nationalities. After scientific differentiation, 55
minority nationalities were acknowledged and this fact was announced
publicly. Most of the minority nationalities, for the first time in
China's history, became equal members of the great family of Chinese
nationalities.
New China brought about the system of regional
autonomy for minority nationalities. Organs of self-government were set up
in regions where people of minority nationalities live in compact
communities, and the internal affairs of the minority nationalities were
handled by themselves. At present, there are throughout the country 159
national autonomous areas, including five autonomous regions, 30
autonomous prefectures and 124 autonomous counties (or banners). National
autonomous areas exercise all rights of self-government in accordance with
the Law of the People's Republic of China on Regional National Autonomy
and may work out autonomous rules and specific regulations according to
local political, economic and cultural characteristics. Without violating
the Constitution and the law, autonomous regions have the right to adopt
special policies and flexible measures; autonomous organs can apply for
permission to make alterations or desist from implementing resolutions,
decisions, orders and instructions made by higher-level state organs if
they are not in accordance with the situation in autonomous regions.
Organs of self-government have the right to handle local financial,
economic, cultural and educational affairs. In regions where people of a
number of nationalities live together or in scattered communities, more
than 1,500 national townships were established so as to enable minority
nationalities to enjoy equal rights to the fullest.
In New China the political rights of minority
nationalities are ensured.
Before liberation, the minority nationalities, like
the majority of the Han people, suffered under severe oppression by the
reactionary ruling class. The oppression in some areas took more savage
and cruel forms than in others. For instance, in old Tibet, over 95
percent of Tibetans, from generation to generation, were serfs attached to
officials, nobles and lamaseries. According to the 13-Article Code and the
16-Article Code which had been enforced for several hundred years in old
Tibet, Tibetans were divided into three classes and nine grades. The lives
of ironsmiths, butchers and women, who were declared an inferior grade of
inferior class in explicit terms, were as cheap and worthless as a straw
rope. This feudal serf system with its hierarchy of three classes and nine
grades was boltered by cruel punishments such as gouging out eyes, cutting
off feet, removing the tongue, chopping off hands and arms, pushing an
offender off a cliff or drowning. Under such circumstances, the human
rights of the majority of laboring people were out of the question.
After New China was founded, the old system was
abolished and democratic reforms were carried out in one minority area
after another. In Tibet, the serfs shook off their chains, and are no
longer serf-owners' private property that can be bought, sold,
transferred, bartered or used to clear a debt, no longer to suffer the
above-mentioned savage punishments, and no longer divided into the three
classes and nine grades. Thanks to the democratic reform, the minority
nationalities, oppressed for generations, obtained the freedom of person
and human dignity, won basic human rights and for the first time became
masters of their own destiny.
Today, the minority nationalities, as equals of the
Han nationality, enjoy all the civil rights which are set down in the
Constitution and the law. In addition, the minority nationalities enjoy
some special rights accorded to them by law.
The right of the minority nationalities to
participate in the exercise of the supreme power of the state is specially
protected. The Constitution stipulates that "all the minority
nationalities are entitled to appropriate representation" in the National
People's Congress (NPC), the highest organ of state power. The proportion
of deputies elected by the minority nationalities to the NPC in the total
number of NPC deputies is always about twice as large as the proportion of
members of the minority nationalities in the country's total population.
Of the deputies to the Seventh National People's Congress, 455 or 15
percent come from minority nationalities. And even the Loba, Hezhe and
Monba nationalities, with only several thousand people, are represented in
the NPC.
The local people's congress is the local organ of
state power. As prescribed in China's Electoral Law, in areas where the
people of minority nationalities live in compact communities, each
minority nationality of a compact community should have its own deputies
to the local people's congress. The law also has stipulations for special
consideration to be given to the deputies from each minority nationality
in the election. According to these stipulations, if the total population
of a minority nationality in a region where people of minority
nationalities live in compact communities is less than 15 percent of the
total population of the region, the population that each deputy of the
minority nationality represents can be less than the population that each
deputy to the local people's congress represents.
The Chinese people of all nationalities are
eligible to hold any posts in the state organ and government departments.
In this respect, there is also no discrimination against the minority
nationalities. For instance, not a few members of minority nationalities
are holding or once held such high-ranking state posts as vice-president
of the state, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the NPC,
vice-premier of the State Council, president of the Supreme People's
Court, and vice-chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC). The Law on Regional National
Autonomy prescribes that citizens of the minority nationality that
exercises regional national autonomy should serve as director or
deputy-director of the standing committee of the people's congress of the
autonomous region; and the chairman of the regional autonomous government
and head of the administration of the autonomous prefecture and the
autonomous county should be citizens of the nationality that exercises
self-government. The staff and officials of the people's governments of
the autonomous regions, and of the departments affiliated to them, should
include members of the nationality that exercises regional national
autonomy and members of other minority nationalities. Statistics show that
in 1989 the number of minority officials made up 17.27 percent of the
total number of directors and deputy-directors of the standing committees
of the people's congresses of various provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities directly under the central government. The number of
minority officials made up 12.66 percent of the governors or
vice-governors of provinces, mayors or deputy-mayors of municipalities,
and chairmen or vicechairmen of autonomous regions. Of the directors or
deputy-directors of the standing committees of the people's congresses at
levels of city, prefecture and autonomous prefecture, minority officials
reached 14.20 percent. The number of minority officials among mayors or
deputy-mayors, commissioners and directors of prefectures took up 11.90
percent. Of the directors or deputy-directors of the standing committees
of the people's congresses at the county level, minority officials
totalled 17.30 percent. Minority officials made up 15.16 percent of county
magistrates. All these proportions surpass 8 percent which is the
proportion covered by the population of the minority nationalities in the
total population of the country.
The state always pays close attention to training
cadres from among people of minority nationalities. In recent years, the
number of minority nationality cadres has gone up at a rate of more than
10,000 people annually. Now there are 37,000 Tibetan cadres throughout
Tibet, making up 66.6 percent of the total number of cadres; this breaks
down to about 72 percent at autonomous-region level and 61.2 percent at
county level. The number of Mongolian cadres accounted for 50 percent of
the total number of cadres in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.
The rights of the national autonomous regions to
economic, cultural and social development are given special consideration.
Before the founding of the People's Republic of China, the economic,
cultural and social development in minority areas was extremely backward.
At that time, some areas were still at the stage of primitive clan
communes, with people practicing slash-and-burn cultivation. The minority
nationalities lived in dire poverty. The average life expectancy was only
30 years, and epidemic diseases were rampant, with the result that the
population decreased year after year. After the founding of New China, the
people's government actively helped the minority nationalities develop
their economies and culture in an effort to change their outdated mode of
production. This enabled them to leap over several historical stages of
social development. Now most of the minority nationalities have solved the
problem of food and clothing, and the total population of the minority
nationalities increased from 35 million in 1953 to 91.20 million in 1990.
The growth rate of the population of minority nationalities is faster than
that of the Hans. The average life expectancy of the minority
nationalities is over 60, an increase of more than 30 years over the
past.
In order to help minority nationalities develop
their economies, the state has carried out economic construction on a
large scale in minority areas. In some of these areas where there was no
industry at all in the past, many large modern industrial enterprises have
been set up. These include the Karamay Oilfield in Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region, the Baotou Iron and Steel Co. in the Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region, the Longyang Xia Hydroelectric Power Station in
Qinghai, the Daba Power Plant in Guizhou, the Yangbajin Thermal and Power
Station in Tibet, the Guizhou Aluminium Works in Guizhou, the Holingol
River Coalfield in Inner Mongolia, the North Xinjiang Railway in Xinjiang,
the Sichuan-Tibet Highway and the Qinghai-Tibet Highway. Before
liberation, there were no highways worthy of the name in Tibet. When the
British wanted to send a car to the Dalai Lama as a gift, it had to be
dismantled and carried to Lhasa by yak-back. At present, a highway network
centered on Lhasa has been built, its mileage reaching 21,800 kilometers,
and many domestic and international airlines have already opened. The
state always gives aid in the form of labor, material and financial
resources to national autonomous regions. Today the central government
provides subsidies totalling nearly 8 billion yuan a year to minority
areas in eight provinces and autonomous regions. Of them, Tibet receives
more than 1.2 billion yuan. Besides, the state also allocates special
funds totalling 600 million yuan a year to aid minority areas, such as
development funds to support underdeveloped areas, subsidies for areas
inhabited by minority nationalities, special investments in capital
construction in frontier areas, as well as operating expenses to subsidize
border construction. The government pursues a tax-reduction and
tax-exemption policy towards poverty-stricken minority areas in addition
to many special measures adopted to lighten their financial burdens,
provide preferential investment for them and send them help in the form of
brain power and wholesale contract to enable them to get rid of poverty.
Special funds have been set up to supply food and clothing to minority
areas. The government has also arranged for the economically developed
areas to provide assistance to the economic construction in minority
areas. The economic construction in minority areas has made great progress
thanks to help from the state and efforts by the local people. The total
output value of industry and agriculture of minority regions in 1949 was
3.66 billion yuan; of this, 3.12 billion yuan came from agricultural
production and 540 million yuan from industrial production. In the same
areas the total industrial and agricultural output value in 1990 came to
227.28 billion yuan, an increase of 23.6 times by calculating at 1980
constant price. Of this, the value of agricultural output was 97.776
billion yuan, up 8.1 times; and 129.506 billion yuan for industry, a hike
of 135.5 times.
As for employment policy, the Chinese government
has formulated a special policy for the minority nationalities. The
government requires that state-owned enterprises in minority areas give
precedence to local citizens of the minority nationalities over all others
when recruiting workers, and that various local governments, when
recruiting workers for state-owned enterprises, should employ minority
farmers and herdsmen from rural and pastoral areas in a planned
way.
The Chinese government has greatly developed
medical and health undertakings in the minority regions, tackling the
problem of shortage of doctors and medicine that has existed for a long
time there. In 1990, health organizations in those regions increased to
31,973, providing 359,830 hospital beds, and the ranks of doctors and
nurses have grown to 488,600. While furthering the practice of modern
medicine, the government encourages the development of traditional
minority medical practice including the Tibetan, Uygur, Mongolian and Dai
medicines. The central government has sent a large number of medical teams
to minority regions. During the period from 1973 to mid-1987, the state
organized medical teams totalling 2,600 persons from some dozen provinces
and cities and sent them into Tibet.
The Chinese government has paid a great deal of
attention to maintaining and developing the excellent traditional cultures
of various nationalities, and made tremendous efforts to promote the
culture and education of the minority nationalities. By 1990, there had
been 75 institutions of higher learning established in minority areas
where in previous years there were none. A total of 12 nationality
colleges run specially for minority nationality students have been set up
in different parts of the country. In addition, some well-known
universities including Beijing University and Qinghua University run
classes specially for minority nationality students. When enrolling new
students, colleges and vocational secondary schools appropriately relax
admission standards for minority examinees. The government has actively
created conditions for teenagers living in pastoral and remote areas to
receive education by establishing boarding schools in minority areas,
where students coming from pastoral, mountainous and poverty-stricken
areas usually enjoy grants-in-aid. The state has transferred many teachers
from inland and coastal areas to remote minority regions to help expand
educational undertakings there. Between 1974 and 1988, the number of
teachers helping in Tibet alone numbered 2,969. The enrollment of minority
students in colleges and universities throughout the country in 1989 was
102.4 times that of 1950; in ordinary middle schools, they totalled 70.3
times that of 1951; and in primary schools, 11.2 times that of
1951.
China's law stipulates that all minority peoples
have the freedom to use and develop their own spoken and written
languages. In the performance of their functions, the selfgovernment
organs in autonomous regions should use one or several locally used
languages according to the regulations of autonomy set by the autonomous
regions. Those organs which simultaneously use several commonly used
languages in their work can give priority to the language of the
nationality which exercises regional autonomy. The spoken and written
languages of minority nationalities are equal to the Han language
(Chinese) in judicial activities. Citizens of all nationalities have the
right to use the language of their own nationality in legal proceedings.
Trials in regions where minority nationalities live in compact
communities. or which are inhabited by many nationalities should be
conducted in the commonly used language of the locality. Indictments,
court verdicts, notices and other documents, if necessary, should be
written in one or several local languages.
The central government supports minority
nationalities in the development of culture and education through the use
of their own languages and has helped ten minority nationalities create
their own script. Both central and regional specialized publishing houses
and news agencies were established to publish minority-language
newspapers, magazines and books, which in 1989, according to statistics,
were respectively 3.1, 7.6 and 5.8 times the number published throughout
the country in 1952. People in minority regions can tune in to the Central
People's Broadcasting Station every day to listen to programs in
Mongolian, Tibetan, Uygur, Kazak and Korean languages. Each minority
region runs radio and TV programs in one or several minority languages
appropriate to the nationality population living there.
The Chinese government fully respects the
traditional culture and customs of minority nationalities, supports
various minority arts, and encourages minority people to go in for all
forms of artistic and sports activities. People from minority areas can
take holidays on their own traditional festivals. Gold, silver and other
raw materials are allotted in certain amounts by the government to the
minority peoples for the production of the daily necessities or luxury
articles including silks, satins, shoes, hats, jewelry, jade artifacts and
gold or silver ornaments.
The disparity between the minority regions and the
inland and coastal areas arose and developed over a long historical
period. For more than 40 years since the People's Republic was founded,
the Chinese government has made positive achievements in its effort to
narrow the gap, promote social development and bring about a change for
the better in the backward minority areas.
VIII. Family Planning and Protection Of Human
Rights
The Chinese government implements a family planning
policy in the light of the Constitution, with the aim of promoting
economic and social development, raising people's living standards,
enhancing the quality of its population and safeguarding the people's
rights to enjoy a better life.
China is a developing country with the biggest
population in the world. Many people, little arable land, comparatively
inadequate per-capita share of natural resources plus a relatively
backward economy and culture -- these features spell out China's basic
national conditions.
The population which is expanding too quickly poses
a sharp contradiction to economic and social development, the utilization
of resources and environmental protection, places a serious constraint on
China's economic and social development, and drags improvement of
livelihood and the quality of the people. By the end of 1990, the mainland
population had reached 1.14 billion. With such an immense population base,
China, despite the implementation of birth control, still sees a yearly
net increase of 17 million people, a number equal to the population of a
medium-sized country. As for the per-capita area of cultivated land, it
had dropped to 1.3 mu, representing only 25 percent of the world average.
Similarly, the per-capita share of freshwater resources is just one
quarter of the world average. China's grain production ranks first in the
world, but divided among the population, the amount of grain per person
accounts for just 22 percent of that in the United States. More than a
quarter of the annual addition to the national income is consumed by the
new population born during the same year. As a result, funds for
accumulation have to be cut, and the speed of economic growth slowed down.
The rapid swelling of the population has brought about many pressures on
the country's employment, education, housing, medical care, and
communications and transportation. Faced with the gravity of this
situation, the government, in order to guarantee people's minimum living
conditions and to enable citizens not only to have enough to eat and wear
but also to grow better off, cannot do as some people imagine -- wait for
a high level of economic development to initiate a natural decline in
birthrate. If we did so, the population would grow without restriction,
and the economy would deteriorate steadily. Hence, China has to strive for
economic growth by trying in every possible way to increase the productive
forces, while at the same time practice the policy of family planning to
strictly control population growth so that it may suit economic and social
development. This is the only correct choice that any government
responsible to the people and their descendants can make under China's
given set of special circumstances.
It is universally acknowledged that China has
achieved tremendous successes in family planning. The birthrate dropped by
a big margin from 33.43 per thousand in 1970 to 21.06 per thousand in
1990, and the natural population growth dropped from 25.83 per thousand to
14.39 per thousand. In 1970, the child-bearing rate of Chinese women was
5.81, and the figure decreased to 2.31 in 1990. At present, the above
three indicators are lower than the average level of other developing
countries. To a certain extent, this success has mitigated the
contradiction between China's ballooning population and its economic and
social development. It has played an important role in advancing socialist
modernization and raising the living standard and the quality of the
population. Also it has been an important contribution to the stability of
the world's population.
The Chinese government, proceeding from national
conditions, has fixed the target of population growth and formulated the
following family planning policy: delayed marriage and postponement of
having children, giving birth to fewer but healthier children, and one
family, one child. Rural families facing genuine difficulties (including
households with a single daughter) can have a second child after an
interval of several years. Family planning is also being encouraged among
minority nationalities to further their well-being and prosperity, and is
based on the minority people's own free will. The specific requirements
for minorities are different from those for Han families and are
determined by the governments of autonomous regions and provinces
according to the population, economy, resources, culture and customs of
each nationality. Such a population policy, taking into account both the
state's necessity to control population growth and the masses' real
problems and degree of acceptance, tallies with China's actual economic
and social situation and conforms to the people's fundamental interests.
As experience proves, the policy has been understood and supported by the
masses after thoroughgoing publicity and education. The fourth census
showed that among the children born in 1989 throughout the country, the
more-than-three-children birthrate dropped to 19.32 percent from 62.21
percent in 1970.
China adheres to the principle of combining
government guidance with the wishes of the masses when carrying out its
family planning policy. Since it involves all families, it would be
impossible to put the policy into effect in a country with a population of
more than 1.1 billion without the masses' understanding, support and
conscientious participation. Family planning is also a reform of social
custom and cannot possibly be carried out just by administrative orders.
In the countryside, which is inhabited by 80 percent of the population,
millennia-old traditional ideas remain influential, the economy is
backward in some areas, and the social welfare and guarantee systems are
still inadequate. People have real difficulties in their production and
livelihood. Given these factors, the government has always given priority
to tireless publicity and educational work among the masses to enhance
public awareness that birth control, as a fundamental policy, has a direct
bearing on the nation's prosperity and people's happy family life.
Government officials are required to take the lead
in carrying out the policy and set a good example. In recent years, the
Chinese Family Planning Association has set up more than 600,000
grass-roots branches with 32 million members to aid the masses in
self-education, self-management and self-service, combining ideological
education with helping the masses solve practical problems.
At the same time, the government has adopted some
necessary economic and administrative measures as supplementary means.
These measures are all adopted in keeping with the law, and with the
ultimate aim of persuasion.
The family planning program puts contraception
first, to protect the health of women and children. The government has
made great efforts to spread scientific knowledge of contraceptive
practices, and to provide couples of child-bearing age who do not want
child with safe, efficacious, simple and inexpensive contraceptives and
the choice of a birth-control operation. At present, about 75 percent of
the couples of child-bearing age throughout the country are resorting to
various kinds of contraceptive practices. All forms of forced abortion are
resolutely opposed. Artificial abortion, only as a remedy for
contraception failure, is performed on a voluntary basis and with
guarantee of safety. In a situation of a notably lower birthrate, the
ratio of annual births to artificial abortions is about the medium level
in the current world. This has resulted from effective practices of
contraception. Now China is adopting practical and effective measures to
further lower the ratio.
China's population policy has two objectives:
control of population growth and improvement in quality of the population.
Work in this field not only encourages couples of child-bearing age to
have fewer children but also provides them with mother care, baby care and
advice on optimum methods of child-bearing and child-rearing. These
services include premarriage check-ups, heredity consultation, pre-natal
diagnosis and care during pregnancy to help couples have sound, healthy
babies.
Drowning or abandoning female infants, a pernicious
practice left over from feudal society, occurs much less often now, but
has not been stamped out entirely in some remote areas. China's law
clearly forbids the drowning of infants and other acts of killing them.
The government has adopted practical measures for handling these kinds of
criminal offenses according to law.
China's family planning policy fully conforms to
Item 9 of the United Nations' Declaration of Mexico City on Population and
Growth in 1984, which demands that "countries which consider that their
population growth rate hinders their national development plans should
adopt appropriate population plans and programs." It also accords with the
UN World Population Plan of Action which stresses that every country has
the sovereign right to formulate and implement its own population policy.
Some people who censure China's family planning policy as "violating human
rights" and being "inhuman" do not understand or consider China's real
situation. But some others have deliberately distorted the facts in an
attempt to put pressure on China and interfere in China's internal
affairs. China has only two alternatives in handling its population
problem: to implement the family planning policy or to allow blind growth
in births. The former choice enables children to be born and grow up
healthily and live a better life, while the latter one leads to
unrestrained expansion of population so that the majority of the people
will be short of food and clothing, while some will even tend to die
young. Which of the two pays more attention to human rights and is more
humane? The answer is obvious.
X. Active Participation in
International Human Rights Activities
China recognizes and respects the purposes and
principles of the Charter of the United Nations related to the protection
and promotion of human rights. It appreciates and supports the efforts of
the UN in promoting universal respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms, and takes an active part in UN activities in the human rights
field. China advocates mutual respect for state sovereignty and maintains
that priority should be given to the safeguarding of the right of the
people of the developing countries to subsistence and development, thus
creating the necessary conditions for people all over the world to enjoy
various human rights. China is opposed to interfering in other countries'
internal affairs on the pretext of human rights and has made unremitting
efforts to eliminate various abnormal phenomena and strengthen
international cooperation in the field of human rights.
In April 1955, Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai signed
the "Draft Final Communique of the Asian-African Conference" (also known
as the "Bandung Declaration") at the Asian and African Conference held in
Bandung, Indonesia. The communique declared that the conference fully
supports the fundamental principles concerning human rights laid down in
the UN Charter, and made the "respect for fundamental human rights and for
the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations" the
first of the ten principles of peaceful coexistence. In May of the same
year, Zhou Enlai, speaking at an enlarged session of the Standing
Committee of the National People's Congress, said that "the ten principles
contained in the Bandung Declaration also include respect for fundamental
human rights and for the purposes and principles of the Charter of the
United Nations.... All these are the principles that have been
consistently advocated by the Chinese people and adhered to by
China."
In his speech during the general debate at the 41st
session of the United Nations General Assembly held in 1986, the Chinese
foreign minister, when mentioning the 20th anniversary of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, pointed out that "the
two covenants have played a positive role in realizing the purposes and
principles of the UN Charter concerning respect for human rights. The
Chinese government has consistently supported these purposes and
principles." In September 1988, the Chinese foreign minister pointed out
in his speech at the 43rd session of the United Nations General Assembly
that the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights" is "the first
international instrument which systematically sets forth the specific
contents regarding respect for and protection of fundamental human rights.
Despite its historical limitations, the Declaration has exerted a
farreaching influence on the development of the post-war international
human rights activities and played a positive role in this regard."
China has taken an active part in the UN activities
in the sphere of human rights. Since resuming its lawful seat in the
United Nations in 1971, China has sent its delegation to attend every
session of the UN Economic and Social Council and of the UN General
Assembly, and has taken an active part in deliberation of human rights
issues and stated its views on the issue of human rights, making its
contributions to enriching the connotation of the concept of human rights.
Chinese delegations attended as observers the UN Human Rights Commission's
sessions in 1979, 1980 and 1981. China was elected a member of the Human
Rights Commission at the first regular session of the UN Economic and
Social Council and has been a member ever since. Since 1984 the human
rights affairs experts recommended by China to the Human Rights Commission
have been continually elected members and alternate members of the
Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of
Minorities. The Chinese members have played an important role in the
sub-commission. They have become members of the Working Group on
Indigenous Populations and the Working Group on Communications affiliated
to the sub-commission.
China has taken an active part in drafting and
formulating international legal instruments on human rights within the UN,
and has sent delegates to participate in working groups charged with
drafting these instruments, including the UN Convention on the Rights of
Children, the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of
All Migrant Workers and Their Families, the Convention against Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, the Declaration
on the Right and Responsibility of Individuals, Groups and Organs of
Society to Promote and Protect Universally Recognized Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms, and the Declaration on the Protection of Rights of
Persons Belonging to National, Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic
Minorities. The meetings of these working groups paid much attention to
the suggestions and amendments put forward by China. Since 1981 China has
participated in every session of the governmental experts group organized
by the UN Commission on Human Rights to draft the Declaration on the Right
to Development and made positive suggestions until the Declaration on the
Right to Development was passed by the 41st session of the UN General
Assembly in 1986. China energetically supported the Commission on Human
Rights in conducting worldwide consultation on the implementation of the
right to development and supported the proposal that the right to
development be discussed as an independent agenda item in the Human Rights
Commission. China has always been a cosponsor country of the Human Rights
Commission's resolution on the right to development.
Since 1980 the Chinese government has successively
signed, ratified and acceded to seven UN human rights conventions, namely
the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,
the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the
Crimes of Apartheid, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women, the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the Convention Relating
to the Status of Refugees, the Protocol Relating to the Status of
Refugees, and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment. The Chinese government has always
submitted reports on the implementation of the related conventions, and
seriously and earnestly performed the obligations it has
undertaken.
China has always upheld justice and made
unremitting efforts to safeguard the right of third world countries to
national self-determination and to stop massive infringements on human
rights. As is well known, China has for many years made unremitting
efforts to seek a just and reasonable resolution of a series of major
human rights issues, including the questions of Cambodia, Afghanistan, the
occupied Palestinian and Arab territories, South Africa and Namibia, and
Panama.
China pays close attention to the issue of the
right to development. China believes that as history develops, the concept
and connotation of human rights also develop constantly. The Declaration
on the Right to Development provides that human rights refer to both
individual rights and collective rights. This means a breakthrough in the
traditional concept of human rights and represents a result won through
many years of struggle by the newly-emerging independent countries and the
international community, a result of great significance. In the world
today the gap between the rich and the poor becomes wider and wider.
Social and economic growth in many developing countries is slow, and
one-third of the population in developing countries still live below the
poverty line. To the people in the developing countries, the most urgent
human rights are still the right to subsistence and the right to economic,
social and cultural development. Therefore, attention should first be
given to the right to development. China appeals to the international
community to attach importance and give attention to the developing
countries' right to development and adopt positive and effective measures
to eliminate injustice and unreasonable practice in the world economic
order. An earnest effort must be made to improve the international
economic environment, alleviate and gradually eliminate factors
disadvantageous to developing countries and establish a new international
economic order. Factors which have a negative influence on the right to
development, such as racism, colonialism, hegemonism and foreign
aggression, occupation and interference must be eliminated. A favorable
international environment must be created for the realization of the right
to development.
Over a long period in the UN activities in the
human rights field, China has firmly opposed to any country making use of
the issue of human rights to sell its own values, ideology, political
standards and mode of development, and to any country interfering in the
internal affairs of other countries on the pretext of human rights, the
internal affairs of developing countries in particular, and so hurting the
sovereignty and dignity of many developing countries. Together with other
developing countries, China has waged a resolute struggle against all such
acts of interference, and upheld justice by speaking out from a sense of
fairness. China has always maintained that human rights are essentially
matters within the domestic jurisdiction of a country. Respect for each
country's sovereignty and non-interference in internal affairs are
universally recognized principles of international law, which are
applicable to all fields of international relations, and of course
applicable to the field of human rights as well. Section 7 of Article 2 of
the Charter of the United Nations stipulates that "Nothing contained in
the present Charter shall authorize the United Nations to intervene in
matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any
state...." The Declaration on the Inadmissibility of Intervention in the
Domestic Affairs of States and the Protection of Their Independence and
Sovereignty, the Declaration on Principles of International Law Concerning
Friendly Relations and Cooperation Among States in Accordance With the
Charter of the United Nations, and the Declaration on the Inadmissibility
of Intervention and Interference in the Internal Affairs of States, which
were all adopted by the United Nations, contain the following explicit
provisions: "No State or group of States has the right to intervene,
directly or indirectly, for any reason whatsoever, in the internal or
external affairs of any other State," and every state has the duty "to
refrain from the exploitation and the distortion of human rights issues as
a means of interference in the internal affairs of States, of exerting
pressure on other States or creating distrust and disorder within and
among States or groups of States." These provisions of international
instruments reflect the will of the overwhelming majority of countries to
safeguard the fundamental principles of international law and maintain a
normal relationship between states. They are basic principles that must be
followed in international human rights activities. The argument that the
principle of non-interference in internal affairs does not apply to the
issue of human rights is, in essence, a demand that sovereign states give
up their state sovereignty in the field of human rights, a demand that is
contrary to international law. Using the human rights issue for the
political purpose of imposing the ideology of one country on another is no
longer a question of human rights, but a manifestation of power politics
in the form of interference in the internal affairs of other countries.
Such abnormal practice in international human rights activities must be
eliminated.
China is in favor of strengthening international
cooperation in the realm of human rights on the basis of mutual
understanding and seeking a common ground while reserving differences.
However, no country in its effort to realize and protect human rights can
take a route that is divorced from its history and its economic, political
and cultural realities. A human rights system must be ratified and
protected by each sovereign state through its domestic legislation. As
pointed out in a resolution of the UN General Assembly at its 45th
session: "Each State has the right freely to choose and develop its
political, social, economic and cultural systems." It is also noted in the
resolution of the 46th conference on human rights that no single mode of
development is applicable to all cultures and peoples. It is neither
proper nor feasible for any country to judge other countries by the
yardstick of its own mode or to impose its own mode on others. Therefore,
the purpose of international protection of human rights and related
activities should be to promote normal cooperation in the international
field of human rights and international harmony, mutual understanding and
mutual respect. Consideration should be given to the differing views on
human rights held by countries with different political, economic and
social systems, as well as different historical, religious and cultural
backgrounds. International human rights activities should be carried on in
the spirit of seeking common ground while reserving differences, mutual
respect, and the promotion of understanding and cooperation.
China has always held that to effect international
protection of human rights, the international community should interfere
with and stop acts that endanger world peace and security, such as gross
human rights violations caused by colonialism, racism, foreign aggression
and occupation, as well as apartheid, racial discrimination, genocide,
slave trade and serious violation of human rights by international
terrorist organizations. These are important aspects of international
cooperation in the realm of human rights and an arduous task facing
current international human rights protection activities.
There is now a change over the world pattern from
the old to the new, and the world is more turbulent than before.
Hegemonism and power politics continue to exist and endanger world peace
and development. Interference in other countries' internal affairs and the
pushing of power politics on the pretext of human rights are obstructing
the realization of human rights and fundamental freedoms. In face of such
a world situation, China is ready to work with the international community
in a continued and unremitting effort to build a just and reasonable new
order of international relations and to realize the purpose of the United
Nations to uphold and promote human rights and fundamental
freedoms.
information Office of the State
Council of the People's Republic of China
November 1991, Beijing
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