US-China Relations (3rd Ed)

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US-China Relations (3rd Ed) Page 46

by Robert G Sutter


  other provinces and many rural areas, such independent gatherings experi-

  ence harassment by local authorities, and their leaders have been beaten,

  detained, and imprisoned. 53

  Many Chinese Protestants reject the official church, known as the Three-

  Self Patriotic Movement, for political and theological reasons. The govern-

  ment claims it has encouraged unofficial Protestant churches to register with

  the state but that many of them have been discouraged from doing so by

  foreign Christian groups. Chinese pressure on such unofficial churches has

  included arresting leaders of house churches, harassing members of congre-

  gations, shutting down places of worship, and denying visas to foreign mis-

  sionaries. 54

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  Chapter 11

  China has engaged in dialogue with the Vatican, which broke ties with

  China in 1951. Both sides express an interest in improved relations. One of

  the key obstacles to normalization has been China’s rejection of the Holy

  See’s authority to appoint bishops. In April 2015 a Chinese bishop was

  ordained in Guangdong province with the tacit consent of the Vatican. Bei-

  jing and Pope Francis have expressed interest in improving relations. Obsta-

  cles remain, however, particularly regarding the appointment of bishops, the

  Vatican’s diplomatic ties with Taiwan, and the Vatican’s stances on religious

  freedom in China. 55

  Tibetans

  Religious freedom and human rights issues in Tibet have a long history in

  Sino-American relations. Partly because of past clandestine US support for

  Tibetan insurgencies against Chinese rule following the escape to India from

  Chinese rule in Tibet by the Dalai Lama and many thousands of his followers

  in the late 1950s, the Chinese government remains wary of American inten-

  tions regarding Tibet. Even after the normalization of US diplomatic rela-

  tions with China, US ambitions to challenge Chinese sovereignty over Tibet

  have been revealed from time to time as Congress has asserted its view of

  Tibet as a separate country, though the US administration consistently ac-

  cepts Chinese sovereignty over Tibet. The intertwined issues of sovereignty,

  border security, and ethnic and religious freedom make the issue of Tibet

  difficult to manage in Sino-American relations. Added to the mix is the

  attraction of many Americans to the Dalai Lama, the leader of Tibetans

  abroad who also enjoys a strong but suppressed following among Tibetans in

  China. 56

  Coming against this background, a series of demonstrations on March 10,

  2008, began in Lhasa and other Tibetan regions of China to mark the forty-

  ninth anniversary of an unsuccessful Tibetan uprising against Chinese rule in

  1959. The demonstrations appeared to begin peacefully with small groups

  that were then contained by security forces. But the protests and the response

  of the PRC authorities escalated in the ensuing days, spreading from the

  Tibetan Autonomous Region into parts of Sichuan, Gansu, and Qinghai

  Provinces with Tibetan populations. By March 14, 2008, mobs of angry

  people were burning and looting establishments in downtown Lhasa. Author-

  ities of the PRC responded by sealing off Tibet and bringing in large-scale

  security forces. The Chinese government defended its actions as appropriate

  and necessary to restore civil order and prevent further violence. Media,

  interest groups, and some officials in the West responded to the Chinese

  actions by calling for boycotts of the opening ceremonies of the Beijing

  Olympics and calling on China to hold talks with the Dalai Lama. 57

  Issues of Human Rights in Contemporary US-China Relations

  257

  The Chinese government and many Chinese people see China as having

  provided Tibet with extensive economic assistance and development using

  money from central government and provincial government coffers, and Chi-

  nese officials often seem perplexed at the simmering anger many Tibetans

  nevertheless retain against them. Despite economic development, Tibetans

  charge that the PRC interferes with Tibetan culture and religion. They cite as

  examples: Beijing’s interference in 1995 in the choice of the Panchen Lama,

  Tibet’s second-highest-ranking personage; enactment of a “reincarnation

  law” in 2007 requiring Buddhist monks who wish to reincarnate to obtain

  prior approval from Beijing; and China’s policy of conducting “patriotic

  education” campaigns, as well as efforts to foster atheism, among the Tibetan

  religious community. The PRC defends the campaigns as tools that among

  other things help monks become loyal, law-abiding citizens of China. 58

  Increasingly expansive government controls on Tibetan religious life and

  practice have caused or contributed to discontent in Tibetan areas. The State

  Department has annually reported “serious human rights abuses” of Tibetans,

  including extrajudicial detentions and killings, arbitrary arrests, and severe

  mistreatment, torture, and deaths of Tibetan detainees and prisoners of con-

  science. In addition to chafing at religious controls, many Tibetans complain

  of the domination of the local economy by Han Chinese, particularly in urban

  areas; forced resettlement; cultural preservation that amounts to cultural reg-

  ulation; and the adverse environmental effects of Beijing’s development

  projects in the region. China’s leaders remain resolute. In August and Sep-

  tember 2015 they convened the Sixth Work Forum on Tibet and issued a

  white paper on Tibet, both of which touted PRC achievements in Tibet,

  reaffirmed PRC policies, and condemned the Dalai Lama’s “separatist activ-

  ities.” As the CCP has sought to control the reincarnation process for Tibetan

  spiritual leaders, Beijing has asserted that the government has the prerogative to determine the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama. For his part, the 14th Dalai

  Lama has suggested that he may not be reincarnated at all. 59

  The Obama administration sought to show its support for religious free-

  dom for Tibetans in China, notably through presidential meetings with the

  Dalai Lama. President Obama met with the Dalai Lama four times. 60

  Uighur Muslims

  Violent clashes in July 2009 between Uighur and Han Chinese people in

  Urumchi, the capital city of the XUAR, left almost two hundred dead and

  hundreds arrested. American leaders, media, and NGOs supported Chinese

  government efforts to separate and arrest the fighters and end the violence,

  but they also were inclined to place blame on Chinese policies and practices

  seen to discriminate against and otherwise treat unfairly the Uighur Muslim

  people. 61

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  Chapter 11

  As reported by the Congressional Research Service, in the past decade,

  Chinese authorities have carried out especially harsh religious and ethnic

  policies against Uighurs. Once the predominant ethnic group in the XUAR,

  Xinjiang’s roughly ten million Uighurs now constitute less than half of the

  region’s population of twenty-two million as many Han Chinese have mi-

  grated there, particularly to Urumqi, the capital. Uighurs have complained of

  restrictions on religious and cultur
al practices, the regulation and erosion of ethnic identity, economic discrimination, arbitrary harassment by PRC public

  security forces, and a lack of consultation on regional policies. Government

  restrictions affect the training and role of imams, the celebration of Ramadan, participation in the hajj, and use of the Uighur language. Uighur children are

  forbidden from entering mosques or studying the Koran while CCP mem-

  bers, civil servants, and teachers are not allowed to openly practice Islam and are discouraged from fasting during Ramadan. In December 2014 the Urumqi government banned the wearing of veils in public areas. The XUAR

  government’s redevelopment of the ancient heart of Kashgar, a center of

  Islamic and Uighur history and culture, also has angered many Uighurs. 62

  PRC leaders often mix the religious and cultural practices of Uighurs in

  Xinjiang with criminal and subversive activities or the “three evils of reli-

  gious extremism, splittism, and terrorism.” The East Turkestan Islamic

  Movement (ETIM) and the Turkestan Islamic Party (TIP) are blamed by

  Beijing for violent attacks in various parts of China since the 1990s. ETIM

  and TIP are Uighur groups that advocate the creation of an independent

  Islamic state in Xinjiang, are believed to be based in Afghanistan and Paki-

  stan, and have had some ties to Al Qaeda and the Taliban. PRC officials

  assert that Islamic fundamentalism, jihad, and terrorist techniques, much of

  them promoted over the Internet, have contributed to violence in Xinjiang,

  and have referred to Islamist-inspired attacks in Beijing and Kunming as well

  as Xinjiang as “the greatest threat since the founding of the PRC.” They also

  claim that one hundred to three hundred Uighur Muslims have been iden-

  tified among ISIS fighters. The United States designated the ETIM as a

  terrorist organization under Executive Order 13224 in 2002 (to block terrorist

  financing) and placed it on the Terrorist Exclusion List in 2004 (to prevent

  entry of terrorists). The ETIM also is on the United Nations’ lists of terrorist organizations. 63

  The PRC government’s three-pronged strategy in response to Uighur

  grievances and unrest involves (1) carrying out a “strike hard” campaign

  against “religious extremism,” “separatism,” and “terrorism”; (2) developing

  the XUAR economy; and (3) introducing policies to assimilate Uighurs into

  Han society. Foreign critics say the policies do not address long-standing

  Uighur religious, ethnic, and political grievances well, and Uighurs accused

  of criminal acts have been deprived of procedural protections that are pro-

  vided under China’s constitution and laws. Meanwhile, assimilation policies

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  259

  may contribute to the erosion of Uighur identity and breed further resent-

  ment. 64

  Falun Gong

  Falun Gong is a movement that combines spiritual beliefs with an exercise

  and meditation regimen derived from traditional Chinese practices known as

  qigong. The movement remained out of the public spotlight while it gained millions of adherents across China in the 1990s. On April 25, 1999, thousands of adherents gathered in Beijing to protest the government’s growing

  restrictions on their activities. The demonstration seemed to take the Chinese

  leadership by surprise. The ability of the movement to mobilize such an

  impressive show of support at the seat of Chinese administrative power was

  viewed as a threat—one that reflected infiltration of Falun Gong supporters

  throughout the police and security forces and other sensitive apparatus of the

  Chinese government. 65

  Party leader Jiang Zemin led a major crackdown against the movement

  that continued for years. The harsh measures against suspected adherents

  who refused to recant their beliefs and cooperate with the authorities led to

  widespread reports by the Department of State, US-based and other human

  rights groups, and foreign media of torture; estimates of adherents who have

  died in state custody range from several hundred to a few thousand. The

  Chinese government acknowledges that deaths while in custody have oc-

  curred but has denied that they were caused by mistreatment. As the Chinese

  suppression succeeded in wiping out the movement in China, its salience as a

  human rights issue in US-China relations declined. 66

  Hong Kong

  The US government, especially the Congress, took a special interest in work-

  ing to ensure that Hong Kong’s transfer to Chinese sovereignty in 1997

  under terms of a Sino-British agreement reached in 1984 did not impinge on

  Hong Kong’s autonomy and on the nascent democracy movement in the

  territory. As time passed and Chinese rule caused few major controversies,

  American interest in Hong Kong as a human rights issue declined for several

  years.

  A series of sit-in street protests, often called the Umbrella Movement,

  occurred in Hong Kong from September to December 2014. They registered

  widespread discontent with, among other things, the limited franchise of

  Hong Kong voters who were not able under provisions of the Chinese-passed

  Basic Law governing Hong Kong to directly elect the chief executive of

  Hong Kong. Beijing used an indirect election by a group of several hundred

  local notables to ensure that the chief executive was compatible with China’s

  interests in Hong Kong. 67

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  Chapter 11

  The Umbrella Movement captured the attention of US media, interest

  groups, and Congress, who showed their strong support for the movement’s

  objective of direct election and more accountable government. These

  Americans primarily paid attention to Beijing’s perceived encroachment on

  Hong Kong rights and interference in the territory’s affairs in ways that

  violated the spirit of the “One Country, Two Systems” concept incorporated

  into the Sino-British Joint Declaration signed in 1984. According to a list

  provided by the Asia Society, Hong Kong grievances voiced by many, but

  often not a majority of, political economic and social leaders in Hong Kong

  included:

  • Beijing’s perceived manipulation of the nomination procedures for direct

  election of the chief executive of Hong Kong in 2017

  • Beijing’s banning in 2016 of elected members of the city’s legislative

  council because of their association with Hong Kong independence

  • Political and economic pressure on local student activists and their fami-

  lies who are associated with the Umbrella Movement protests demanding

  more local democracy

  • Increased pressure and tightened censorship on the press and local media

  • Increased scrutiny and pressure on both foreign and Hong Kong NGOs

  • Instances of perceived encroachment on the autonomy of the local judici-

  ary

  • Instances of encroachment on local academic freedom

  • The kidnappings and rendition to the mainland of non-Chinese-passport-

  holding Hong Kong booksellers by mainland security personnel (dis-

  cussed above)68

  US influence in Hong Kong–Beijing relations seemed small. The Obama

  government officials generally eschewed comment. The State Department’s

&nb
sp; annual reports on human rights in Hong Kong registered a long list of

  American concerns. There were some congressional hearings and statements.

  Overall, the issue of Beijing’s interference in Hong Kong reinforced negative

  trends in US-China relations.

  China’s International Challenges to Human Rights

  With its expanding international profile and greater assertiveness under Pres-

  ident Xi Jinping, Chinese government and Chinese Communist Party organs

  have been expanding the reach of their censorship and control activities

  beyond purely domestic affairs into the United States and other countries.

  Examples reported by the Asia Society and other observers include the ab-

  ductions and detaining of foreign nationals and Hong Kong residents, which

  were discussed above. Chinese consular and embassy officials warn US and

  Issues of Human Rights in Contemporary US-China Relations

  261

  other foreign think tanks, churches, media outlets, NGOs, and universities

  against giving public platforms to people they deem politically unacceptable.

  Chinese officials also have pressured or boycotted international cultural

  events ranging from book fairs to beauty pageants in order to censor certain

  topics or expel certain participants for political reasons. Beijing agents target relatives of Chinese living abroad who express views that challenge party

  orthodoxy, not only by denying them visas to visit ailing and dying parents

  but also by threatening the human rights of family relatives within China.

  Meanwhile, as also noted above are China’s massive public diplomacy/prop-

  aganda efforts that feature media distortions, censorship, and defamation of

  democratic values. 69

  US Government Policy Options

  Contemporary US government policies and practices regarding human rights

  issues in relations with China reflect the generally secondary importance of

  these issues in recent Sino-American relations. The US government has a

  range of approaches endeavoring to promote democracy, individual rights,

  and the rule of law in China; their impact has not had a substantial effect on

  the continuation of one-party authoritarian rule in China. Despite recent neg-

 

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