JULY 31, 2014
 
2014822014ASIA_China_GZ.jpg (300×421)
 
Chinese human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng is seen in Beijing in this January 6, 2006 file photo.
(c) 2011 Reuters
 
After Gao Zhisheng’s years of torture and arbitrary detention, anything short of allowing him genuine freedom will surely be widely condemned.  Chinese authorities have a chance in their treatment of Gao to make a break from the previous administration’s thuggish tactics.
 
Sophie Richardson, China director
 
(New York) – The Chinese government should free the prominent human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng and refrain from imposing any further restrictions on his movement, Human Rights Watch said today. Gao has repeatedly been subjected to enforced disappearance, arbitrary detention, or imprisonment on baseless charges.
 
Gao has been imprisoned since late 2011 in Shaya Prison in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region on charges of “inciting subversion of state power,” a state security charge often used against peaceful government critics. Prison authorities have said they will release him on August 7, 2014.
 
“After Gao Zhisheng’s years of torture and arbitrary detention, anything short of allowing him genuine freedom will surely be widely condemned,” said Sophie Richardson, China director. “Chinese authorities have a chance in their treatment of Gao to make a break from the previous administration’s thuggish tactics.”
 
Earlier in July, prison authorities told Gao’s brother that Gao will be released on August 7. But they also told Gao’s brother not to come to the prison, family members and press reports said. The prison authorities told Gao’s brother they had yet to “communicate with Beijing” – presumably about the release – and that he should await further notice. Gao’s family has not received any further information about his release.
 
Gao, 50, was named “one of China’s top 10 lawyers” by state-run media in 2001. But his defense of individuals and cases considered controversial by the government, including Falun Gong practitioners, underground Christians, and villagers and small business owners in property disputes against local officials – eventually angered local and national authorities.
 
In August 2006, Gao was detained, stripped of his lawyer’s license and charged with “inciting subversion of state power.” On December 22, 2006, Gao was sentenced to three years in prison and deprived of his political rights for one year, though the sentence was suspended and Gao was given five years of probation. During that time, Gao was forcibly disappeared for more than 50 days, between September and November 2007, after he was last seen in the presence of Beijing Public Security officers at his home. He later described being severely tortured during this period.
 
In January 2009, Gao’s wife, Geng He, and their two children fled to the US. In February 2009, Gao was detained again by Chinese security officers and held incommunicado for more than a year. In response to a journalist’s query in January 2010 about Gao’s whereabouts, a Foreign Ministry spokesperson said, “He is where he should be.”
 
Gao briefly reappeared in late March 2010. In an interview with the Associated Press in April 2010, Gao revealed that he had been repeatedly tortured during this latest 14-month disappearance.
 
Gao was detained again on April 20, 2010, and his whereabouts were again unknown until December 16, 2011, a few days before the end of his five-year probation period. Xinhua, China’s state news agency, reported that day that a Beijing court had determined that Gao had violated the rules of his probation and would therefore have to serve out the three-year sentence initially delivered in December 2006. This announcement drew widespread international condemnation, including from the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).
 
Gao’s family did not receive notification about where Gao was to serve his sentence until January 1, 2012. His family has only been allowed two visits since then, even though officials generally allow monthly visits to prisoners. During those two brief visits, Gao was not allowed to discuss his conditions in prison.
 
In recent years, the Chinese government has released activists from prison only to effectively incarcerate them again under house arrest. There are concerns that Gao will face similar treatment.
 
In September 2010, the prominent rights defender Chen Guangcheng was released from more than four years in prison, but was then taken to his home and subjected to unlawful house arrest by Shandong authorities until his escape in April 2012.
 
After being imprisoned for 15 years, the Inner Mongolian dissident Hada has been held under house arrest since his “release” from prison in December 2010.
 
Gao should be released and not subjected to any further restrictions. There should be no obstacles to meeting his family and friends or to leaving the country if he chooses.
 
“The Chinese government has gone to extraordinary lengths to silence one of its most vocal critics, but paradoxically this attracted more attention to China’s poor rights records,” Richardson said. “Gao should never have been in jail in the first place, and the only way to begin mitigating the damage done is to free Gao once and for all.”
 
Chronology of Gao Zhisheng
 
JULY 31, 2014
 
2001
2001: Gao Zhisheng named “one of China’s top ten lawyers” in an event co-organized by a China Central TV and the Ministry of Justice
2004
December 31, 2004: Gao published his first open “Letter to the National People’s Congress,” appealing to the central government to stop persecuting Falun Gong practitioners.
2005
October 18, 2005: Gao wrote a second letter to the central government calling on them to halt the continuing torture and ill-treatment of detained Falun Gong practitioners. Afterwards, Gao started receiving threatening phone calls and came under round-the-clock police surveillance.
November 4, 2005: Beijing Municipal Bureau of Justice ordered Gao’s law firm to suspend practice for one year.
December 12, 2005: Gao wrote a third letter to the central government on the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners.
2006
August 2006: Gao was detained, stripped of his lawyers’ license and charged with “inciting subversion of state power”
December 22, 2006: Gao was sentenced to three years in prison, with a five-year probation, and deprived of his political rights for one year.
2007
June 2007: Gao was rewarded “Courageous Advocacy Award” of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA)
September 12, 2007: Gao sent an open letter to the US Congress denouncing the human rights situation in China and calling on the US government to boycott the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Shortly after, Gao was disappeared for over fifty days. He later described being severely tortured by Chinese police during this period.
2009
January 2009: Gao’s wife, Geng He, and two children fled to the US
February 2009: Gao was disappeared again by Chinese security officers and held incommunicado for more than a year.
2010
January 2010: Gao’s brother, Gao Zhiyi, told journalists that the Beijing police told him that Gao “lost his way and went missing.” For months, the government had denied knowing Gao’s whereabouts or any involvement in his disappearance.
January 21, 2010: In response to a journalist’s question about Gao’s whereabouts, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said, “He is where he should be.” This was the first official acknowledgement of knowledge about Gao’s whereabouts.
March 2010: Gao briefly reappeared and met reporters.
April 2010: In an interview with the Associated Press, Gao said that he had been repeatedly tortured by police during his 14-month disappearance.
April 20, 2010: Gao went missing again, and his whereabouts were again unknown until December 16, 2011
August 2010: Gao was awarded with “International Human Rights Lawyer Award” by US National Bar Association
2011
December 16, 2011: Xinhua, China’s state news agency, reported that a Beijing court had determined that Gao had violated probation rules and would therefore have to serve out the three-year sentence initially delivered in December 2006.
2014
August 7 2014: Gao is scheduled to be released from prison