Christian lawyers call for Chinese colleagues’ release
By Dan Wooding, Founder of the ASSIST News Service
NEW DEHLI, INDIA (ANS – October 30, 2015)
- Advocates Asia, a forum of Christian lawyers in 20 Asian countries,
has urged the Chinese government to release “immediately and
unconditionally” human rights lawyers and activists detained since early
July.
According to Anto Akkara of World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
the participants of the 14th convention of Advocates Asia, held in New
Delhi from October 22-24, expressed “deep concern over [the] arrests,
detention and disappearance of human rights lawyers and activists in
China, who have been defending individuals and their rights to freedom
of religion or belief and freedom of expression.”
They
reiterated that the “religious beliefs of all persons must be respected
… Coercion, harassment and persecution of the [detained] lawyers and
activists is ... unjust and harsh,”
The
story went on to say that at the conference, which was attended by 120
delegates, a summary of the statement of London-based Christian
Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) on the arrests of the lawyers was read out.
In
its July 13 statement, CSW had quoted the China Human Rights Lawyers
Concern Group, saying that “114 individuals have been targeted in
sweeping arrests. Those detained include human rights lawyers and
activists [and] also relatives of lawyers and staff from lawyer firms.”
Many
of those detained, the statement pointed out, were “signatories to a
letter condemning the forced disappearance of lawyer Wang Yu, who had
defended members of Falun Gong, a spiritual practice banned in China,”
“Among
the lawyers arrested were many who have defended the right to freedom
of religion or belief and freedom of expression, including Li Heping, a
Christian lawyer who had defended Christians, Falun Gong practitioners
and other lawyers.”
CSW
also highlighted the case of lawyer Zhang Kai, who defended Protestant
pastor Huang Yizi, who protested the demolition of churches and crosses
in China’s Zhejiang province. Two Christian activists, including one
leader of an unregistered church, have also been questioned, CSW said.
Though
the number of detainees rose to 226 by July 20, CSW in a subsequent
statement pointed out that, “while the majority have been released, at
least six are being held incommunicado and at least 14 are in some form
of detention or confinement.”
This followed international protests led by UN human rights experts, the European Union, UK, US and other international groups.
“We
are meeting in a free atmosphere, but the Christian lawyers of China
even do not have the liberty to meet,” said Min-Choon Lee, a Malaysian
lawyer and president of Advocates Asia.
Lee
told the conference he too had been arrested in early 2014, during
Malaysian Christians’ fight for the right to use the word “Allah.”
Vietnamese
Christian lawyer Nguyen Van Dai, who was instrumental in setting up an
independent human rights commission in Vietnam, has been under house
arrest since 2006, Robin David, a New Delhi-based lawyer and executive
committee member of Advocates Asia, told the conference.
“Van
Dai participated at the Advocates International Conferences in
Washington DC in 2000 and 2004. He was arrested in 2006 and is under
house arrest even now,” David told World Watch Monitor.
“I
had the privilege of meeting him at both the conferences. He registered
for the Advocates Asia Conference in 2006. However, he did not show up.
He is still under house arrest.”
“Ours
is not a profession, but a vocation,” said Michael F. Saldanha, a
Catholic and retired judge of the Mumbai high court – in his keynote
address on the theme ‘Advocates as Catalysts for Change.’ “A lot of
social injustices can be stopped if lawyers give up their indifferent
attitude to human rights violations. Most atrocities take place because
of the total failure of the legal system,” he said.
World
Watch Monitor said that Jamie Williams, an American who has been
teaching law in the Pelita Harapan University of Indonesia for five
years, said that the type of religious persecution experienced in the
West has “little significance” compared to the incidents in Asian
countries.
“In
the US, persecution could mean a photographer being forced to take
snaps of gay weddings against his or her will. But, in the Asian
context, it is much more stark and brute,” he said.
“The
expansion of Islamic fundamentalist groups is posing a great threat to
religious freedom in Central Asian countries,” said Ekaterina Smyslova, a
lawyer from Russia. “Even the rights of Muslims to live according to
the Qur’an is being threatened.”
Photo
caption: 1) Advocates Asia founder and president Min-Choon Lee was
arrested in Malaysia as part of the ongoing battle for Christians to be
able to use the word 'Allah'.(World Watch Monitor) 2) Chinese lawyer,
Zhang Kai.3) Dan Wooding.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 74, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma,
to whom he has been married for more than 52 years. They have two sons,
Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is
the founder and international director of ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints
in Strategic Times) and the ASSIST News Service (ANS). He is also the
author of some 45 books and has two US-based TV programs and a radio
show called “Front Page Radio.”
You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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