Human rights conditions in China deteriorated significantly in 2006, with about 100 activists, lawyers, writers and academics subjected to police custody, house arrest, incommunicado confinement, pressure in their jobs and surveillance by plainclothes security forces, a new report by Human Rights Watch said.
Several widely publicised cases involving journalists and rights lawyers were cited in the report as evidence of a severe crackdown, prompted in large part by fears that individual cases of unrest might lead to regional instability. There were 39,000 cases of “public order disruptions,” or large protests, in the first half of 2006, four times as many as 10 years ago, according to data from the Public Security Ministry.
Authorities fired and jailed journalists, shut down more than 700 online forums and ordered eight Internet search engines to filter “subversive and sensitive content” ased on 10,000 key words, according to the report, which was released on Thursday by the New York-based watchdog group. Lawyers who represented peasants protesting mistreatment were badly beaten, detained and arrested. In March, new restrictions were announced requiring protesters’ attorneys to report to local judges in cases involving 10 or more plaintiffs.
“Last year, the environment for rights defenders worsened,” said Liu Shaobo, a leading writer. “The government increased its crackdown on lawyers and also its controls on the Internet and the media. I saw more wronged cases last year than in previous years under President Hu Jintao’s governance. And dissidents were under closer surveillance.