Activists protest China’s human-rights record
Activists who oppose China’s repressive government and dismal human-rights record will gather for protests around the world Friday beginning at 7:30 a.m. (EDT). At Chinese embassies in Washington, London, Madrid, Berlin, Paris, Brussels, Montreal, Rome, and Stockholm, organizers plan to have leading dissidents give speeches at precisely 8:08 a.m., just as the opening ceremonies of the Olympic Games get underway in Beijing.
In China’s capital, meanwhile, three U.S. Christian activists are now missing after Beijing officers had detained them. The trio are Patrick J. Mahoney, director of the Christian Defense Coalition; Michael McMonagle, a Philadelphia Catholic pro-life activist and founder of Generation Life; and Brandi Swindell, director and co-founder of Generation Life based in Boise, Idaho. On Aug. 6 plainclothes officers rounded up the three after they unfurled in Tiananmen Square a banner reading “Jesus Christ is King” in Chinese and English. That statement was made significant in China by Cardinal Kung, the Roman Catholic bishop of Shanghai, who in 1955 was sentenced to life in prison for such declarations and for his work on behalf of the underground church. The three also laid roses to honor those killed during the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989.
Released the same day, the three scheduled a press conference for 11 a.m. Beijing time, Aug. 7. It never took place. “We have not heard from them in 14 hours,” Rob Schenck, head of the National Clergy Council, told WORLD Thursday. Based on word from a fourth member of the group who has not been arrested, Schenck, who is acting as the group’s spokesman in the United States, said the three were allowed to again make their way to Tiananmen Square, but plainclothes officers “immediately manhandled them” when they attempted to make public statements. Two were then again detained, but McMonagle, Schenck said, “has vaporized and we don’t know where he is.” Schenck had maintained cell phone contact with the activists but now suspects that their phones have been confiscated.
The Mahoney group and others have long planned to draw attention to the lack of religious freedom in China during the opening of the Olympics. Schenck told WORLD they viewed this time as “a unique window” of public scrutiny “that would also allow for a certain measure of safety—not for Chinese citizens but for outsiders to engage China’s record, to be a voice and a presence on behalf of brothers and sisters in China who are persecuted.”
Organizers of the protests at Chinese embassies around the world say they also want to draw attention to ongoing abuses. “Chinese human-rights activists are being detained, harassed, or forced to leave Beijing, while their supporters abroad are being prevented from going to China,” read a statement from Reporters Without Borders, one of the protest organizers.
To underscore the statement, Beijing officials this week revoked a visa they already had issued to champion athlete Joey Cheek, denying the Olympic speedskater an opportunity to be on hand for the Games. Cheek organized Team Darfur to raise awareness about genocide in western Sudan and now fields a following of 400 world-class athletes, including participants at this month’s Games, who believe China as the lead investor in Sudan should do more to stop the atrocities there.
Athletes comprising the U.S. Olympic team on Wednesday chose another member of Team Darfur, Lopez Lomong, to carry the U.S. flag into Beijing’s stadium on behalf of his adopted nation during the opening ceremonies. Lomong, the 23-year-old Sudanese-born 1,500-meter runner, is himself a victim of war in south Sudan and one of the historic “Lost Boys” who spent a decade wandering and in refugee camps before he was granted asylum in the United States. The team’s unanimous choice of Lomong ensures that politics and human-rights activism will not end with the start of the Games.

















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back to top13 Comments to “Activists protest China’s human-rights record”
One can but pray that someone will inform the President and that he can use his good offices to obtain their release.
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Or at least not show up in Beijing.
The plain truth about our policy toward this fascist government is that as long as our corporations can use its supply of cheap labor, and keeps lending our government huge amounts of money, we have no concerns whatsoever how they treat human rights.
I love the Olympics, and will doubtless watch a lot of them. But it sickens me that the oligarchs of the IOC chose to hold the games there.
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Arcadia, for once we agree. And it is distressing that both Democratic and Republican administrations have chosen to look the other way with regard to China.
The missus (Cameron) and I aren’t planning on watching the Olympics. For the life of me I can’t figure out how/why Beijing was selected to host, either.
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The IOC should just cancel the olympics (small “o” intentional). It would be the right thing to do.
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This could get interesting. Forget the games, the political drama coming out of this should be a lot more exciting — and, hopefully, enlightening — in the coming weeks.
As a newspaper reporter, I once covered Mahoney in the early 1990s when he came to our area for a pro-life rally. A bit of a firebrand, he definitely has a knack for landing himself smack in the middle of controversy. He made a point of telling me during our interview that he was a registered Democrat, yet also was adamantly pro-life and determined to carry the message to those within his own political party.
And the pastor of our church spent time mentoring and teaching pastors of house churches in China a few years back. Many of them were subsequently (and, last I heard, still remain) jailed.
Not pretty.
China may well be sorry they got the global spotlight with the Olympics when this is all over.
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I agree with Arcadia, too. Imagine that!
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President Bush recently performed a medal-winning routine on the balance beam, one leg in Thailand, and the other in China.
China responded with a mighty hammer toss.
I agree with everybody posting so far, but my agreement is only good for five minutes, and expires after that time.
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NJL writes:
“One can but pray that someone will inform the President and that he can use his good offices to obtain their release.”
Arcadia writes:
“Or at least not show up in Beijing.”
“The plain truth about our policy toward this fascist government is that as long as our corporations can use its supply of cheap labor, and keeps lending our government huge amounts of money, we have no concerns whatsoever how they treat human rights.”
Headlines read:
Bush, Chinese Leader Exchange Warm Greeting
That’s not to say Bush didn’t indirectly mention China’s atrocious human rights record… but he did seem to underscore the “good relationship” aspect also. I take it to mean the good business aspect Arcadia mentions.
Disgusting. Purely disgusting. No. More than that. Outrageous and atrocious.
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Well, I agree with Donna J. I hope the Chinese get everything they deserve on this one. I resented that the IOC handed this to them, too, but everything has a silver lining. Protests are it! They can’t control everything!
The Chinese are people like to save face, and they want this to go well. Hopefully, this won’t. I’m not against the Chinese people themselves — anyone would want their country to fare well — but the Chinese government I have no sympathy for.
It may turn out, though we’ll never know, that Bush’s presence actually helps these guys in a backroom deal. You never know what God’s up to.
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Now, if enough folks would NOT watch as a protest…
But, myself included, we need, and hence we support, what now substitutes for the Colosseum.
But we certainly don’t need our President as a modern day symbolic Nero.
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Well, there’s a nice photo of Bush with our women’s basketball team on FoxNews.Com. Why don’t you look at it as support for the troops.
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The opening ceremonies are broadcasting live on CBC but I can’t bring myself to watch this version of the bread and circuses. My wife accused me of inconsistency as I watched hockey almost religiously but that’s my bread and circuses. However, the Chinese version is too blatant, too excessive and as my WV post and link from yesterday mentions a dress rehearsal for the new and improved police state just waiting to be exported.
At least every poster here can actually agree on one thing. Good choice of words in #2
I wonder if the 12 year old migrant girls working for ____________ (insert favorite MNC) just a few miles from the Birds Nest are watching the Olympic or is just an other day supplying Wal-Mart.
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That was a very foolish and as far as I’m concerned counterproductive move on the part of those protesters. I feel badly for them and for their loved ones as I seriously doubt this will turn out well.
I wholeheartedly agree with their assertion but after having lived and worked in China I realize that deliberately provoking the dragon is neither a wise nor is it a productive thing to do.
I suspect these individuals will never be seen again. If they are not dead already they will soon wish they were. In the end I believe that the evangelism of China will be hindered far more than it will helped by this impetuous move.
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