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1 |
ID:
135388
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Summary/Abstract |
The article presents a legal document detailing the indictment of Chinese human rights activist and dissident Hu Jia. According to the Beijing Public Security Bureau, the defendant have committed the crime of inciting subversion of state power. The document has been submitted to the Beijing Municipal First Intermediate People's Court in accordance with the prvisions of the Criminal Procedure Law.
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2 |
ID:
135390
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Summary/Abstract |
Corruption is an extremely serious social problem in China today. As Xi Jinping said during a collective studies session at the Political Bureau on November 17, 2012, “lfthe corruption problem keeps going from bad to worse, it is bound to eventually bring down the Party and the country." Speaking at a meeting ofthe Ministry ofSupervision ofthe Central Coin- mission for Discipline Inspection on November 19, 2012, secretary of the CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, Wang Qishan, also emphasized “unswerving opposition to corruption.”
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3 |
ID:
135385
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Summary/Abstract |
We, lawyers Li Heping and Li Xiongbing of the Beijing Gaobo Longhua Law Firm, lawyers Zhang Lihui and Li Shunzhang of the Beijing Guogang Law Firm, lawyer Teng Biao of the Beijing Huayi Law Firm,
and lawyer Wu Hongweiof the Beijing Haiming Law Firm have been entrusted by Ms. Han Lingrong to defend Han Lingrong’s granddaugh- ter (daughter’s daughter) Wang Bo, son-in-law Wang Xinzhong, and
daughter Liu Shuqin, respectively. Given that our trusters are the same people, that the defendants are members of one extended family, that all of the defendants have the status of Falun Gong believers, and that all have been accused and sentenced for the same set of facts and the same charges; moreover, based on the counsels’ understanding of the extreme importance of the freedom of religious belief to politics and morality and to maintaining mankind’s freedom and happiness, and based on the counsels’ anticipation that China today must shift consideration of the topic of freedom of belief from the perilous and sensitive domains of religion and politics to a more prudent and rational legal platform, we jointly put forward our defense opinions as follows.
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4 |
ID:
135387
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Summary/Abstract |
The article discusses the need to conduct the democratic elections for the Beijing Bar Association. The roles of lawyers in Beijing, China and the Beijing Bureau of Justice in participating and organizing the democratic elections are outlined. The absence of a legal charter of election procedures in the association is highlighted.
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5 |
ID:
135392
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Summary/Abstract |
On March 6, 2008, at 8:25 p.m., after buying books at the All Sages Book Garden, lcalled my wife and said I‘d be home in about 20 minutes. Around 8:40 p.m., I’djust parked the car and was about to close the door when I was surrounded by three or four middle-aged men. One of them pounded me heavily on the shoulders. “Aren’t you Teng Biao?" Without waiting for an answer, they forced me into a black sedan; only a few seconds later did it dawn on me that this was a kidnapping! I began to struggle. and shout and scream, and kept at it for a full three minutes. I figured the noise was loud enough for the residents of the four surrounding apartment blocks and the district security to hear, but no one showed up. I was outnumbered, they had tied my hands behind my back, and I could not move. Once I was shoved into the car, I stopped shouting. No one could have heard me anyway, so I calmed down
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6 |
ID:
135389
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Summary/Abstract |
On May 29, "2012, Xu Zhiyong published an article titled “New Citizens Movement" (sometimes translated New Civil Movement), it is presented here in English for the first time with the permission of Xu Zhiyong (translated by an anonymous friend of the blog). Since publishing this essay Xu has twice been detained illegally, but, unfortunately, this has not received attention in the international press. Yaxue translated his account of the first disappearance (Xu has disappeared several times over his career as
an outspoken human rights lawyer, including an incident just one week before he published this). This essay and Xu’s activism is truly deserving of further coverage overseas as it offers a comprehensive path for reform in China.
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7 |
ID:
135384
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Summary/Abstract |
As a lawyer, I have recently received from various places many petitions and requests for help regarding the sentencing of Falun Gong practitioners and the plight [of the practitioners being punished by] reeducation through labor. On December 26, my associate and I went to Shijiazhuang City of Hebei Province to offer legal assistance to Huang Wei, who has been subject to so—called reeducation through labor. After taking up the case, in the course of dealing with the administrative and judicial authorities, we
discovered a series of phenomena that were beyond the imaginations of people today. These phenomena exist in both the legislative and judicial realms. As an attorney and a citizen of the present era, I feel extraordi- narily downcast and saddened in the face of such incredible phenomena. The first thought that came to me after my negotiations with several courts in Shijiazhuang Citywas that I would express such suffocating depression and sadness by submitting a letter as soon as I could to the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress and its chairman
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8 |
ID:
135391
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Summary/Abstract |
The criminal suspect Xu Zhiyong is a male, ethnic Han, born March 2, 1973, a Beijing resident, Ph.D. in law, citizen with no Party affiliation, and lecturer in humanities at the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications; ID card number: 6201021 973030253 l 6. place ofhousehold registration: Apt. 1 104. no. 4 Qinghe Qingyuan Dong Li, Haidian District, Beijing, current residential address: Apt. l I04, no. 4 Qinghe Qingyuan Dong Li, Haidian District, Beijing. Xu was criminally detained on July 16, 2013, on suspicion of the crime of gathering a crowd to disrupt order in a public place. He was lawfully arrested on charges of gathering a crowd to disrupt order in a public place on August 22, 2013, and is currently
detained in the Beijing Municipal Detention Center no. 3.
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9 |
ID:
135383
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Summary/Abstract |
article 88, paragraph 2of the legislation law of the Peoples Republic of China stipulates that the NPC standing committee is empowered to annual administrative regulation that conflict with the constitution and laws, and article 90, paragraph 2 [of the legislation law of the peoples republic of China] stipulated that citizens may submit written proposals to the national people’s of congress (NPC) standing committee for conducting an examination when they believed an administrative regulation conflict with the constitution and law
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10 |
ID:
135381
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Summary/Abstract |
The rise of China’s rights defence movement has occurred in tandem with the rapid development of the Internet in China. Various forms of rights defence inside and outside of the courtroom have emerged and developed alongside changes to China’s ideological, political, and legal systems and social structure. Similarly, Internet technology such as microblogs and other social media are enriching the modalities of activity in the rights defence movement, enhancing the mobilisation capacity of activists, and accelerating the systematisation of popular rights defence, profoundly affecting China’s ongoing political transformation.
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11 |
ID:
135386
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Summary/Abstract |
The article presents a legal document detailing the verdict in the case involving Chinese civil rights activist Chen Guangcheng. Chen was placed under criminal detention for allegedly destroying property and gather a mob to disturb traffic on June 10, 2006. A brief note from fellow activist Hu Jia about the case is also provided.
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12 |
ID:
135382
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Summary/Abstract |
The term “ right defense” has become very popular, but has not actually been in use for a long time. The year 2003 saw a series of relatively influential public law cases, including those involving Sun Zhigang, Li Siyi Sun Dawu, and several independent candidates in people’s congress election.
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