UN experts urge China to investigate disappearance of
human rights lawyer Jiang Tianyong
GENEVA (6 December 2016) – A group of United Nations
human rights experts has urged the Chinese Government to immediately
investigate the whereabouts and fate of a prominent human rights lawyer, Jiang
Tianyong, who has disappeared since 21 November 2016.
Mr. Jiang Tianyong has represented clients in a number of
high-profile cases in China, including clients that carried HIV, Falun Gong
practitioners, Tibetan protesters and victims of the 2008 milk scandal, as well
as well-known rights defenders.
“We cannot rule out the possibility that Mr. Jiang may
have been disappeared by the State agents because of his human rights work,”
the UN experts noted. “Over the past years, we have received information that
Mr. Jiang has been arrested, detained, and beaten by the police and state
security officers on multiple occasions as a result of his human rights
work.”
“Combined with the reports of hundreds of human rights
defenders in China that have been harassed, arrested, criminally charged,
detained, or gone missing since the ‘709 crackdown’ in July 2015, we fear that
Mr. Jiang’s disappearance may be directly linked to his advocacy and he may be
at risk of torture,” they said.
Mr. Jiang’s whereabouts are unknown after he visited
Changsha, Hunan Province, to meet with a family member of a human rights lawyer
who had been arrested in last year’s crackdown, and who is detained at the
Changsha Detention Centre. While in Changsha, he accompanied the family member
and three other lawyers to the detention centre to inquire about the detainee’s
situation.
The last communication from Jiang was a message to a
friend in the evening of 21 November, informing that he would board the train
to return to Beijing the next morning.
Authorities in Beijing, Changsha and Zhengzhou, where Mr. Jiang is a
registered resident, have reportedly refused to investigate his disappearance.
The UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human
rights, Philip Alston, who met with Mr. Jiang in August during his visit to
China, said he was deeply concerned that Mr. Jiang’s disappearance may have occurred,
at least in part, in reprisal for his cooperation with the UN during his visit
to China.
“The international standards are clear: States must
refrain from and protect all persons from acts of reprisal,” Mr. Alston said,
noting that that other individuals he met during his visit to China have also
been harassed and subjected to what appears to be reprisals.
“As an essential condition to all country visits of the
Special Procedures mandate holders, Governments must provide assurance that no
persons will suffer intimidation, threats, harassment or punishment, be
subjected to judicial proceedings or to any other kind of reprisals by any
means whatsoever, for their cooperation with the UN experts,” he stressed.
The UN human rights experts, who are in contact with the
Chinese authorities to clarify the issues in question, have urged them to
investigate Mr. Jiang’s whereabouts and guarantee him access to a lawyer and
his family, as well as the medical care he requires, given his poor health.
(*) The experts: Mr. Philip Alston, Special Rapporteur on
extreme poverty and human rights; Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary
Disappearances; Mr. Michel Forst, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human
rights defenders; and Mr. David Kaye, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and
protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression.
ENDS
The Special Rapporteurs and Working Groups are part of
what is known as the Special Procedures of the Human Rights Council. Special
Procedures, the largest body of independent experts in the UN Human Rights
system, is the general name of the independent fact-finding and monitoring
mechanisms of the Human Rights Council that address either specific country
situations or thematic issues in all parts of the world. Special Procedures
experts work on a voluntary basis; they are not UN staff and do not receive a
salary for their work. They are independent from any government or organization
and serve in their individual capacity. Learn more, log on to: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/SP/Pages/Welcomepage.aspx
UN Human Rights, country page – China:
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Countries/AsiaRegion/Pages/CNIndex.aspx
For more information and media requests, please contact
Ms. Junko Tadaki (Tel: + 41 22 917 9298 / jtadaki@ohchr.org ) or write to
srextremepoverty@ohchr.org
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http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=20987&LangID=E
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xcelaya@ohchr.org)
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