(Washington, DC) -- As the one year countdown begins, time is running out for the Chinese government to fulfill its promise of promoting human rights as part of the Olympics legacy, Amnesty International charges in its recent briefing on China's human rights progress. The new report, "China: The Olympics Countdown - One Year Left to Fulfill Human Rights Promises," focuses on four key areas of human rights relating to the Olympics: death penalty, detention without trial, human rights activists and media freedom.
"Unless the Chinese authorities take urgent measures to stop human rights violations over the coming year, they risk tarnishing the image of China and the legacy of the Beijing Olympics," said Irene Khan, Amnesty International?s Secretary General.
In Washington, Amnesty International members and other activists will gather in front of the Chinese Embassy in Washington, DC on August 8 - exactly one year before the 2008 summer Olympics begin in Beijing - to call on Chinese officials to improve their human rights record. China had agreed to improve its human rights record as a condition to receiving the bid. Amnesty International has received reports prompting serious concerns regarding China's willingness to abide by its promise.
The new briefing looks at China's progress toward its promised human rights improvements ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Amnesty International reports that several Beijing-based activists continue to face 'house arrest' and tight police surveillance, while some activists in other parts of China are encountering heightened patterns of abuse as attention is focused on Beijing in the run-up to the Olympics. The report also highlights an ongoing crackdown on journalists, which has extended recently to the closure of certain Chinese civil society and development publications.
"The crackdown on human rights defenders and domestic media continues to overshadow more positive reforms with regard to the death penalty and foreign media coverage in China," said Khan. "Not only are we not seeing delivery on the promises that the Olympics would help improve the human rights situation in China, but the police are using the pretext of the Games to extend the use of detention without trial."
The report also highlights the continued use of detention without trial as part of the government's 'clean up' operations of Beijing ahead of the 2008 Games, despite the fact that substantial reform or abolition of methods of arbitrary detention including 're-education through labor' has been on China's reform agenda for many years.
Amnesty International welcomes recent statements by Chinese Supreme Court officials expressing the need for greater transparency on the death penalty and unified criteria for imposing death sentences. However, the organization urged the authorities to broaden this approach by increasing access to information on individuals facing the death penalty, particularly for lawyers and members of their families, and by publishing full national statistics on death sentences and executions.
"The application of the death penalty in China -- the world's top executioner -- remains shrouded in secrecy," said Khan.
"Full transparency is essential to help prevent miscarriages of justice and provide the Chinese public with sufficient information to reach informed conclusions on the death penalty," said Khan. "Nothing short of publishing full national statistics on the application of the death penalty in China will suffice."
Key findings in this latest assessment are as follows:
Death penalty
Detention without trial
Human rights activists
Media freedom
Amnesty International has sent copies of its latest update to the Chinese authorities and the International Olympic Committee (IOC), noting that these issues are directly relevant to Beijing's hosting of the Olympics and core principles in the Olympic Charter.
"The ongoing serious human rights violations in China constitute an affront to core principles in the Olympic Charter relating to the 'preservation of human dignity' and 'respect for universal fundamental ethical principles'," said Khan. "The IOC must promote a positive legacy of the Olympics built on respect for human rights and rule of law."
"With just one year to go, time is running out before the Beijing Olympic Games are irreversibly tarnished by the China's lack of respect for human rights," said Khan. "The Chinese authorities must press ahead with their promises to improve human rights so that when August 2008 arrives the Chinese people can be proud of what their country has to offer the world."
For an entire copy of the new briefing, "China: The Olympics Countdown - One Year Left to Fulfill Human Rights Promises," please contact the AIUSA press office at 202.544.0200 x302.