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Lawyers, rights, under attack in China

11 August 2009 | by Biwa Kwan Print this article Comments Share this article
CHINA’S legal rights movement is reeling as a government crackdown on crusading lawyers has culminated in the detention of a widely respected rights defender, lawyer Xu Zhiyong.

The “soft-spoken and politically shrewd” Xu Zhiyong, 36, could face up to seven years in prison if convicted of tax evasion, the New York Times reports.

Xu made a name for himself representing migrant workers, death row inmates and the parents of babies poisoned by tainted milk, and the government’s accusation is mostly seen in China as a cover for his try offense, “angering the Communist Party leadership through his advocacy of the rule of law”.

The detention followed the shutdown of legal aid organisation, the Open Constitution Initiative, which Xu helped to establish.

The crackdown on human rights lawyers has intensified in recent weeks, with 53 lawyers disbarred earlier this year. Another human rights lawyer, Gao Zhisheng, disappeared into police custody six months ago, while blind lawyer Chen Guangcheng was beaten and jailed for revealing abuses in China's birth-control program.

Last week, China’s justice minister announced all law firms in China would be overseen by party liaisons, who would "guide their work". The minister said lawyers' first precept should be to obey the Communist Party and maintain social harmony.



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Tags: | babies | China | human rights | lawyer | migrant workers | New York Times | rule of law | Xu Zhiyong

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  1. at 12:51 PM on 12 August 2009, China insider wrote:
    I think there is a major factual mistake in this article. The majority of the 53 lawyers disbarred in Beijing was actually from King & Wood, Jun He, Commerce & Finance - leading commercial firms. And the reason they can't renew their licence may be because they were made redundant, and can;t be registered unless they were employed by a law firm?! I found out this by actually going to the offical website of Minister of Justice and Beijing Bar Assocaition and read the actual announcement - but of couse, it's all in Chinese so foreigner can't understand.

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