BRIEF: Tibetan Reporter Detained by Chinese Government

BRIEF: Tibetan Reporter Detained by Chinese Government

BEIJING, China – The reporter, Jamyang Kyi, 42, an announcer at the state-run television station in Qinghai, a western province bordering Tibet, was detained on April 1 and has not been seen since April 7, according to colleagues and friends. The authorities also confiscated her computer and a list of contacts, they said.

Jamyang Kyi is better known for her singing and song writing in the Tibetan language and performs abroad, sometimes alongside musicians associated with the Dalai Lama’s Tibetan government-in-exile.  However, she has avoided themes or language in her music and writings that could be construed as challenging the Communist Party’s hold over Tibet.

Chukora Tsering, a researcher at the Tibetan Center for Human Rights and Democracy in Dharamsala, India, said he knew of nothing in her music or writings that might have provoked the authorities.  Her husband, Lamao Jia, who is also a journalist and a writer, said he had received no word from his wife for more than a week and did not know where she was being held. “She is in serious trouble.  I’m very worried for her safety. I’m very sorry. I can’t say more,” he said in a telephone interview.

Asked about Jamyang Kyi’s detention, Jiang Yu, a Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, said she was unaware of the songwriter’s case. She insisted, that the Chinese legal system dealt fairly with all its citizens. “China is a country under the rule of law.  The law protects freedom of speech and other rights of its citizens. Only when a person goes against the law will they be punished by the law,” she said during a regularly scheduled news conference.

For more information, please see
:

New York Times – China Detains Tibetan Reporter – 18 April 1008

International Herald Tribune – Tibetan entertainer detained in China following anti-government protests – 16 April 2008

BRIEF: Red Cross Condemns American Prison in Afghanistan

BAGRAM, Afghanistan – The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) announced this week that it disapproves of the way the United States runs its prison at the Bagram Airbase in Afghanistan, and urged for reforms.

Over 600 prisoners are held at Bagram, and the US military does not reveal who is held there or why.  Family and other public visitors are not allowed, including journalists.

The ICRC, however, has visited Bagram 120 times.  This recent announcement was made after the ICRC President, Jakob Kellenberger, visited last week.

Kellenberger commended the US for following some of the ICRC’s past recommendations, such as allowing video-conference communication between prisoners and their families.  He also appreciated the founding of new “enemy combatant review boards” that will examine Afghan detainees’ cases every six months and determine whether they can be released.

Nevertheless, he urged for further reforms to expand prisoner rights and allow them to introduce outside testimony:  “This [enemy combatant review board] should also get evidence from the persons outside, … evidence which can speak in favor of those who are detained … Evidence of people who know them, so that this evidence is brought into the process.”

Over the past five years, the US has been criticized for holding prisoners in places like Bagram without charge.

Kellenberger emphasized that the prisoners in Bagram “do not know what the future brings, how long will they be there and under which conditions will they be released.”

For more information, please see:

Associated Press – Red Cross: Change Needed at US Prison – 15 April 2008

The Jurist – Red Cross chief urges US military to allow outside evidence in Afghan detainee hearings – 14 April 2008

Bomb Attacks in Four Cities Kill 70, Injure Over 100

By Christopher Gehrke
Impunity Watch Senior Desk Officer, South America

BAQUBA, Iraq – Blasts in the Iraqi cities of Baquba, Ramadi, Mosul, and Baghdad killed more than 70 and injured more than 100 yesterday.

At approximately 10:50 a.m., a vehicle filled with explosives detonated outside a restaurant in Baquba, killing 53 and injuring 90.  The Baquba police estimated that nearly 1,400 pounds of explosives were packed into the vehicle.

A suicide bombing in Ramadi outside a kebab restaurant killed thirteen; three were killed and twelve were wounded in another car bombing in Mosul; and three were killed and eight were injured in Baghdad in a car bomb blast that targeted police patrol.

BCC reports that Sunni Islamist groups inspired by al-Qaeda are likely suspects.

The death toll in Baquba is expected to rise, said police.  There were still burnt bodies inside the cars at the scene.  Most of the bodies were burned beyond identification, and most of the dead appeared to be women and children.  Baquba is known as an insurgent stronghold.

One physician described the scene in Baquba:  “Some of the bodies that came to the hospital were, let’s say, not bodies, but only a hand or a torso.”

The Baquba attack was one of the most deadly in Iraq in months, where it appeared the U.S. surge strategy was successful in preventing civilian deaths.  This week, however, has seen several attacks.  Seventeen were also killed in two bomb attacks near Mosul Monday, among them 12 members of the Iraqi army.

American and Iraqi forces were backed by Awakening Councils in Baquba and Ramadi, which are mostly Sunni organizations that oppose Sunni extremists.  Baquba residents said that the attacks were probably retaliation for their decision to fight these groups.

Rear Adm. Greg Smith – the chief spokesman for the U.S. military there – told the New York Times that the attacks show that al-Qaeda could regenerate and strike, despite not controlling the territory as it had.

“They no longer possess the capability to terrorize and intimidate the major population centers or large swaths of Iraq’s countryside, but they certainly maintain both the will and the capacity to indiscriminately kill and maim innocent Iraqi citizens with vehicle and suicide bombs,” he said.

Authorities are no sure if the triple car bombing was coordinated or not.

For more information, please see:

BBC News – Dozens dead as Iraq cities bombed – 16 April 2008

New York Times – Dozens killed in Bombings in Four Iraqi Cities – 16 April 2008

Times Online – Dozens killed in car bombs across Iraq – 15 April

Agence France Press – Iraq bombings, clashes kill 62 – 15 April 2008

Gramma International – Lethal day in Iraq, 69 dead – 15 April 2008

San Francisco Chronicle – Explosions kill dozens in 2 cities – 16 April 2008

Daily Dispatch – Car bombs rip through Iraqi lull – 16 April 2008

Guardian – Bomb attacks kill at least 50 people as new wave of violence hits Iraq – 16 April 2008

Repatriated North Korean Refugees Faced “Severe Prosecution” at Home

By Ariel Lin
Impunity Watch Reporter, Asia

A new study that concerns treatments of North Korean refugees after they are forcibly returned from China to North Korea puts pressure on the Chinese government to stop repatriating North Korean refugees. Tens of thousands of North Koreans are thought to have crossed into China, propelled by hardship or persecution. China treats them as economic migrants and sends them back.

The 48-page report is titled “A Prison Without Bars.” The chairman of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, Michael Cromartie, says the report is based on interviews with 32 refugees who fled North Korea for China from 2003 to 2007 and with six former North Korean security agents who defected to South Korea during the past eight years.  He called on countries to press the Chinese government to stop sending North Korean refugees back to their homeland and provide increased protections as required by international protocols.

The report said that repatriated North Korean refugees were often subjected to harsh interrogation, torture and long detentions without trial if found to have converted to Christianity or had contact with South Korean Christians or churches while in China. Former North Korean security agents told the commission that authorities set up mock prayer meetings to entrap new converts in North Korea and train staff in Christian practices for the purposes of infiltrating churches in China.

Refugees said that merely owning a Bible could lead to arrests, disappearances and even deaths of those repatriated.  “Its up to the condition of the guards. Because killing a prisoner will do no harm for them,” one interviewee said.  Another refugee, claimed that “a person was shot to death” on a riverside in Hoeryeong, a North Korea city along the border with China, for accepting a Bible from South Korean priests.  According to the report, the treatment was part of Pyongyang’s efforts to prevent the spread of religion.

For more information, please see:

AFP – China slammed over “grave” crisis facing NKorean refugees – 16 April 2008

BBC – China ‘must not return N Koreans’ – 16 April 2008

Chosun News – U.S. Report Hits North Korea On Religious Rights – 16 April 2008

International Herald Tribune – U.S. congressional report finds abuse of returned North Korean refugees – 15 April 2008

Reuters – U.S. panel urges China not to repatriate North Koreans – 15 April 2008

Washington Post – NKoreans with religious ties face peril – 15 April 2008

UPDATE: Uzbek Critic Sentenced

TASHKENT, Uzbekistan – According to rights group Human Rights Defenders Initiative, Uzbek dissident Yusuf Juma has been sentenced to five years forced labor for resisting arrest and assaulting a police officer (see prior Impunity Watch article here).  He was charged with the crimes in December after conducting a protest against Islam Karimov’s third bid for president.  While being held prior to trial, his family claims that he was tortured.

His son Bobur, who had also been arrested during the protest, was given a suspended sentence of three years after admitting to the charges.  A family member said that Bobur only confessed after being beaten, and after authorities told him that without his confession, his father would be sentenced to 20 years.

For more information, please see:

BBC News – Uzbek poet ‘sentenced over demo’ – 15 April 2008

Impunity Watch – BRIEF: Family of Uzbek Critic Say He Is Being Tortured by Government – 12 April 2008