December 20, 2004
New Account Sheds Light on Degrading Conditions at
Inner
Mongolia’s Chifeng Prison.
Human
Rights in China (HRIC) called today for the urgent release of
prominent Inner-Mongolian prisoner of conscience Hada. Deemed to
be “resisting reform,” Hada is reported to be routinely
subjected to torture and ill-treatment, and held under a
particularly harsh disciplinary regimen at Chifeng Prison,
Inner Mongolia. He is believed to be in extremely poor health and in need
of urgent medical attention.
China’s most well-known Inner-Mongolian political prisoner,
Hada was sentenced to a 15-year prison term under charges of
“separatism” and “espionage” in 1996 in connection with the
activities of the Southern Mongolian Democratic Alliance, an
organization advocating the preservation of Mongolian culture
and self determination.
According to the account of a recently released political
prisoner from Chifeng prison interviewed by HRIC, Hada has been
routinely abused and brutalized as well as subjected to
disciplinary punishments that range from being held in solitary
confinement to being chained onto a metal “shackle board” – a
bare metal plank equipped with handcuffs at each corner. The
source said Hada is prohibited from talking to other inmates,
deprived of regular family contacts and denied proper medical
attention.
According to HRIC’s source, general conditions of detention
that prevail at Chifeng prison are excessively poor and marked
by ill-treatment and pervasive brutality. All prisoners engage
in grueling work loads of up to 16 hours a day, seven days a
week. Food and healthcare are patently inadequate.
Without any effective avenue for complaint and no exterior
supervision, prisoners at Chifeng are reportedly subjected to a
vast repertoire of disciplinary punishments – many of them
falling under the definition of torture in Article 1 of the
Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment, to which
China is a
signatory.
In addition to the ubiquitous use of electric batons by
guards, customary punishments imposed on prisoners reportedly
include being made to be stand for extended periods in
uncomfortable and painful positions, being chained upright to a
metal door for excruciating lengths of time, and being sent to a
cell with dimensions too small to allow the prisoner lie down.
The system of pervasive brutality is entrenched by the notorious
“cell boss” system, in which certain criminal detainees are
specifically appointed by prison officials to enforce discipline
– often violently – among fellow prisoners.
Political prisoners and ethnic Mongolians are said to be
subjected to an even harsher regimen because of their official
designation as a threat to the state under charges such as
“endangering state security” or “separatism.” They are
reportedly prohibited from talking in their native language and
must only use Mandarin, even though some guards are themselves
ethnic Mongolians. Further details of conditions at Chifeng
Prison, as well as further background on Hada, are provided at
the end of this press release.
HRIC President Liu Qing called on the Chinese government to
release Hada and open all prisons to external observers. “Hada
must be freed and given proper medical attention immediately,”
said Liu Qing. “This case illustrates once again that
China’s
persistent refusal to open its prison system to external
scrutiny is feeding a pattern of endemic torture and
ill-treatment.”
Human Rights in
China is an
international monitoring and advocacy non-governmental
organization based in New York and Hong Kong. Founded in March
1989 by Chinese scientists and scholars, it conducts research,
education and outreach programs to promote universally
recognized human rights and advance the institutional protection
of these rights in the People’s Republic of China.
For further information contact Stacy Mosher (English) or Liu
Qing (Chinese) at HRIC’s
New York
office:
(212)
239-4495, or
Nicolas Becquelin at HRIC’s Hong Kong office: (852) 2710-8021.
Appendices following:
Egregious abuses at Chifeng Prison
Background on Hada
China’s
domestic and international obligations in respect of torture
Photos of Hada and of Chifeng Prison are also available on
request. They have not been attached to this press release in
order to avoid overburdening mailboxes.
Egregious abuses at Chifeng Prison
The account presented here, based on the testimony of a
recently-released political prisoner and supplemented by HRIC’s
own research, is the most recent detailed account of prison
publicized outside of
China. The
information indicates that while many of
China’s
penal institutions have undergone substantial modernization,
what takes place within their walls remains fundamentally
unchanged.
The identity of HRIC’s source must be kept confidential, as
all inmates and released prisoners in
China are
sternly warned not to reveal anything about prison conditions or
personal experience on the threat of “severe repercussions.”
Chifeng Prison organization
Situated less than 300 kilometers northwest of
Beijing,
Chifeng Prison, officially known as “Inner-Mongolia Autonomous
Region Prison Number 4,” is a modern-looking provincial-level
penal facility. In May 2001, Chifeng prison was designated by
the Justice Department authorities of
Inner Mongolia
as an “Autonomous Region-level Modern and Civilized Prison.”
At Chifeng prison, as in the rest of the PRC penal system,
political prisoners are not held separately from prisoners
convicted for common criminal offenses. Each prisoner is
assigned a regimen according to the nature of their offence and
their behavior in prison. The disciplinary regimens range from
maximum (teji yanguan),
down to level three supervision (sanji yanguan).
The stricter the level of security, the more an inmate is
isolated from the other prisoners.
Chifeng inmates are organized into brigades (dadui), squadrons (zhongdui)
and teams (xiaodui). A brigade comprises 800 to 1,000 prisoners and is
typically divided into five squadrons, each of which is engaged
in a different type of heavy labor. Inmates at Chifeng Prison
are mainly engaged in producing bricks and carpets of the type
for which
Mongolia has
become renowned. Prisoners are also frequently dispatched to
work in the fields surrounding the prison. The number of inmates
in a squadron varies during the year according to the needs of
the different production activities. The smallest unit, the
team, is made of 50 to 60 prisoners.
Forced labor at Chifeng Prison
Each squadron in a brigade is assigned specific agricultural
and production activities. Squadrons No.1 and 2 are involved in
the production of bricks, with inmates from Squadron No.1
responsible for mixing clay with water and then passing it to
members of Squadron No.2, who pour the mixture into rectangular
containers and load the blocks into a kiln. Squadrons No.3 and 4
engage in carpet manufacturing, with Squadron No.4 weaving the
carpets and passing them to Squadron No.3 for cleaning and
ironing.
Squadron No.5 consists of inmates who are too weak, old, sick
or disabled and cannot carry out heavy labor, and has no
prescribed routine tasks. Inmates can be involved in packaging
finished products, or in producing soccer balls for a
Tianjin
company. In addition, prisoners are dispatched to the fields to
grow food for the prison or for external sale. Prisoners are
paid a government allowance of 6 yuan (less than $1) per month
for their work.
National prison regulations limit prison labor to a maximum
of eight hours per day. At Chifeng Prison, however, prisoners
reportedly work up to 16 hours a day, from
5 a.m. to 9
p.m., 7 days a week, under a strict system of daily quotas. The
prolonged working hours often result in the physical
incapacitation of prisoners through exhaustion or accidents. In
one case reported by HRIC’s source, an ailing inmate forced to
engage in heavy labor collapsed while pulling a brick cart and
died on the spot.
A catalog of abuses
Torture and ill-treatment are reported to be rampant in
Chinese jails, and Chifeng Prison is no exception. According to
HRIC’s source, guards are well aware that they will face no
repercussions for ill-treatment short of the death of a
prisoner, a situation that entrenches brutality as an expedient
in maintaining “order” in the prison.
HRIC’s source said the daily work and activities of Chifeng
inmates is tightly supervised by a two-tier system: while prison
guards and officials make up the formal system, specially-
appointed prisoners known as “cell bosses” (laotou
yuba)
or “criminal heads” (fantou) exert an even more fearsome control over their fellow
detainees.
Despite having been formally prohibited a decade ago by the
1994 PRC Prison Law, the practice of using cell bosses is
reportedly still the norm in
China.
According to HRIC’s information, Chifeng Prison stands out in
this respect by appointing cell-bosses to head its Squadron
Disciplinary Committees.
According to HRIC’s source, in addition to the ubiquitous use
of electric batons by guards, customary punishments imposed on
prisoners include being made to be stand for extended periods in
uncomfortable and painful positions, being chained upright to a
metal door for excruciating lengths of time, being sent to a
cell too small for the prisoner to lie down, and being
brutalized or beaten by cell-bosses and their accomplices.
Isolation and solitary
confinement
According to HRIC’s source:
“I was never put into solitary confinement, but there was no
real difference because no one was allowed to speak to me. I
felt as isolated as if I were under solitary confinement….Every
day, two inmates were assigned to keep an eye on me. When I
walked, they walked with me. When I stopped walking, they
stopped. Again, these stalkers were not allowed to speak to me.”
Political prisoners are reportedly submitted to a more severe
regimen than ordinary criminals. In particular, they are
forbidden from talking to other inmates and subjected to
permanent monitoring from fellow detainees. Solitary confinement
is another standard punishment. Although the practice is common
in any detention facility, at Chifeng Prison the detention can
extend far beyond the 15 days maximum specified under the PRC
Prison Law.
Use of electric batons
According to HRIC’s source:
“Electric batons! The guards use them all the time. They
strike you in the back. Once my entire upper back was blue. It
was extremely painful for a long time afterward.”
Guards at Chifeng Prison are reported to routinely use
electric batons to punish or otherwise terrorize inmates.
Virtually all prisoners have been subjected to such assaults.
HRIC’s source said that guards would sometimes poke an inmate
just because he had stepped out of line, was not performing his
work speedily enough or even just for “amusement.”
When used as a punishment, electrical shocks are administered
to an inmate’s back. A series of extended shocks will leave the
detainee with painful bruising on his entire back. The use of
electric batons as a means of punishment is strictly prohibited
under Chinese law.
Disciplinary cell
HRIC’s source said that the most feared
punishment for an inmate at Chifeng is to be sent to the
“disciplinary cell,” or yaxiaohao, a cell isolated from the rest
of the prison where the guards are allowed to impose abuses that
are technically forbidden by prison regulations. (Chifeng
Prison’s rules are posted on the prison’s Web site at:
http://www.chifeng.gov.cn/4/open.htm)
“Hugging the metal door”
According to HRIC’s source:
“Those who are sent to the disciplinary cell will first be
hanged up. Do you know what it is to ‘hang up’? They use a
metal gate with bars and shackle your wrists and ankles. We
called this ‘hugging the metal door’… You can’t move. You can’t
rest. They release you for natural functions, but put you back
immediately afterwards... Once I was kept in that position for
two days. My legs swelled completely. They didn’t release me
until I fainted.”
In the punishment called “hugging the metal door” (bao
tiemen), the inmate has his wrists and ankles shackled to or around
a metal door. Standing upright in this position soon becomes
unbearable, but if the victim tries to rest his legs by hanging
from his arms, the pain to his wrists soon becomes excruciating.
HRIC’s source said this punishment could be imposed for up to 12
days at a time.
“The disciplinary bed”
According to HRIC’s source:
“[Hada] frequently had to sleep on the disciplinary bed.
[The bed] is about the size of this table [about 180 cm long and
80 cm wide]. (Pointing at the upper right corner) There is a
hoop here. (Pointing at the upper left corner) A hoop there.
Both are used as handcuffs. (Pointing at the lower right corner)
A hoop here. (Pointing at the lower left corner) Another hoop
there for the feet. (Pointing at the middle of the table) There
is a hole that can be opened for natural functions. The
disciplinary bed can be adjusted to an upright position for
urination. The bed is made of steel. Every brigade has one. They
use it for inmates detained in the disciplinary cell. Hada was
often punished with the disciplinary bed.”
Probably the most fearsome punishment entailed by a stay in
the disciplinary cell is the “disciplinary bed” (xingchuan)。As
detailed above, it consists of a horizontal metal “shackle
board” – a bare metal plank laid flat and supported by four low
legs, and equipped with a set of handcuffs by which the prisoner
is secured to each corner. As the victim lays spread-eagle on
the metal plank, the slightest discomfort will gradually evolve
into a tormenting pain. Limbs become numb and painful, making it
difficult to rest or sleep adequately. Prisoners subjected to
the shackle board rapidly lose strength and experience serious
deterioration to their general health.
HRIC’s source said that according to information circulating
among prisoners at Chifeng Prison, Hada was often subjected to
the disciplinary bed over the past three years because he was
not “obedient” and “resisted reform.” After a day of heavy
labor, he would be brought back to the punishment cell and
shackled to the board for the night.
The use of chain and fetters administered as a punishment –
rather than as a temporary measure of restraint – is reported to
be standard practice in prisons across
China. The use
of the shackle board was documented by a former political
prisoner from Longxi Prison, Hunan more than a decade ago (see
Human Rights Watch, Anthems of Defeat: Crackdown in Hunan
Province 1989-1992, New York, 1992). The prisoner described this
punishment as “the cruelest and most barbaric form of shackling
that I saw used during my own term of imprisonment.”
HRIC’s more recent information suggests that while the
facilities of many penal institutions have undergone substantial
modernization, what takes place within their walls remains
fundamentally unchanged. This failure to improve prison
conditions over the past 15 years goes a long way in explaining
why China
continues to evade any form of independent scrutiny of its
prison system.
Background on Hada
Hada was born into a Mongolian family on
November 29,
1955. In early 1981 he became an active participant in the
growing Inner Mongolian student movement, which sought to
preserve Mongolian ethnic identity in Chinese-controlled Inner
Mongolia. After graduating from university in 1983, Hada
published a number of articles on political theory in the
Mongolian language. He became a research student in the
political theory department of
Inner
Mongolian
Normal
University
in 1986, and upon completing his M.A. he devoted his energy to
promoting indigenous Mongolian culture, opening a Mongolian
studies bookstore in Hohhot, the capital of Inner Mongolia, with
his wife, Xinna.
In May 1992, Hada and fellow activist Tegexi set up the
Mongolian Culture Rescue Committee (eventually renamed the
Southern Mongolian Democratic Alliance), of which Hada was
elected chairman. In 1994 the group began publishing a
periodical, Voice of Southern Mongolia, and in 1995 drafted a
new constitution that outlined the
Alliance’s
chief mission as “opposing colonization by the Han people and
striving for self-determination, freedom and democracy in
Southern [Inner] Mongolia.”
On
December 10, 1995, Hada’s home was ransacked by police from the
Inner Mongolian Public Security Bureau, who confiscated numerous
documents relating to the Alliance, as well as the names and
addresses of more than 100 international scholars with whom Hada
had been corresponding. The following day, the authorities
detained Hada and interrogated him about the Alliance’s
activities. He was formally arrested on March 9, 1996.
The Hohhot People’s Procuratorate formally charged Hada with
“espionage”, “separatism,” “stealing secrets for the enemy” and
“organizing counterrevolutionary forces” on
August 19, 1996. Following a closed
hearing, the Hohhot Intermediate People’s Court on November 11,
1996 sentenced Hada to 12 years in prison for separatism and an
additional 10 years for espionage, combined for a total of 15
years in prison with four years’ subsequent deprivation of
political rights. Hada’s appeal to the Inner Mongolia Supreme
People’s Court was rejected. Tegexi was sentenced to 10 year's
imprisonment and three years’ deprivation of political rights
for “separatism,” but he was subsequently released early, in
December 2002, on grounds of “good behavior” (a full English
translation of the Court verdict is available at
http://www.innermongolia.org/english/hohhot_municipal_intermediate_pe.htm
).
Following Hada’s arrest, more than ten other prominent
Mongolian intellectuals were detained. On December 16, Hada’s
wife Xinna posted a note on the front door of their book store
informing people about Hada’s detention and the crackdown on
fellow activists. When students embarked on a protest, the
authorities quickly suppressed it and arrested 12 students.
Xinna herself was also taken into custody and investigated for
“inciting students to cause a disturbance.”
Xinna was released on bail on
January 12,
1996, but detained again on January 28, 1996 after giving an
interview to an overseas journalist. Although never formally
charged, Xinna was not released until nearly four months later,
on April 12. The Public Security Bureau closed down the
bookstore in
Hohhot,
leaving the family with no source of income.
In June 1998, Hada’s wife Xinna sent an open letter to U.S.
President Bill Clinton, who was visiting
China at the
time. She reported that Hada’s health problems “[were] not taken
seriously by prison authorities” and that she had asked the
authorities to transfer Hada to a prison in Hohhot where his
family could take care of him more easily, and to allow him to
visit a hospital for medical treatment. The Chinese authorities
have never acceded to these requests.
China’s
domestic and international obligations in respect of torture
Torture and ill-treatment of detainees and prisoners is
reported to be widespread and systemic throughout
China. Although
China ratified the UN Convention Against Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (hereafter,
Convention against Torture) in 1988, the authorities have failed
to introduce basic safeguards to prevent torture or to bring
many torturers to justice.
Forced labor and ''acknowledgment of guilt'' are central to
penal policy, generating an environment in which prisoners are
routinely abused. Particularly brutal treatment is frequently
reported against prisoners who are deemed to be ''resisting
reform'' (kangju gaizao) through failure to meet production targets, complaining, staging hunger
strikes or attempting to escape.
Former prisoners who have been held in all forms of criminal
and administrative detention report that guards routinely use
''cell bosses'' to discipline, beat and torture their fellow
prisoners. During the UN Committee Against Torture hearing in
May 2000,
China's
representatives acknowledged that the government “did not
exclude the possibility that some individual police officers use
inmates to control inmates in their daily work.''
Obligations under domestic law
Chinese law punishes torture and ill-treatment as a crime in
specific circumstances only. Article 248 of
China’s
Criminal Law makes it a criminal offence for any “custody or
supervisory personnel” in a custody or supervision institution
such a prison to “beat a detainee or subject him to corporal
punishment or abuse, if the circumstances are serious.” Any
custody or supervisory personnel “who instigate a detainee to
beat another detainee or subject him to corporal punishment or
abuse” shall be punished in the same way.
What constitutes “serious circumstances” is not set out in
the law or subsequent interpretations. In 1999, the Supreme
People’s Procuratorate issued rules limiting the prosecution of
this crime to five circumstances: causing injury to the detained
person; instigating the suicide of the detained person or mental
disorder or other serious consequences; more than three
instances of beating, corporal punishment or maltreatment of one
or more detainees; using cruel methods, having an adverse
impact; instigating detainees to beat, corporally punish or
maltreat other detainees as above.
In practice, even those who can be pursued for criminal
responsibility under the law often escape prosecution or receive
only light punishment.
International obligations
As a State Party to the Convention Against Torture,
China is
obliged to ensure that “all acts of torture are offences in its
criminal law,” including any “attempt to commit torture” or “act
by any person which constitutes complicity or participation in
torture.”
China
must also ensure that all punishments for these crimes reflect
their “grave nature”(Article 4).
The Convention also requires State Parties to prevent “other
acts of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment”
when committed “by or at the instigation of” or “with the
consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person
acting in an official capacity”(Article 16).
Torture is defined as “any act by which severe pain or
suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally
inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or
a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an
act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having
committed or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or
for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such
pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or
with the consent or acquiesce of a public official or other
person acting in an official capacity” (Article 1).
China does not
grant access to prisons to any independent organization,
including the International Red Cross. In July 2004, the
Chinese government abruptly “postponed” the scheduled visit of
the United Nation Special Rapporteur on Torture, Theo Van Boven.
Selected References:
HRIC, Impunity for
torturers continues despite changes in the law,
July 2000.
Amnesty International,
Torture – a growing scourge in
China – time for action, February 2001, ASA
17/004/2001.
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