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Re-education through labor

Re-education through labor (RTL; simplified Chinese: 劳动教养; traditional Chinese: 勞動教養; pinyin: láodòng jiàoyǎng), abbreviated laojiao (simplified Chinese: 劳教; traditional Chinese: 勞教; pinyin: láojiào) was a system of administrative detention on mainland China. Active from 1957 to 2013, the system was used to detain persons who were accused of committing minor crimes such as petty theft, prostitution, and trafficking of illegal drugs, as well as political dissidents, petitioners, and Falun Gong followers. It was separated from the much larger laogai system of prison labor camps.

A photograph of Shayang Re-education Through Labor camp in Hubei province, from the archives of the Laogai Museum

Sentences under re-education through labor were typically for one to three years, with the possibility of an additional one-year extension. They were issued as a form of administrative punishment by police, rather than the judicial system. While they were incarcerated, detainees were frequently subjected to a form of political education. Estimates of the number of RTL detainees on any given year range from 190,000 to two million. In 2013, approximately 350 RTL camps were in operation.[1]

On 28 December 2013, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress abolished the re-education through labor system and detainees were released.[2][3] However, human rights groups have claimed that other forms of extrajudicial detention have taken its place, with some former RTL camps being renamed drug rehabilitation centers.[4]

In 2014, re-education facilities were constructed in Xinjiang and they were used to target a wider context than people who were accused of committing minor crimes and political dissidence.[5] By 2017, these had become the massive Xinjiang internment camps holding 1–3 million people, utilizing forced labor, and now recognized as re-education camps by many nations, intergovernmental organizations such as the UN and EU, and human rights groups.[citation needed]

By October 2019, “students” held in these camps or “vocational education and training centers” were all released and these camps were closed. [6][7]

Re-education through labor and the Chinese penal system edit

The People's Republic of China employs several forms of correction for people who have been arrested, of which re-education through labor was one. The Laogai Research Foundation classifies re-education through labor as a sub-component under the umbrella of the laogai ("reform through labor") criminal justice system,[8] which generally refers to prisons, prison farms, and labor camps for convicted criminals. Re-education through labor, on the other hand, refers to detentions for persons who are not considered criminals or have only committed minor offenses.[9][10] Persons detained under re-education through labor were detained in facilities which are separate from the general prison system; furthermore, detainees in these re-education facilities receive a small salary, which laogai detainees do not, and in theory have shorter work hours.[9] The laogai system is much larger than the re-education through labor system, with the Laogai Research Foundation identifying 1,045 laogai camps in 2006 (compared to 346 re-education centers).[8] Both systems, however, involve penal labor and often do not allow trials or judicial hearings.[11] The term "reform through labor" or laogai was officially replaced with "prison" in 1994,[12] and the term "re-education center" or láojiàosuǒ (劳教所) was replaced with "correctional center" in 2007.[13]

Other components of the prison system include detention centers for individuals awaiting sentence or execution,[14] and juvenile detention camps for individuals under a minimum age (which has varied through the years, and may currently be under 14).[15] The system formerly included components such as custody and repatriation for individuals without a residence permit;[12] "forced job placement,"[16] which has not been widely practiced since the 1990s;[12] and "shelter and investigation," a system of detentions for individuals under legal investigation, which was abolished in 1996.[15] The Laogai Research Foundation also classifies psychiatric facilities, or ankang, as a form of detention for political dissidents,[17] although it is not officially recognized as part of the laogai penal system.[12]

History edit

Institutions similar to re-education through labor facilities, but called "new life schools" or "loafers' camps", existed in the early 1950s, although they did not become official until the anti-rightist campaigns in 1957 and 1958.[18] A report by Human Rights in China (HRIC) states that re-education through labor was first used by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1955 to punish counter-revolutionaries, and in 1957 was officially adopted into law to be implemented by the Ministry of Public Security.[19] The law allowed police to sentence both minor offenders and "counter-revolutionaries" or "anti-socialist elements"[20] to incarceration in labor camps without the right to a judicial hearing or trial,[9] and did not allow judicial review to take place until after the punishment was being enforced.[13] In the beginning there were no limits to the length for which detainees could be sentenced, and it was not until 1979 that a maximum sentence of four years (three years' sentence plus one-year extension) was set.[19][20] In 1983, the management and implementation of the re-education through labor system was passed from the Ministry of Public Security to the Ministry of Justice.[19]

When Falun Gong was banned in mainland China in 1999, re-education through labor became a common punishment for practitioners.[8][21] Some human rights groups claim that as many as 10,000 Falun Gong members were detained in between 1999 and 2002,[21] with as many as 5,000 detained in 2001.

[22] More recent estimates suggest that hundreds of thousands of Falun Gong adherents are imprisoned in China,[23] with some sources estimating up to half of the official reeducation through labor camp population is Falun Gong practitioners.[24] In some labor camps, Falun Gong practitioners make up the majority population.[25]

There have been numerous calls for the system to be reformed or replaced.[26] As early as 1997, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) called for China to allow judicial control over detentions;[27] in 2000, the UN Committee Against Torture recommended that all forms of administrative detention, including re-education through labor, be abolished;[28] in 2004, the WGAD called for the establishment of rights to due process and counsel for individuals detained;[26] and in 2005, the Special Rapporteur on Torture called for the outright abolition of re-education through labor.[26] The prominent deaths of two inmates in spring 2003 prompted many calls within China for reform of the system, but reform did not happen immediately,[28] though The China Daily reported that there was "general consensus" that reform was needed.[29] In March 2007, however, the Chinese government did announce that it would abolish the re-education through labor system and replace it with a more lenient set of laws.[13] According to the proposal, the maximum sentence would be lowered from four years to 18 months; re-education centers would be renamed "correction centers" and have their fences and gates removed.[13][30] A month later, Chongqing municipality passed a law allowing lawyers to offer legal counsel in re-education through labor cases.[31]

Many human rights groups, however, doubted the efficacy of the proposed reforms, saying that the new laws would only help minor criminals and not help political prisoners, and the reforms would not actually abolish the re-education through labor system.[30] The Laogai Research Foundation stated that lowering the maximum length of detention and changing the names of the detention facilities would not constitute a "fundamental change".[32] Nine months after the declaration that the laws would be rewritten, the re-education through labor system had not been abolished; in December 2007, a group of academics drafted an open letter to the government calling for an end to the system.[33][34] During the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, there were reports that some individuals who applied for permits to protest were detained without trial;[35] of these, some were sentenced to re-education through labor.[36][37] In the United Nations Human Rights Council's September 2008 Universal Periodic Review of the People's Republic of China, re-education through labor was listed as an "urgent human rights concern,"[38] and as of February 2009, a large number of re-education through labor camps were still in operation.[39]

Statistics edit

Reports on re-education through labor have found it difficult to estimate the number of people in re-education centers,[9] and nationwide statistics were often unavailable in the past.[19] What data have become available often vary widely.[20]

Number of RTL detentions per year and overall
Source Year Number of detainees
in given year
Number of detainees
since founding
PRC government 2009 190,000[39]
2003 230,000[40]
China Labour Bulletin 2007 300,000[30]
Laogai Research Foundation 2006, 2008 500,000–2 million[16]
Unspecified non-governmental organizations 2003 310,000[40]
Human Rights in China (organization) 2001 200,000[19] (in 1990s)
Human Rights Watch 1998 230,000[9] (in 1997)
Xinhua official news agency 2001 3.5 million[19][20][40]
China Daily 2007 6 million[13]

Of these detainees, 5 to 10 percent are estimated to be political prisoners, and as many as 40 percent are estimated to be drug offenders[41]—in 1998, nearly one-third of the known re-education camps were specifically built for the purpose of holding drug offenders.[20]

The China Daily estimated that there were a total of 310 re-education centers in China in 2007.[13] The 2008 edition of the Laogai Research Foundation's biennial report listed exactly 319 "confirmed" re-education centers in China, and 74 "unconfirmed" ones, but it also estimated that the actual number of such centers might be much higher.[42] the provinces with the most centers being Guangdong (31), Heilongjiang (21), and Henan (21).[43] In a February 2009 meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Council, the Chinese government stated that there are 320 centers.[39] The provinces with the largest numbers of re-education centers include Guangdong, Liaoning, Heilongjiang, and Henan.[20][42] At the end of 2008, there were 350 labor camps and 160,000 prisoners were being held in them.[44]

Detentions edit

Conviction and detention edit

Sentencing for re-education through labor is generally carried out by the police rather than by the judicial system, so individuals are rarely charged or tried before being detained.[9][19][45][46][47] Public security bureaus (police offices) are able to carry out administrative detentions for "minor" infringements that are not considered criminal acts;[10] at least one analyst has suggested that local public security bureaus often abuse their authority and detain individuals for things such as personal vendettas.[48] Individuals may also be sentenced to re-education through labor by courts, but the proportion of individuals who receive trials rather than going directly into administrative detention is determined in part by how much capacity that province has for re-education detainees—provinces with large re-education through labor apparatus generally allow fewer detainees to have trials.[49] Where detainees have been allowed a trial, their lawyers have faced "intimidation and abuse," according to some reports,[50] and the individuals under trial have sometimes been convicted on the basis of confessions that were coerced through "torture and severe psychological pressure."[50] In at least one instance, convicted individuals were sent to re-education through labor even after being found not guilty in a trial.[51][47]

Most detainees in re-education through labor facilities are reported to be drug users, petty criminals, and prostitutes, as well as some political prisoners;[41] James Seymour has also claimed that most individuals sentenced to re-education through labor are from urban areas.[18] Individuals who attempt to leave the country illegally have also been sentenced to re-education through labor upon their return.[52] In periods leading up to visits from foreign dignitaries or politically sensitive anniversaries (such as the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989), local authorities have supposedly detained "undesirables" such as the homeless, mentally or physically disabled individuals, and migrant workers.[53] One China specialist at the RAND Corporation has claimed that the police, faced with a lack of "modern rehabilitation and treatment programs," use re-education through labor convictions to "warehouse" individuals for "an increasing number of social problems."[41]

Detainees can seek to have their detention repealed through an "administrative review" (xingzheng fuyi, 行政复议) of the decision or by filing an "administrative litigation" (xingzheng susong 行政诉讼) against the Re-education Through Labor Management Committee that detained them. According to the advocacy group Chinese Human Rights Defenders, however, these options are ineffective and the groups overseeing the reviews and litigations often have the same interests as the management committee that originally ordered the detention.[47]

Conditions in the facilities edit

 
Workers in the Shayang Re-education Through Labor camp; photo from the archives of the Laogai Museum

The United States Department of State called the conditions in prisons "harsh and frequently degrading," and said the conditions in re-education through labor facilities were similar, citing overcrowded living spaces, low-quality food, and poor or absent medical care.[28] Detainees in camps are required to work for little or no pay;[54] while Chinese law requires that prison laborers' workday be limited to 12 hours a day.[55] In 2001, sociologist Dean Rojek estimated that detainees generally worked six days a week, "in total silence."[10] Much of the labor done by re-education through labor detainees is geared towards agriculture[48] or producing goods, many of which are sold internationally, since re-education through labor detainees are not counted as official "prisoners" and therefore not subject to international treaties.[11] They also perform work ranging "from tending vegetables and emptying septic pits to cutting stone blocks and construction work."[46]

Although drug abusers are ostensibly placed in re-education through labor to be treated for their addictions, some testimonial evidence has suggested that little "meaningful treatment" takes place in at least some of the centers, and that drug abusers often relapse into addiction upon their release from detention.[41]

The facilities have been widely criticized for the physical abuse that is said to go on within them. Corporal punishment is commonly used,[10] and torture and physical abuse are also thought to be widespread in the facilities.[28] In April 2003, Zhang Bin, an inmate at the re-education facility Huludao City Correctional Camp, was beaten to death, reportedly by other inmates and by the labor supervisor.[28] Zhang's death, along with the March 2003 death of inmate Sun Zhigang in a custody and repatriation prison, sparked calls within China for reform of the system, although reforms were not made immediately.[28][56]

Though most reports describe the conditions of re-education camps as "brutal,"[48] there are some claims of prisoners being well-treated. For example, when he was released from a three-year re-education sentence in 1999,[57] dissident Liu Xiaobo said that he had been treated very mildly, that he had been allowed to spend time reading, and that the conditions had been "pretty good."[48]

Forced labor may include breaking rocks and assembling car seat covers, and even gold farming in World of Warcraft.[58]

According to Chinese state media Xinhua, slightly over 50% of detainees released from prison and re-education through labor in 2006 received government aid in the form of funds or assistance in finding jobs.[59]

Life after release edit

Detainees who are released from re-education through labor camps may still be unable to travel or see other people freely. Individuals who remain in re-education through labor for 5 or more years may not be allowed to return to their homes, and those who do may be closely monitored and not permitted to leave certain areas.[53] For example, in July 2003 a priest who had been released from detention was kept under house arrest, and five men who attempted to visit him were themselves detained.[51]

Criticism edit

The re-education through labor system has been criticized by human rights groups, foreign governments and UN bodies, and Chinese rights lawyers. Some Chinese government agencies and reformers within government have likewise criticized the system as being unconstitutional, and advocated for its reform or abolition.

Human Rights Watch has stated that the "re-education through labor" system violates international law, specifically Article 9 (4.)of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which provides that "Anyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings before a court, in order that the court may decide without delay on the lawfulness of his detention..."[9] Re-education through labor has also been criticized by numerous human rights groups for not offering procedural guarantees for the accused,[19][22] and for being used to detain political dissidents,[60] teachers,[40][61] Chinese house church leaders,[8] and Falun Gong practitioners.[19][60] Furthermore, even though the law up until 2007 specified a maximum length of detainment of four years, at least one source mentions a "retention for in-camp employment" system that allowed authorities to keep detainees in the camps for longer than their official sentences.[9]

Re-education through labor has been a focus of discussion not only among foreign human rights groups, but also among legal scholars in China, some of whom were involved in the drafting of the 2007 laws meant to replace the system.[19]

In addition to legal scholars, the Supreme People's Court of the People's Republic of China had criticized the system.[45] In light of the widespread disapproval of the system, HRIC called in 2001 for the system to be abolished entirely. Among its criticisms it cited the fact that the wording of re-education through labor laws was excessively vague, allowing authorities to manipulate it; the fact that the punishment given in re-education centers was too severe for the crimes committed; the abusive conditions at re-education centers; and the variation of re-education through labor laws from one province to another.[19] The Chinese Ministry of Justice, has also noted that the system violated items in the Chinese constitution. Wang Gongyi, vice-director of the Institute of Justice Research affiliated to the Ministry of Justice, said that the re-education through labor system contradicts several items in the Constitution, the Criminal Procedure Law, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which China signed in 1998.[13]

Although many human rights groups and legal scholars both within and without China called for the reform or total abolition of re-education through labor, China's security agencies have defended the use of the system as being necessary to maintain social stability. A 1997 report in China's Legal Daily hailed re-education through labor as a means to "maintain social peace and prevent and reduce crime."[9] The Ministry of Public Security stated in 2005 that re-education through labor helped maintain rule of law and was mainly used for rehabilitating lawbreakers.[41] In 2007, when new laws were drafted, the Ministry of Public Security was opposed to the proposal that would allowing judicial review before punishment was enforced.[13]

Profit opportunities edit

The laojiao system employs tens of thousands of people. Profits are made through sale of the products of forced labor and through the collection of bribes received to reduce sentences or to ensure that relatives receive adequate food.[62]

Abolition edit

During the Third Plenum of the 18th Party Congress in Beijing on 15 November 2013, Chinese officials announced that they planned to abolish the Re-education Through Labor system.[63][64]

The planned abolition of the system, however, has been criticised by human rights groups, with Amnesty International issuing a report titled "Changing the Soup but Not the Medicine." Amnesty's report concludes that the camp closures are a positive step forward for human rights, but the fundamental problems of arbitrary detention remain in China:[64]

Many of the policies and practices which resulted in individuals being punished for peacefully exercising their human rights by sending them to RTL have not fundamentally changed: quite the contrary. There is ample evidence that such policies and practices are continuing in full force. The latest anti-Falun Gong campaign, launched earlier this year and intended to operate for three years, shows that the CCP's determination to rid China of this spiritual group has not abated. Falun Gong practitioners continue to be punished through criminal prosecution and being sent to "brainwashing centres" and other forms of arbitrary detention. Petitioners likewise continue to be subjected to harassment, forcibly committed to mental institutions and sent to "black jails" and other forms of arbitrary detention. Human rights defenders, democracy advocates, whistle-blowers and other political activists are also being increasingly targeted through criminal detention, "black jails", short-term administrative detention, and enforced disappearances, rather than RTL.[64]

On 28 December 2013, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress abolished the re-education through labor system.[2] Detainees were released without finishing their sentences.[3]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Long overdue: The government says it will reform its system of labour camps". The Economist. 12 January 2013. Retrieved 8 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b 全国人民代表大会常务委员会关于废止有关劳动教养法律规定的决定 (in Chinese). 28 December 2013. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
  3. ^ a b Moore, Malcolm (9 January 2014). "China abolishes its labour camps and releases prisoners". The Telegraph. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
  4. ^ Amnesty International, "CHINA: “CHANGING THE SOUP BUT NOT THE MEDICINE?” : ABOLISHING RE-EDUCATION THROUGH LABOUR IN CHINA" (Dec 2013), p 35
  5. ^ "New Evidence for China's Political Re-Education Campaign in Xinjiang". uhrp.org. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  6. ^ "新疆自治区主席、乌鲁木齐市委书记等在京答记者问" (in Chinese). 新京报客户端. 10 December 2019., “Chinese: 目前(2019年10月),参加“三学一去”的教培学员已全部结业,在政府帮助下实现了稳定就业,改善了生活质量,过上了幸福生活。
  7. ^ "我大使答瑞媒17问:目前新疆没有一所教培中心" (in Chinese). 观察者网. 24 March 2021., “Chinese: 截至2019年10月,教培中心学员已经全部毕业。目前,新疆没有一所教培中心。过去四年多来新疆也未再发生一起暴恐事件。这一切都显示出,我们在新疆的政策是正确的。
  8. ^ a b c d (PDF). The Laogai Research Foundation. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 May 2008. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i . Human Rights Watch. June 1998. Archived from the original on 12 October 2007. Retrieved 12 October 2008. ().
  10. ^ a b c d Rojek (2001), p. 100.
  11. ^ a b Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 17.
  12. ^ a b c d Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 16.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Wu, Jiao (1 March 2007). "New law to abolish laojiao system". China Daily. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  14. ^ Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 20.
  15. ^ a b Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 22.
  16. ^ a b Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 18.
  17. ^ Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 23.
  18. ^ a b Seymour (2005), p. 149.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k . Human Rights in China. 1 February 2001. Archived from the original on 7 September 2008. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  20. ^ a b c d e f Seymour (2005), p. 150.
  21. ^ a b Spiegel, Mickey (January 2002). "Reeducation through Labor; Transformation Centers". Human Rights Watch. Retrieved 28 October 2008.
  22. ^ a b Eckholm, Eric (28 February 2001). "Beijing, Turning Tables, Defends its Repression of Sect". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 30 January 2013. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  23. ^ Leeshai Lemish, 'Leeshai Lemish: The Games are over, the persecution continues'[permanent dead link], National Post, 7 October 2008.
  24. ^ U.S. Department of State, , 11 March 2010.
  25. ^ "We Could Disappear at Any Time". Human Rights Watch. 7 December 2005.
  26. ^ a b c Wickeri, Elizabeth (2007). (PDF). China Rights Forum (1). Human Rights in China: 26. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 July 2009.
  27. ^ "Human Rights Watch World Report 2005: China". 28 January 2005. Retrieved 17 November 2008.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (2004); Section 1c: "Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment."
  29. ^ "End legal black hole". China Daily. 1 March 2007. Retrieved 17 November 2008.
  30. ^ a b c "Human rights groups doubt 'laojiao' abolished". AsiaNews. 2 March 2007. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  31. ^ . Laogai Research Foundation. 4 April 2007. Archived from the original on 30 April 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2008. Translated from Chinese, original source was 海涛 (4 April 2008). "中国重庆允许律师代理劳动教养案". Voice of America. Retrieved 4 April 2007.
  32. ^ . Laogai Research Foundation. 1 March 2007. Archived from the original on 29 April 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2008.
  33. ^ "Academics call for end to China camps". China Post. 5 December 2007. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  34. ^ Martinsen, Joel (5 December 2007). "Scholars and peasants vs. re-education through labor". Danwei. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  35. ^ Drew, Jill; Ariana Eunjung Cha (15 August 2008). "No Permits, No Protests in Beijing's Special 'Pens'". The Washington Post. Retrieved 16 August 2008.
  36. ^ Jacobs, Andrew (20 August 2008). "Too Old and Frail to Re-educate? Not in China". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  37. ^ Cha, Ariana Eunjung (21 August 2008). "Protest Application Brings Labor-Camp Threat, Woman Says". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  38. ^ "China UPR Submission". United Nations Human Rights Council. 30 September 2008. Retrieved 24 February 2009. Alternate link (PDF).
  39. ^ a b c "DRAFT REPORT OF THE WORKING GROUP ON THE UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW" (PDF). Human Rights Council Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review. United Nations Human Rights Council. p. 16.
  40. ^ a b c d Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (2004); Section 1d: "Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile."
  41. ^ a b c d e Yardley, Jim (9 May 2005). "Issue in China: Many in Jails Without Trial". The New York Times. p. 2. Retrieved 22 October 2008.
  42. ^ a b Laogai Handbook (2008), p. 3.
  43. ^ Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 3.
  44. ^ Tania Branigan (16 August 2012). "Outcry in China over mother sent to labour camp after daughter's rape". The Guardian.
  45. ^ a b Magnier, Mark (5 March 2007). "China thinks of closing its reeducation prisons". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 7 November 2008.
  46. ^ a b . Gu Chu Sum - Political Prisoners Association. 24 June 2007. Archived from the original on 25 June 2007. Retrieved 12 December 2008.
  47. ^ a b c . Chinese Human Rights Defenders. 10 February 2009. Archived from the original on 29 April 2009. Retrieved 25 February 2009.
  48. ^ a b c d Seymour (2005), p. 151.
  49. ^ Seymour (2005), pp. 150–1.
  50. ^ a b "China (includes Tibet, Hong Kong, and Macau)". 2003 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. United States Department of State Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. 25 February 2004. Retrieved 17 November 2008. Section 1e: "Denial of Fair Public Trial ."
  51. ^ a b Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (2004); Section 2c: "Freedom of Religion."
  52. ^ Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (2004); Section 6f: "Trafficking in Persons."
  53. ^ a b Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (2004); Section 2d: "Freedom of Movement within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration and Repatriation."
  54. ^ Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (2004); Section 6c: "Prohibition on Forced or Bonded Labor."
  55. ^ Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 15.
  56. ^ Stewart, Terence; Lighthizer, Robert; Hartquist, David; Schagrin, Roger; Andros, Linda (18 August 2005). . U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. Archived from the original on 21 November 2008. Retrieved 17 November 2008.
  57. ^ "Student jailed one year for critical poster". The Standard. 9 October 1999. Retrieved 27 February 2009. [dead link]
  58. ^ "Chinese Prisoners Forced to Play World of Warcraft, Detainee Says". FOX News. 26 May 2011.
  59. ^ "China says social care helps lower crime rate among ex-convicts". Xinhua News Agency. 17 January 2009. Retrieved 23 February 2009.
  60. ^ a b Laogai Handbook (2006), p. 1.
  61. ^ "School Founder 'Seriously Ill' in Prison and Children Beg in the Streets after Closure of Children's Home in Lhasa: New Information about the Gyatso Arrests". International Campaign for Tibet. 12 September 2005. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  62. ^ Andrew Jacobs (14 December 2012). "Opposition to Labor Camps Widens in China". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  63. ^ Buckley, Chris (15 November 2013). "China to Ease Longtime Policy of 1-Child Limit". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  64. ^ a b c Amnesty International, “Changing the Soup but Not the Medicine?" Abolishing Re-Education Through Labour in China , Amnesty International Publications, 2013

References edit

  • Cohen, Jerome A.; Lewis, Margaret K. (2013). Challenge to China : How Taiwan Abolished Its Version of Re-Education Through Labor. Great Barrington, MA: Berkshire Publishing Group. ISBN 9781614729327. Archived from the original on 18 November 2013. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (25 February 2004). "China (includes Tibet, Hong Kong, and Macau)". 2003 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. United States Department of State. Retrieved 17 November 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • (PDF). The Laogai Research Foundation. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 March 2007. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  • "Laogai Handbook" (PDF). The Laogai Research Foundation. 2008. Retrieved 25 February 2009.
  • Rojek, Dean G (2001). "Chinese Social Control: From Shaming and Reintegration to "Getting Rich is Glorious"". In Liu Jianhong; Zhang Lening; Steven F. Messner (eds.). Crime and Social Control in a Changing China. Contributions to Criminology and Penology 53. Greenwood Press.
  • Seymour, James D. (2005). "Sizing up China's prisons". In Børge Bakken (ed.). Crime, Punishment, and Policing in China. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-7425-3574-6.

education, through, labor, confused, with, laogai, known, english, reform, through, labor, song, rise, against, education, through, labor, simplified, chinese, 劳动教养, traditional, chinese, 勞動教養, pinyin, láodòng, jiàoyǎng, abbreviated, laojiao, simplified, chine. Not to be confused with laogai known in English as reform through labor For the song by Rise Against see Re Education Through Labor Re education through labor RTL simplified Chinese 劳动教养 traditional Chinese 勞動教養 pinyin laodong jiaoyǎng abbreviated laojiao simplified Chinese 劳教 traditional Chinese 勞教 pinyin laojiao was a system of administrative detention on mainland China Active from 1957 to 2013 the system was used to detain persons who were accused of committing minor crimes such as petty theft prostitution and trafficking of illegal drugs as well as political dissidents petitioners and Falun Gong followers It was separated from the much larger laogai system of prison labor camps A photograph of Shayang Re education Through Labor camp in Hubei province from the archives of the Laogai Museum Sentences under re education through labor were typically for one to three years with the possibility of an additional one year extension They were issued as a form of administrative punishment by police rather than the judicial system While they were incarcerated detainees were frequently subjected to a form of political education Estimates of the number of RTL detainees on any given year range from 190 000 to two million In 2013 approximately 350 RTL camps were in operation 1 On 28 December 2013 the Standing Committee of the National People s Congress abolished the re education through labor system and detainees were released 2 3 However human rights groups have claimed that other forms of extrajudicial detention have taken its place with some former RTL camps being renamed drug rehabilitation centers 4 In 2014 re education facilities were constructed in Xinjiang and they were used to target a wider context than people who were accused of committing minor crimes and political dissidence 5 By 2017 these had become the massive Xinjiang internment camps holding 1 3 million people utilizing forced labor and now recognized as re education camps by many nations intergovernmental organizations such as the UN and EU and human rights groups citation needed By October 2019 students held in these camps or vocational education and training centers were all released and these camps were closed 6 7 Contents 1 Re education through labor and the Chinese penal system 2 History 2 1 Statistics 3 Detentions 3 1 Conviction and detention 3 2 Conditions in the facilities 3 3 Life after release 4 Criticism 4 1 Profit opportunities 5 Abolition 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesRe education through labor and the Chinese penal system editThe People s Republic of China employs several forms of correction for people who have been arrested of which re education through labor was one The Laogai Research Foundation classifies re education through labor as a sub component under the umbrella of the laogai reform through labor criminal justice system 8 which generally refers to prisons prison farms and labor camps for convicted criminals Re education through labor on the other hand refers to detentions for persons who are not considered criminals or have only committed minor offenses 9 10 Persons detained under re education through labor were detained in facilities which are separate from the general prison system furthermore detainees in these re education facilities receive a small salary which laogai detainees do not and in theory have shorter work hours 9 The laogai system is much larger than the re education through labor system with the Laogai Research Foundation identifying 1 045 laogai camps in 2006 compared to 346 re education centers 8 Both systems however involve penal labor and often do not allow trials or judicial hearings 11 The term reform through labor or laogai was officially replaced with prison in 1994 12 and the term re education center or laojiaosuǒ 劳教所 was replaced with correctional center in 2007 13 Other components of the prison system include detention centers for individuals awaiting sentence or execution 14 and juvenile detention camps for individuals under a minimum age which has varied through the years and may currently be under 14 15 The system formerly included components such as custody and repatriation for individuals without a residence permit 12 forced job placement 16 which has not been widely practiced since the 1990s 12 and shelter and investigation a system of detentions for individuals under legal investigation which was abolished in 1996 15 The Laogai Research Foundation also classifies psychiatric facilities or ankang as a form of detention for political dissidents 17 although it is not officially recognized as part of the laogai penal system 12 History editInstitutions similar to re education through labor facilities but called new life schools or loafers camps existed in the early 1950s although they did not become official until the anti rightist campaigns in 1957 and 1958 18 A report by Human Rights in China HRIC states that re education through labor was first used by the Chinese Communist Party CCP in 1955 to punish counter revolutionaries and in 1957 was officially adopted into law to be implemented by the Ministry of Public Security 19 The law allowed police to sentence both minor offenders and counter revolutionaries or anti socialist elements 20 to incarceration in labor camps without the right to a judicial hearing or trial 9 and did not allow judicial review to take place until after the punishment was being enforced 13 In the beginning there were no limits to the length for which detainees could be sentenced and it was not until 1979 that a maximum sentence of four years three years sentence plus one year extension was set 19 20 In 1983 the management and implementation of the re education through labor system was passed from the Ministry of Public Security to the Ministry of Justice 19 When Falun Gong was banned in mainland China in 1999 re education through labor became a common punishment for practitioners 8 21 Some human rights groups claim that as many as 10 000 Falun Gong members were detained in between 1999 and 2002 21 with as many as 5 000 detained in 2001 22 More recent estimates suggest that hundreds of thousands of Falun Gong adherents are imprisoned in China 23 with some sources estimating up to half of the official reeducation through labor camp population is Falun Gong practitioners 24 In some labor camps Falun Gong practitioners make up the majority population 25 There have been numerous calls for the system to be reformed or replaced 26 As early as 1997 the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention WGAD called for China to allow judicial control over detentions 27 in 2000 the UN Committee Against Torture recommended that all forms of administrative detention including re education through labor be abolished 28 in 2004 the WGAD called for the establishment of rights to due process and counsel for individuals detained 26 and in 2005 the Special Rapporteur on Torture called for the outright abolition of re education through labor 26 The prominent deaths of two inmates in spring 2003 prompted many calls within China for reform of the system but reform did not happen immediately 28 though The China Daily reported that there was general consensus that reform was needed 29 In March 2007 however the Chinese government did announce that it would abolish the re education through labor system and replace it with a more lenient set of laws 13 According to the proposal the maximum sentence would be lowered from four years to 18 months re education centers would be renamed correction centers and have their fences and gates removed 13 30 A month later Chongqing municipality passed a law allowing lawyers to offer legal counsel in re education through labor cases 31 Many human rights groups however doubted the efficacy of the proposed reforms saying that the new laws would only help minor criminals and not help political prisoners and the reforms would not actually abolish the re education through labor system 30 The Laogai Research Foundation stated that lowering the maximum length of detention and changing the names of the detention facilities would not constitute a fundamental change 32 Nine months after the declaration that the laws would be rewritten the re education through labor system had not been abolished in December 2007 a group of academics drafted an open letter to the government calling for an end to the system 33 34 During the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing there were reports that some individuals who applied for permits to protest were detained without trial 35 of these some were sentenced to re education through labor 36 37 In the United Nations Human Rights Council s September 2008 Universal Periodic Review of the People s Republic of China re education through labor was listed as an urgent human rights concern 38 and as of February 2009 a large number of re education through labor camps were still in operation 39 Statistics edit Reports on re education through labor have found it difficult to estimate the number of people in re education centers 9 and nationwide statistics were often unavailable in the past 19 What data have become available often vary widely 20 Number of RTL detentions per year and overall Source Year Number of detaineesin given year Number of detaineessince founding PRC government 2009 190 000 39 2003 230 000 40 China Labour Bulletin 2007 300 000 30 Laogai Research Foundation 2006 2008 500 000 2 million 16 Unspecified non governmental organizations 2003 310 000 40 Human Rights in China organization 2001 200 000 19 in 1990s Human Rights Watch 1998 230 000 9 in 1997 Xinhua official news agency 2001 3 5 million 19 20 40 China Daily 2007 6 million 13 Of these detainees 5 to 10 percent are estimated to be political prisoners and as many as 40 percent are estimated to be drug offenders 41 in 1998 nearly one third of the known re education camps were specifically built for the purpose of holding drug offenders 20 The China Daily estimated that there were a total of 310 re education centers in China in 2007 13 The 2008 edition of the Laogai Research Foundation s biennial report listed exactly 319 confirmed re education centers in China and 74 unconfirmed ones but it also estimated that the actual number of such centers might be much higher 42 the provinces with the most centers being Guangdong 31 Heilongjiang 21 and Henan 21 43 In a February 2009 meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Council the Chinese government stated that there are 320 centers 39 The provinces with the largest numbers of re education centers include Guangdong Liaoning Heilongjiang and Henan 20 42 At the end of 2008 there were 350 labor camps and 160 000 prisoners were being held in them 44 Detentions editConviction and detention edit Sentencing for re education through labor is generally carried out by the police rather than by the judicial system so individuals are rarely charged or tried before being detained 9 19 45 46 47 Public security bureaus police offices are able to carry out administrative detentions for minor infringements that are not considered criminal acts 10 at least one analyst has suggested that local public security bureaus often abuse their authority and detain individuals for things such as personal vendettas 48 Individuals may also be sentenced to re education through labor by courts but the proportion of individuals who receive trials rather than going directly into administrative detention is determined in part by how much capacity that province has for re education detainees provinces with large re education through labor apparatus generally allow fewer detainees to have trials 49 Where detainees have been allowed a trial their lawyers have faced intimidation and abuse according to some reports 50 and the individuals under trial have sometimes been convicted on the basis of confessions that were coerced through torture and severe psychological pressure 50 In at least one instance convicted individuals were sent to re education through labor even after being found not guilty in a trial 51 47 Most detainees in re education through labor facilities are reported to be drug users petty criminals and prostitutes as well as some political prisoners 41 James Seymour has also claimed that most individuals sentenced to re education through labor are from urban areas 18 Individuals who attempt to leave the country illegally have also been sentenced to re education through labor upon their return 52 In periods leading up to visits from foreign dignitaries or politically sensitive anniversaries such as the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 local authorities have supposedly detained undesirables such as the homeless mentally or physically disabled individuals and migrant workers 53 One China specialist at the RAND Corporation has claimed that the police faced with a lack of modern rehabilitation and treatment programs use re education through labor convictions to warehouse individuals for an increasing number of social problems 41 Detainees can seek to have their detention repealed through an administrative review xingzheng fuyi 行政复议 of the decision or by filing an administrative litigation xingzheng susong 行政诉讼 against the Re education Through Labor Management Committee that detained them According to the advocacy group Chinese Human Rights Defenders however these options are ineffective and the groups overseeing the reviews and litigations often have the same interests as the management committee that originally ordered the detention 47 Conditions in the facilities edit nbsp Workers in the Shayang Re education Through Labor camp photo from the archives of the Laogai Museum The United States Department of State called the conditions in prisons harsh and frequently degrading and said the conditions in re education through labor facilities were similar citing overcrowded living spaces low quality food and poor or absent medical care 28 Detainees in camps are required to work for little or no pay 54 while Chinese law requires that prison laborers workday be limited to 12 hours a day 55 In 2001 sociologist Dean Rojek estimated that detainees generally worked six days a week in total silence 10 Much of the labor done by re education through labor detainees is geared towards agriculture 48 or producing goods many of which are sold internationally since re education through labor detainees are not counted as official prisoners and therefore not subject to international treaties 11 They also perform work ranging from tending vegetables and emptying septic pits to cutting stone blocks and construction work 46 Although drug abusers are ostensibly placed in re education through labor to be treated for their addictions some testimonial evidence has suggested that little meaningful treatment takes place in at least some of the centers and that drug abusers often relapse into addiction upon their release from detention 41 The facilities have been widely criticized for the physical abuse that is said to go on within them Corporal punishment is commonly used 10 and torture and physical abuse are also thought to be widespread in the facilities 28 In April 2003 Zhang Bin an inmate at the re education facility Huludao City Correctional Camp was beaten to death reportedly by other inmates and by the labor supervisor 28 Zhang s death along with the March 2003 death of inmate Sun Zhigang in a custody and repatriation prison sparked calls within China for reform of the system although reforms were not made immediately 28 56 Though most reports describe the conditions of re education camps as brutal 48 there are some claims of prisoners being well treated For example when he was released from a three year re education sentence in 1999 57 dissident Liu Xiaobo said that he had been treated very mildly that he had been allowed to spend time reading and that the conditions had been pretty good 48 Forced labor may include breaking rocks and assembling car seat covers and even gold farming in World of Warcraft 58 According to Chinese state media Xinhua slightly over 50 of detainees released from prison and re education through labor in 2006 received government aid in the form of funds or assistance in finding jobs 59 Life after release edit Detainees who are released from re education through labor camps may still be unable to travel or see other people freely Individuals who remain in re education through labor for 5 or more years may not be allowed to return to their homes and those who do may be closely monitored and not permitted to leave certain areas 53 For example in July 2003 a priest who had been released from detention was kept under house arrest and five men who attempted to visit him were themselves detained 51 Criticism editThe re education through labor system has been criticized by human rights groups foreign governments and UN bodies and Chinese rights lawyers Some Chinese government agencies and reformers within government have likewise criticized the system as being unconstitutional and advocated for its reform or abolition Human Rights Watch has stated that the re education through labor system violates international law specifically Article 9 4 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ICCPR which provides that Anyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings before a court in order that the court may decide without delay on the lawfulness of his detention 9 Re education through labor has also been criticized by numerous human rights groups for not offering procedural guarantees for the accused 19 22 and for being used to detain political dissidents 60 teachers 40 61 Chinese house church leaders 8 and Falun Gong practitioners 19 60 Furthermore even though the law up until 2007 specified a maximum length of detainment of four years at least one source mentions a retention for in camp employment system that allowed authorities to keep detainees in the camps for longer than their official sentences 9 Re education through labor has been a focus of discussion not only among foreign human rights groups but also among legal scholars in China some of whom were involved in the drafting of the 2007 laws meant to replace the system 19 In addition to legal scholars the Supreme People s Court of the People s Republic of China had criticized the system 45 In light of the widespread disapproval of the system HRIC called in 2001 for the system to be abolished entirely Among its criticisms it cited the fact that the wording of re education through labor laws was excessively vague allowing authorities to manipulate it the fact that the punishment given in re education centers was too severe for the crimes committed the abusive conditions at re education centers and the variation of re education through labor laws from one province to another 19 The Chinese Ministry of Justice has also noted that the system violated items in the Chinese constitution Wang Gongyi vice director of the Institute of Justice Research affiliated to the Ministry of Justice said that the re education through labor system contradicts several items in the Constitution the Criminal Procedure Law and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights which China signed in 1998 13 Although many human rights groups and legal scholars both within and without China called for the reform or total abolition of re education through labor China s security agencies have defended the use of the system as being necessary to maintain social stability A 1997 report in China s Legal Daily hailed re education through labor as a means to maintain social peace and prevent and reduce crime 9 The Ministry of Public Security stated in 2005 that re education through labor helped maintain rule of law and was mainly used for rehabilitating lawbreakers 41 In 2007 when new laws were drafted the Ministry of Public Security was opposed to the proposal that would allowing judicial review before punishment was enforced 13 Profit opportunities edit The laojiao system employs tens of thousands of people Profits are made through sale of the products of forced labor and through the collection of bribes received to reduce sentences or to ensure that relatives receive adequate food 62 Abolition editDuring the Third Plenum of the 18th Party Congress in Beijing on 15 November 2013 Chinese officials announced that they planned to abolish the Re education Through Labor system 63 64 The planned abolition of the system however has been criticised by human rights groups with Amnesty International issuing a report titled Changing the Soup but Not the Medicine Amnesty s report concludes that the camp closures are a positive step forward for human rights but the fundamental problems of arbitrary detention remain in China 64 Many of the policies and practices which resulted in individuals being punished for peacefully exercising their human rights by sending them to RTL have not fundamentally changed quite the contrary There is ample evidence that such policies and practices are continuing in full force The latest anti Falun Gong campaign launched earlier this year and intended to operate for three years shows that the CCP s determination to rid China of this spiritual group has not abated Falun Gong practitioners continue to be punished through criminal prosecution and being sent to brainwashing centres and other forms of arbitrary detention Petitioners likewise continue to be subjected to harassment forcibly committed to mental institutions and sent to black jails and other forms of arbitrary detention Human rights defenders democracy advocates whistle blowers and other political activists are also being increasingly targeted through criminal detention black jails short term administrative detention and enforced disappearances rather than RTL 64 On 28 December 2013 the Standing Committee of the National People s Congress abolished the re education through labor system 2 Detainees were released without finishing their sentences 3 See also edit nbsp China portal nbsp Law portal Custody and repatriation Human rights in the People s Republic of China List of Re education Through Labor camps in China Mao Hengfeng a human rights activist who has been repeatedly ill treated and tortured in the RTL camps Notes edit Long overdue The government says it will reform its system of labour camps The Economist 12 January 2013 Retrieved 8 November 2016 a b 全国人民代表大会常务委员会关于废止有关劳动教养法律规定的决定 in Chinese 28 December 2013 Retrieved 26 May 2016 a b Moore Malcolm 9 January 2014 China abolishes its labour camps and releases prisoners The Telegraph Retrieved 26 May 2016 Amnesty International CHINA CHANGING THE SOUP BUT NOT THE MEDICINE ABOLISHING RE EDUCATION THROUGH LABOUR IN CHINA Dec 2013 p 35 New Evidence for China s Political Re Education Campaign in Xinjiang uhrp org Retrieved 15 May 2018 新疆自治区主席 乌鲁木齐市委书记等在京答记者问 in Chinese 新京报客户端 10 December 2019 Chinese 目前 2019年10月 参加 三学一去 的教培学员已全部结业 在政府帮助下实现了稳定就业 改善了生活质量 过上了幸福生活 我大使答瑞媒17问 目前新疆没有一所教培中心 in Chinese 观察者网 24 March 2021 Chinese 截至2019年10月 教培中心学员已经全部毕业 目前 新疆没有一所教培中心 过去四年多来新疆也未再发生一起暴恐事件 这一切都显示出 我们在新疆的政策是正确的 a b c d Laogai Handbook PDF The Laogai Research Foundation 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 27 May 2008 Retrieved 18 October 2008 a b c d e f g h i Reeducation Through Labor in China Human Rights Watch June 1998 Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 12 October 2008 a b c d Rojek 2001 p 100 a b Laogai Handbook 2006 p 17 a b c d Laogai Handbook 2006 p 16 a b c d e f g h Wu Jiao 1 March 2007 New law to abolish laojiao system China Daily Retrieved 18 October 2008 Laogai Handbook 2006 p 20 a b Laogai Handbook 2006 p 22 a b Laogai Handbook 2006 p 18 Laogai Handbook 2006 p 23 a b Seymour 2005 p 149 a b c d e f g h i j k Reeducation Through Labor A Summary of Regulatory Issues and Concerns Human Rights in China 1 February 2001 Archived from the original on 7 September 2008 Retrieved 18 October 2008 a b c d e f Seymour 2005 p 150 a b Spiegel Mickey January 2002 Reeducation through Labor Transformation Centers Human Rights Watch Retrieved 28 October 2008 a b Eckholm Eric 28 February 2001 Beijing Turning Tables Defends its Repression of Sect The New York Times Archived from the original on 30 January 2013 Retrieved 18 October 2008 Leeshai Lemish Leeshai Lemish The Games are over the persecution continues permanent dead link National Post 7 October 2008 U S Department of State 2009 Human Rights Report China Including Tibet Hong Kong and Macau 11 March 2010 We Could Disappear at Any Time Human Rights Watch 7 December 2005 a b c Wickeri Elizabeth 2007 China s Growing Prominence in the Multilateral Human Rights System an HRIC brief PDF China Rights Forum 1 Human Rights in China 26 Archived from the original PDF on 29 July 2009 Human Rights Watch World Report 2005 China 28 January 2005 Retrieved 17 November 2008 a b c d e f Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 2004 Section 1c Torture and Other Cruel Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment End legal black hole China Daily 1 March 2007 Retrieved 17 November 2008 a b c Human rights groups doubt laojiao abolished AsiaNews 2 March 2007 Retrieved 18 October 2008 Chongqing China allows counsel for reeducation through labor cases Laogai Research Foundation 4 April 2007 Archived from the original on 30 April 2009 Retrieved 22 October 2008 Translated from Chinese original source was 海涛 4 April 2008 中国重庆允许律师代理劳动教养案 Voice of America Retrieved 4 April 2007 Editorial China abolishing Laojiao system Not likely Laogai Research Foundation 1 March 2007 Archived from the original on 29 April 2009 Retrieved 22 October 2008 Academics call for end to China camps China Post 5 December 2007 Retrieved 18 October 2008 Martinsen Joel 5 December 2007 Scholars and peasants vs re education through labor Danwei Retrieved 18 October 2008 Drew Jill Ariana Eunjung Cha 15 August 2008 No Permits No Protests in Beijing s Special Pens The Washington Post Retrieved 16 August 2008 Jacobs Andrew 20 August 2008 Too Old and Frail to Re educate Not in China The New York Times Retrieved 18 October 2008 Cha Ariana Eunjung 21 August 2008 Protest Application Brings Labor Camp Threat Woman Says The Washington Post Retrieved 18 October 2008 China UPR Submission United Nations Human Rights Council 30 September 2008 Retrieved 24 February 2009 Alternate link PDF a b c DRAFT REPORT OF THE WORKING GROUP ON THE UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW PDF Human Rights Council Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review United Nations Human Rights Council p 16 a b c d Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 2004 Section 1d Arbitrary Arrest Detention or Exile a b c d e Yardley Jim 9 May 2005 Issue in China Many in Jails Without Trial The New York Times p 2 Retrieved 22 October 2008 a b Laogai Handbook 2008 p 3 Laogai Handbook 2006 p 3 Tania Branigan 16 August 2012 Outcry in China over mother sent to labour camp after daughter s rape The Guardian a b Magnier Mark 5 March 2007 China thinks of closing its reeducation prisons Los Angeles Times Retrieved 7 November 2008 a b Chinese Justice amp Detention Centres in Tibet Gu Chu Sum Political Prisoners Association 24 June 2007 Archived from the original on 25 June 2007 Retrieved 12 December 2008 a b c Chinese Human Rights Defenders Re Education through Labor Abuses Continue Unabated Overhaul Long Overdue Chinese Human Rights Defenders 10 February 2009 Archived from the original on 29 April 2009 Retrieved 25 February 2009 a b c d Seymour 2005 p 151 Seymour 2005 pp 150 1 a b China includes Tibet Hong Kong and Macau 2003 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices United States Department of State Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 25 February 2004 Retrieved 17 November 2008 Section 1e Denial of Fair Public Trial a b Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 2004 Section 2c Freedom of Religion Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 2004 Section 6f Trafficking in Persons a b Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 2004 Section 2d Freedom of Movement within the Country Foreign Travel Emigration and Repatriation Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 2004 Section 6c Prohibition on Forced or Bonded Labor Laogai Handbook 2006 p 15 Stewart Terence Lighthizer Robert Hartquist David Schagrin Roger Andros Linda 18 August 2005 A Position Paper U S China Economic and Security Review Commission Archived from the original on 21 November 2008 Retrieved 17 November 2008 Student jailed one year for critical poster The Standard 9 October 1999 Retrieved 27 February 2009 dead link Chinese Prisoners Forced to Play World of Warcraft Detainee Says FOX News 26 May 2011 China says social care helps lower crime rate among ex convicts Xinhua News Agency 17 January 2009 Retrieved 23 February 2009 a b Laogai Handbook 2006 p 1 School Founder Seriously Ill in Prison and Children Beg in the Streets after Closure of Children s Home in Lhasa New Information about the Gyatso Arrests International Campaign for Tibet 12 September 2005 Retrieved 18 October 2008 Andrew Jacobs 14 December 2012 Opposition to Labor Camps Widens in China The New York Times Retrieved 15 December 2012 Buckley Chris 15 November 2013 China to Ease Longtime Policy of 1 Child Limit The New York Times Retrieved 3 February 2014 a b c Amnesty International Changing the Soup but Not the Medicine Abolishing Re Education Through Labour in China Amnesty International Publications 2013References editLibrary resources about Re education through labor Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Cohen Jerome A Lewis Margaret K 2013 Challenge to China How Taiwan Abolished Its Version of Re Education Through Labor Great Barrington MA Berkshire Publishing Group ISBN 9781614729327 Archived from the original on 18 November 2013 Retrieved 17 November 2013 Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 25 February 2004 China includes Tibet Hong Kong and Macau 2003 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices United States Department of State Retrieved 17 November 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Laogai Handbook PDF The Laogai Research Foundation 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 16 March 2007 Retrieved 18 October 2008 Laogai Handbook PDF The Laogai Research Foundation 2008 Retrieved 25 February 2009 Rojek Dean G 2001 Chinese Social Control From Shaming and Reintegration to Getting Rich is Glorious In Liu Jianhong Zhang Lening Steven F Messner eds Crime and Social Control in a Changing China Contributions to Criminology and Penology 53 Greenwood Press Seymour James D 2005 Sizing up China s prisons In Borge Bakken ed Crime Punishment and Policing in China Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 7425 3574 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Re education through labor amp oldid 1195334595, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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