Archive: October 18, 2023

Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders. Photo: UN

UN Expert Demands Release of Human Rights Defender Guo Feixiong in China

Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders. Photo: UN
Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders. Photo: UN

UN Expert Demands Release of Human Rights Defender Guo Feixiong in China

Guo Feixiong is the pen name of Chinese human rights defender and writer Yang Maodong. 

Chinese authorities can no longer ignore calls for the release of human rights defender Guo Feixiong, whose health has been seriously deteriorating in prison, a UN expert said today (October 18).

“Mr. Guo Feixiong is unjustly imprisoned, and he is in a critical state of health,” said Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders. “UN human rights experts have sent 10 urgent letters to authorities about his situation since 2006. He must be released immediately on humanitarian grounds,” she said.

According to a UN Human Rights Office statement, Guo Feixiong is the pen name of Chinese human rights defender and writer Yang Maodong. He has spent over 13 years in prison since 2005 on baseless charges.

In the most recent of detentions, on 5 December 2021, he was taken into police custody and held for six months without access to his lawyer. Mr. Guo Feixiong was subsequently charged with subversion of State power in June 2022, convicted by the court of first instance in May 2023 and sentenced to eight years in prison. The sentence against the human rights defender was upheld on appeal in June 2023.

“Guo has launched several hunger strikes to protest his arbitrary detention and his situation is now critical,” Lawlor said. “His weight has dropped dramatically, he is suffering from a number of serious health conditions and is without access to acceptable medical treatment. I am extremely concerned that his life may be in danger,” she said, adding that the Chinese authorities must immediately and unconditionally release Mr. Guo Feixiong.

The Special Rapporteur stressed her willingness to continue to engage with Chinese authorities to ensure the rights of Mr. Guo Feixiong and many other human rights defenders in similar situations in China, are upheld.

Ms. Mary Lawlor (Ireland) was appointed as Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders by the Human Rights Council in 2020.

Poor children who live and sleep on the open pavements in India’s capital New Delhi. Photo: Rakesh Raman / RMN News Service (Representational Image)

New Research Report Reveals Massive Corruption in India

Poor children who live and sleep on the open pavements in India’s capital New Delhi. Photo: Rakesh Raman / RMN News Service
Poor children who live and sleep on the open pavements in India’s capital New Delhi. Photo: Rakesh Raman / RMN News Service

New Research Report Reveals Massive Corruption in India

India Corruption Research Report 2023 – Corruption in India Research

The India Corruption Research Report 2023 (ICRR 2023) is the second annual report on corruption in India. Released in October 2023, the 86-page report covers diverse aspects of corruption in India. Some of the key facts are given below.

ICRR 2023: Key Facts

Corruption in India is increasing exponentially.

Corruption cases of the ruling regime never get investigated.

Bureaucrats enjoy full impunity in their acts of corruption.

Judicial corruption is increasing rapidly.

Courts are mostly complicit in corruption crimes.

Oligarchs close to the government politicians commit financial crimes blatantly.

Investigation agencies are negligent and unskilled to handle corruption cases.

Anti-corruption laws are not followed.

Courts easily grant bail to corrupt politicians.

Corruption is equally rampant in the Central and State governments.

With opaque corporate funding through electoral bonds, political corruption by the ruling regime has increased manifold.

In return to illicit corporate funds, the government does not take back loans given to corporates. Banks have written off bad loans worth Rs. 14.56 lakh crore (~ US$ 175 billion) in the last nine financial years starting 2014-15. This is the most dreaded form of organized corruption.

As the leaders of opposition political parties are equally corrupt, they do not oppose government corruption. 

Since politicians, bureaucrats, police, and judges have formed a criminal gang in India, there is no forum for citizens where they could complain and get rid of corruption.

You can click here to download and read the report.

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