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Prison Release of Chen Guangcheng
Only "a Step in the Right Direction"
Editor's note. The following is a
statement from the office of pro-life Congressman Chris Smith
(R-NJ).
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Human Rights
Activist Chen Guangcheng exposed forced abortion and
sterilization in China |
"The prison release of Chen
Guangcheng, one of China's most heroic human rights defenders,
is good news but only a step in the right direction," said Rep.
Chris Smith, a senior member of the House Committee on Foreign
Affairs.
"The fact that Chen remains under
house arrest, imprisoned in his own home, and is reportedly in
need of urgent medical attention, must not be ignored," Smith
said. "I appeal to the Chinese government to let Chen move about
freely and ensure that he has access to the care he needs."
In 2005 and 2006 rights activist
Chen Guangcheng revealed to the world the massive violence and
brutality of a one-child policy enforcement campaign in Linyi,
Shandong province. The Chinese government placed him under house
arrest, then convicted him on trumped-up charges of property
destruction. Chen served the full term of his 4-year3-month
sentence, despite health problems indicating the appropriateness
of medical parole. On September 9, 2010, officials transported
him from prison to his house, which reportedly is surrounded by
police and surveillance cameras, and foreign reporters
attempting to enter his village have been beaten and driven
away.
"The Chinese government's
relentless pursuit of Chen corresponds to the continuing
violence of the one-child policy, which Chen bravely exposed,"
Rep. Smith continued. "This year alone there are reliable
reports of large scale and forced abortion and sterilization
campaigns in Guangdong, Fujian, Yunnan, Zhejiang, and Jiangxi
provinces. The trauma to Chinese women is immense.
"As Ranking Member of the
Congressional-Executive Commission on China, I urge President
Obama to do everything possible to end human rights abuses in
China, including withholding funds from the United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA) until it divests from providing support
to the UN agency that aids and abets China's abusive population
control program."
Rep. Smith has chaired 28
hearings on human rights in China, including a November 2009
hearing, "Thirty Years of the One-Child Policy." In February of
this year, Rep. Smith led a bi-partisan group of Congressmen in
nominating Chen Guangcheng for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Smith is a senior member of the
Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, and Ranking Member of
Congressional-Executive Commission on China. |