2015 China
18 April,
Pingyao to Xi’an
Vienna Hotel 169CNY
Two firsts:
(1) We
changed our itinerary at the last moment and could not, therefore, get a seat
on the fast trains to Xi’an, it being a popular destination and a weekend. So
full were the trains, we could not purchase even standing-room-only tickets on
the first train of the day. We did, however, manage to get standing tickets, at
the same price as sitting tickets, for the 14:11 train, the D2507. In truth we
did not stand for much of the slightly-under-three-hour journey. Standing
passengers hover near the doors between carriages. Here, two fold-down seats
are supplied for train officials. A young woman sharing our space commandeered
one of these, while Charl and I took turns on the other. After an hour or so
the conductor beckoned to us and led us to two vacant seats and there we sat in
comfort for the remainder of the trip.
(2) We
had reserved a hotel in Xi’an via ctrip.com. They emailed us, however, to say
they did not accept foreigners. We know many hotels in China are not registered
to accommodate foreigners, but this is the first time we have been turned away.
The Vienna Hotel took us in, accommodating us in a windowless room at
considerably less than their normal rack rate. The Vienna shares a building
with another hotel, using floors 2-5 and 13-16. Instead of a real window, we
had a pretend window. A piece of glass with curtains hanging on either side and
a picture of a sunny beach behind the glass, complete with umbrellas and beach
chairs brightly lit. And here we are perfectly comfortable.
Did you know China has in theory abandoned its
Re-education Through Labour camps, but still incarcerates its citizens,
including prostitutes, without trial?
Amnesty.org:
“China’s ‘Re-education Through Labour’
camps: Replacing one system of repression with another? 17 December 2013
China’s
abolition of the “Re-education Through Labour” (RTL) system risks being no more
than a cosmetic change, with authorities already stepping up other forms of
persecution, Amnesty International said in a briefing released today.
While RTL
camps are being shut down, the briefing details how the Chinese authorities are
increasingly making use of so-called “black jails”, enforced drug
rehabilitation centres, and “brainwashing centres” to take their place.
“Abolishing
the RTL system is a step in the right direction. However, it now appears that
it may only be a cosmetic change just to avert the public outcry over the
abusive RTL system where torture was rife,” said Corinna-Barbara Francis,
Amnesty International’s China Researcher.
“It’s
clear that the underlying policies of punishing people for their political
activities or religious beliefs haven’t changed. The abuses and torture are
continuing, just in a different way.”
On 15
November 2013, China announced the decision to abolish the long-standing RTL
system, which for decades has been used to arbitrarily detain hundreds of
thousands of people without charge or trial.
The
“re-education” process often subjected those detained for political, religious
or personal beliefs and activities to torture to make them renounce their
beliefs and cease these activities.
However,
Amnesty International’s research shows that the authorities are increasingly
using other channels to punish the same types of individuals.
Old RTL
camps are often re-tooled, sometimes with a simple name change. Some have
re-opened, or simply been re-labelled as drug rehabilitation centres, so-called
“drug RTLs”. Most offer very little in the form of drug rehabilitation and
operate virtually identically to RTL camps – where detainees can be held for
years of harsh forced labour and ill-treatment.
The
authorities have also expanded the use of “brainwashing centres” – sometimes
officially known as “legal education classes” – designed primarily as places
where Falun Gong practitioners are coerced into renouncing their beliefs, often
through torture and other ill-treatment.
And they
have made increasing use of so-called “black jails” – unofficial detention
facilities, often set up in seemingly random places like hotels or abandoned
buildings, to incarcerate petitioners.
These
jails have no legal basis in Chinese laws and authorities continue to deny
their existence, leaving detainees potentially even more at risk of human
rights violations than in the RTL system.
Torture
is rampant in both “black jails” and “brainwashing centres”.
RTL
detainees told Amnesty International how they were severely beaten, sometimes
with electric batons, denied food, subjected to simulated drowning, injected
with unknown drugs and subjected to the “rack” torture.
Zhang
Lianying, 52, was sent three times to a RTL camp for refusing to give up her
religious beliefs. At the notorious Masanjia RTL camp she was subjected to
“rack” torture over 20 times for days at a time. She often had to endure this
torture naked, and was not fed, allowed to drink, sleep or go to the bathroom
during the entire time.
She told
Amnesty International that she was beaten immediately after arriving at the
camp.
“A male
guard hit my face again and again with handcuffs and with his fists. They tried
to pry open my mouth… and took turns smashing my mouth and teeth with metal
ladles. Blood gushed out of my mouth. Male and female guards grabbed my hair
and banged my head against the wall and a table.”
Other
detainees described being put through mental torture, with officials telling
them they were responsible for the end of their marriages, and threatening
persecution of their relatives and denying them family visits unless they
“confessed”. Detainees were also forced to discipline and “re-educate” other
detainees.
“Many
detainees, who had spent years in RTL camps, are now being sent directly to
’black jails’, ’brainwashing centres’ or drug RTLs because they continue to
refuse to give up their rights or beliefs,” said Corinna-Barbara Francis.
“The
Chinese authorities must immediately end all forms of arbitrary detention, and
ensure that laws protecting detainees are brought in line with international
human rights standards.
“There
needs to be a fundamental change in the policies that are at the root of the
repression and which strip detainees of their most basic rights. As long as
those are in place, the Chinese authorities will simply find new ways to punish
individuals they see as a threat.”"