Events
» The Congressional-Executive Commission on China
Published 06/22/2011
The Congressional-Executive Commission on China announces a roundtable discussion hosted by Senator Sherrod Brown, Cochairmanon Current Conditions for Human Rights Defenders and Lawyers in China, and Implications for U.S. PolicyThursday, June 23, 2011 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Russell Senate Office Building, Room 328A In recent months, Chinese officials reportedly have conducted one of the harshest crackdowns in years against human rights lawyers, civic activists, and other advocates. Those targeted have advocated on behalf of specific groups and issues, such as victims of earthquakes, diseases, and tainted food, child laborers, persecuted religious groups, and political dissidents. Targeted individuals also have advocated for broader freedoms and democracy. The Internet and social media have played a prominent role in their advocacy. During the crackdown, Chinese officials reportedly have abused the law in some cases, "disappearing" some citizens outside the legal process. This roundtable will examine the implications of this crackdown on the advocacy work of those affected and the broader implications for the rule of law, the Chinese legal profession, and for U.S. policy. This roundtable will be webcast here. Panelists: Elisabeth Wickeri, Executive Director and Adjunct Professor of Law, Leitner Center for International Law and Justice, Fordham Law School; Member, Committee to Support Chinese Lawyers Margaret K. Lewis, Associate Professor of Law, Seton Hall Law School Li Xiaorong, Independent Scholar Sarah Cook, Asia Research Analyst and Assistant Editor, Freedom on the Net, Freedom House CECC Roundtables are open to the public. No RSVP is necessary. Click here to download a copy of the Commission's full 2010 Annual Report. The Congressional-Executive Commission on China, established by the U.S.-China Relations Act of 2000 as China prepared to enter the World Trade Organization, is mandated by law to monitor human rights, including worker rights, and the development of the rule of law in China, and to prepare an Annual Report to the President and Congress. The Commission by mandate also maintains a database of information on political prisoners in China—individuals who have been imprisoned by the Chinese government for exercising their civil and political rights under China's Constitution and laws or under China's international human rights obligations. The Commission's reporting and its Political Prisoner Database are available to the public online via the Commission's Web site, http://www.cecc.gov. Maya H. Graham Press Secretary and External Affairs Coordinator Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) Visit www.cecc.gov for analysis of recent developments and other resources related to the development of rule of law and human rights in China.
» THE CITY OF KASHGAR – AN OASIS OF THE SILK ROAD ON THE BRINK OF EXTINCTION
Published 01/17/2011
9.00 – 12.30h Thursday, 27 January 2011 Room PHS 5B001, Paul-Henri Spaak Building, European Parliament 60 Rue Wiertz, Brussels, Belgium Brussels, 17 January 2011 – Two years into Beijing’s ‘Kashgar Dangerous House Reform’, and the Old City of Kashgar in East Turkestan, or China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR), faces near total destruction. There is a pressing need to assess the damage incurred, implications for the region’s Uyghur population, and to identify ways in which damage can be mitigated. To address this urgent need, Ms Frieda Brepoels MEP will convene a conference, ‘Kashgar: An Oasis of the Silk Road on the Brink of Extinction’ at the European Parliament in Brussels from 9.00–12.30 on 27 January 2011 in collaboration with the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO) and the Belgian Uyghur Association. After opening remarks by Rebiya Kadeer, Nobel Peace Prize nominee and President of the World Uyghur Congress, international experts including Henryk Szadziewski, Manager of the Uyghur Human Rights Project, Washington, and Ulrich Delius, German Society for Threatened Peoples, will provide a rare glimpse into one of the defining cultures of Central Asia and an internationally significant Silk Road city that has witnessed Tamerlane, Genghis Khan and Marco Polo but is excluded from applications for UNESCO World Heritage status due to political reasons. Drawing on the historical lessons taught by the international case studies of Lhasa and Bruges, Vincent Metten, EU Policy Director of the International Campaign for Tibet, and Suzanne van Haeverbeek, former Flemish world heritage expert, will discuss how international intervention may prevent Kashgar’s further destruction and avoid the total and irreversible loss of a unique site of cultural and architectural heritage. For more information on the event please refer to http://www.unpo.org/article/12104 * * * Registration is required and must be submitted before 19 January 2011 Please send your full name, date of birth, place of residence, nationality, organisation to ekrockow@unpo.org
» China Defense & Security 2011
Published 12/24/2010
Jamestown Foundation
Presents China Defense & Security 2011 Featuring Keynote Address by The Honorable Kurt M. Campbell Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Thursday, February 10, 2011 Root Conference Room Carnegie Endowment for International Peace 1779 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest Washington D.C., DC 20036-2109 *Registration for this conference will open on January 3, 2011* **Members of the Friends of Jamestown Program will receive a 50% discount on conference admission.** -------------------------------------------------------------------------- REGISTRATION: 8:30 A.M. - 9:00 A.M. OPENING REMARKS: 9:00 A.M. - 9:15 A.M "MILITARY POWER IN CHINA'S GRAND STRATEGY" Arthur Waldron Lauder Professor of International Relations, University of Pennsylvania PANEL ONE: 9:15 A.M. - 10:30 A.M. CHINA'S RISE & GLOBAL SECURITY Moderator: L.C. Russell Hsiao Editor, China Brief Presenters: "Beijing's Quasi-Superpower Diplomacy & Expanding Core Interests" Willy Lam Senior Fellow, The Jamestown Foundation "China's Rise in the Changing Strategic Landscape" Michael Green Senior Adviser and Japan Chair, CSIS Associate Professor, Georgetown University "Military Balance and Cross-Strait Relations" To be announced (TBA) COFFEE BREAK: 10:30 A.M. – 10:45 A.M. PANEL TWO: 10:45 A.M. - 12:00 P.M. FORCE STRUCTURE & MISSIONS Moderator: Ambassador Stapleton Roy Director, Kissinger Institute on China and the United States, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Presenters: "The Chinese Armed Forces Structure and Evolving Missions" Dennis Blasko Former Military Intelligence Officer and Foreign Area Officer specializing in China "The Ten Pillars of the PLAAF" Kenneth Allen Senior Research Analyst, DGI’s Center for Intelligence Research "Second Artillery Corps" Mark Stokes Executive Director, Project 2049 Institute LUNCHEON AND KEYNOTE ADDRESS 12:00 PM - 1:15 PM The Honorable Kurt Campbell Assistant Secretary of State Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs Q & A PANEL THREE: 1:15 PM - 2:30 PM NAVAL MODERNIZATION & STRATEGIC THINKING Moderator: RADM Michael McDevitt, USN (Ret.) Vice President, Center for Naval Analyses Presenters: "Strategic Thinking in China's Naval Modernization" Dan Blumenthal Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute "China's Anti-Access/Area Denial Capabilities" Andrew Erickson Associate Professor, U.S. Naval War College "The PLAN's Evolving Naval Doctrine & Strategy" Nan Li Associate Professor, U.S. Naval War College COFFEE BREAK: 2:30 P.M. - 2:45 P.M. PANEL FOUR: 2:45 P.M. - 4:00 P.M THE FUTURE OF CHINA DEFENSE & SECURITY Moderator: Richard C. Bush III Director of the Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies, Brookings Institution Presenters: "Science & Technology in China's Defense Modernization" Tai Ming Cheung Associate Research Scientist, IGCC "Information Warfare and China's Cyber-warfare Capabilities" To be announced (TBA) "Advances in China's Space Program" Dean Cheng Research Fellow, Heritage Foundation CONCLUSION: 4:00 P.M. -------------------------------------------------- *** For further information please contact Hsiao@jamestown.org***
» "Becoming Chinese" – A photography exhibit by Carolyn Drake
Published 11/25/2010
Artist reception and slideshow: December 7, 2010, 7:30 p.m.
ARTIST’S STATEMENT
Since 2007, I have been documenting the Uighur people in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, a vast, arid end-point to the Central Asian Silk Road above Tibet. “Becoming Chinese” focuses on where Uighurs ply trades and work farms, scrum open-air markets, traverse trucking routes, and try to transmit an ethnic culture under siege.
China’s policy to develop its western frontier (which holds its largest natural gas reserves), has sent millions of loyal Han Chinese into Xinjiang, home to about 10 million Uighurs. Though unofficial, China’s flagrant efforts to exterminate the Uighur's millennia-old culture is ongoing. Against these overwhelming tides, Uighurs continue to aspire to cultural and political autonomy, and at times to independence. These images provide glimpses into the disappearing spaces of their daily lives.
ARTIST’S BIO
Based in Istanbul, Turkey, American photographer Carolyn Drake is best known for her work examining the history, topography, cultures, and geopolitical borders of Central Asia. Situated between China, Russia, Iran and Afghanistan, this is a region where East meets West—where cultures have intersected and collided for millennia.
Drake is the recipient of a Fulbright fellowship, the Lange Taylor Documentary Prize, and a Guggenheim fellowship, as well as awards from the POYi and World Press Photo competitions. Her work is published in numerous publications, including The New Yorker, National Geographic, The New York Times, and Newsweek. Recent exhibitions include solos shows at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford, UK and The Third Floor Gallery in Cardiff, Wales.
Her web site is at: http://www.carolyndrake.com
ALL PHOTOGRAPHY EVENTS ARE FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
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THE HALF KING IS LOCATED AT 505 WEST 23RD STREET, JUST WEST OF 10TH AVENUE.
» ANNOUNCING THE CHINESE TRANSLATION OF LESSONS IN DEMOCRACY
Published 09/25/2010
LESSONS IN DEMOCRACY (www.lessonsindemocracy.org) Contact: Roland Watson, roland@lessonsindemocracy.org ANNOUNCING THE CHINESE TRANSLATION OF LESSONS IN DEMOCRACY September 24, 2010 We are very pleased to announce the Chinese translation of Lessons in Democracy, by the Wei Jingsheng Foundation. The translation is available in two Chinese character sets, Simplified and Traditional. The translation will be launched at a press conference in Room HC-6 of the United States Capitol, from 2.00pm - 3.30pm, September 27th. The conference will be followed by a seminar on The Sixty-One Years of Communist China, by the Asia Democracy Alliance, from 3.30pm - 5pm. http://www.lessonsindemocracy.org/LessonsinDemocracyChineseSimplified.pdf http://www.lessonsindemocracy.org/LessonsinDemocracyChineseTraditional.pdf Wei Jingsheng is a leading pro-democracy advocate for China. He spent eighteen years as a political prisoner. His first imprisonment followed Deng Xiaoping’s formal announcement of the “four modernizations,” in agriculture, industry, national defense, and science and technology. Mr. Wei wrote an article saying that China needed democracy as well, which article he titled the Fifth Modernization, and which he posted in 1978 on Beijing’s Democracy Wall. He was arrested, for the first time, after taking this courageous step. The lessons were translated by Huang Ciping, Director of the Foundation. Ms. Huang, a scientist in optical physics, was previously President of the Independent Federation of Chinese Students and Scholars in the United States, and the Global Chinese Students and Scholars' Union. The translation was edited by Cheng Yike. Ms. Cheng is an author and has published seven books in China, including five children’s books, a book of essays, and a biography. Please forward these links, if possible right now, to all your Chinese friends. Please also post the links on as many China email lists, blogs and websites as possible. The basic idea for the translation is that if the people of China want democracy, they should be interested to learn about it. Then, when they understand how their lives would be changed, practically, with freedom and human rights, they should be willing to fight for it. This means that the lessons are not solely an educational initiative. They will have a political impact as well. The lessons are "A" democracy guide, not "The" democracy guide. There are many approaches to teaching democracy - ours is only one of them. Our approach begins with an emphasis on the underlying principles. When people who live in dictatorships ask about democracy, they don't start with questions about the system's formal mechanisms, like elections and political parties, or its presidential and parliamentary alternatives. Instead, they want to know about the ideas: What is democracy, really? What would it mean to me? How would my life in a democratic nation be different, and better? Again, for China, this implies that the initiative will have a political impact as well as educational. At present, many individuals and groups in China are protesting for their rights, but without a simultaneous demand for democracy. They have yet to learn that such rights can never be established and preserved unless the dictatorship that rules the country - the Communist Party of China - is replaced with democratic government. Lessons in Democracy is a long-term initiative. It takes years to devise ways to expose a national population to the ideas of democracy, certainly in a dictatorship like China. If you can help us promote and distribute the translation, we will be off to a good start. (Thanks!)
» The 2010 DOD China Report - Defining the Challenge to Taiwan
Published 09/16/2010
The 2010 DOD China Report Defining the Challenge to Taiwan Speakers: Mark Stokes Executive Director Project 2049 Institute Dan Blumenthal Resident Fellow and Director, Asian Studies American Enterprise Institute Dean Cheng Research Fellow, Asian Studies Center The Heritage Foundation Host: Walter Lohman Director, Asian Studies Center The Heritage Foundation Date: Tuesday, September 28, 2010 Time: 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium or call (202) 675-1752 News media inquiries, please call (202) 675-1761 All events can be viewed live at heritage.org. Guests are subject to Terms and Conditions of Attendance, which can be read at heritage.org/Events/Terms-and-Conditions-of-Attendance.
The recently released annual Department of Defense Report to Congress provides the official US assessment of China's military capabilities. What does it say explicitly - and implicitly - about the threat posed to Taiwan? How should the report findings influence pending arms sales and America's obligations under the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA)? Taiwan's long-standing request for F-16s remains unfilled. Undue delays have surfaced over seemingly minor arms sales notifications to Congress. Is U.S. policy toward Taiwan taking the threat it faces into full account? Or having made the $6.4 billion second installment on the Bush-era sale to Taiwan, is the Administration tacking back to a more China-sensitive orientation? We hope to address these questions and others with top experts on the PLA and the cross-straits military balance.
» “Ethnic Conflicts” or “Social Riots”? How to Understand Ethnic Relations in Xinjiang
Published 09/13/2010
Professor Yang Zhongdong talks about ethnic relations in Xinjiang. 09/23/2010 4:00PM - 6:00PM USC Davidson Conference Center, California Room Address: 3415 S. Figueroa, Los Angeles, CA 90007 Cost: Free Phone: 1-213-821-4382 Website: http://china.usc.edu/ShowArticle.aspx?articleID=2005 Professor Yang Zhongdong, a visiting scholar from Xinjiang University’s School of Humanities, talks about recent ethnic riots in China's Xinjiang Autonomous Region. Professor Yang argues against the use of the concept of "ethnic conflict" to describe of the 2009 riots in Xinjiang. He combines a comprehensive analysis of the riots with particular attention to social, economic, cultural, and historical factors with recollections of his own personal experiences in Xinjiang. Professor Yang's research focus is contemporary Muslim communities in Xinjiang Province. Born in Urumqi, the region’s capital, Professor Yang is a Hui, a Muslim ethnic minority. This background helped inspire his study of the history and the culture of Xinjiang. As a scholar in Hui Studies, a fairly new discipline, Professor Yang emphasizes the importance of the ethnological discipline in his research. Ethnology, according to Professor Yang, incorporates a large amount of fieldwork that is essential to studying one specific ethnicity. The diversity of China dictates that an ethnological approach to studying the Xinjiang people is indispensible. His current research in Los Angeles involves comparing how religion and ethnicity shape the identity of Muslim minorities in the U.S. and China. Contact: US-China Institute Phone: 1-213-821-4382 Email: uschina@usc.edu Sponsor(s): US-China Institute
» Roundtable: "China's Far West: Conditions in Xinjiang One Year After Demonstrations and Riots"
Published 07/9/2010
Monday, July 19, 2010 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 628At this CECC roundtable, panelists will provide an analysis of conditions in the far western region of Xinjiang one year since demonstrations and rioting in Xinjiang's capital in July 2009. The 2009 events drew an international spotlight to longstanding tensions in the region and to Uyghurs' grievances toward government policies that have undermined their rights. Has the government since taken steps to address these grievances? Authorities pledged in 2010 to improve economic conditions in Xinjiang and appointed a new Party secretary for the region. How will these new developments shape Xinjiang's future? Have authorities adhered to international standards for due process in carrying out trials connected to alleged crimes committed in July 2009? How have government controls over the free flow of information affected our understanding of events in the region? Panelists: Kathleen E. McLaughlin, China correspondent for BNA, Inc., and freelance journalist Sophie Richardson, Asia Advocacy Director, Human Rights Watch Stanley W. Toops, Associate Professor, Department of Geography and International Studies Program, Miami University CECC Roundtables are open to the public. No RSVP is necessary.
» CAN ANYONE HEAR US? VOICES FROM THE 2009 UNREST IN URUMCHI
Published 06/23/2010
and the National Endowment for Democracy cordially invite you to the launch of a new report from the Uyghur Human Rights Project, CAN ANYONE HEAR US? VOICES FROM THE 2009 UNREST IN URUMCHI and a roundtable discussion on UYGHUR-HAN TENSIONS: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Thursday, July 1, 2010 2:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
1025 F Street NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20004 RSVP with name and affiliation by Tuesday, June 29 On July 5, 2009, thousands of young Uyghur protestors, holding the red flags of the People's Republic of China, peacefully took to the streets of Urumchi to protest against the beating and killing of several Uyghur migrant workers a week earlier at a toy factory in Guangdong province and to demand respect for the human rights of the Uyghur people. Two days later, according to Chinese government media, the death toll from street riots stood at 197 (of whom the vast majority were reported to be Han Chinese), with 1,700 injured. Chinese President Hu Jintao left the G8 Summit in Rome early and returned to Beijing to manage the unrest, one of the worst cases of inter-ethnic violence in the history of the People's Republic of China. In the aftermath of the violence, independent observers voiced concerns about a large number of deaths of Uyghurs as well as Han Chinese, as well as sweeping detentions of young men in Urumchi and other cities, with 26 death sentences and nine executions officially reported to date. In advance of the one-year anniversary of the Urumchi unrest, analysts will assess the causes of the transformation of peaceful demonstrations into deadly inter-ethnic violence, government policy responses to the unrest, the effect of those policies on Uyghur and Han populations in Xinjiang, and the likely outcomes of the May 2010 Xinjiang Work Conference hosted by Chinese President Hu Jintao. Agenda
2:00 Report Launch: Can Anyone Hear Us? Voices from the 2009 Unrest in Urumchi. What Happened? From July 5 through the September "syringe attacks." Amy Reger, Researcher, Uyghur Human Rights Project, and Henryk Szadziewski, Project Manager, Uyghur Human Rights Project **Special Feature: Testimony of two eyewitnesses With comments by: Dr. Sophie Richardson, Advocacy Director for Asia, Human Rights Watch Clothilde Le Coz, Washington Director, Reporters Without Borders Moderator: Brian Joseph, Senior Director for Asia and Global Programs, NED 3:15 Coffee Break 3:30 Keynote Remarks: Ms. Rebiya Kadeer, President, World Uyghur Congress Mr. Carl Gershman, President, National Endowment for Democracy 4:00 Roundtable Discussion: Chinese government policy, developments on the ground, international perspectives. Are the problems in Xinjiang and Tibet unique to ethnic minorities, or are there under-explored commonalities with other marginalized communities in China? Dr. Dru Gladney, President, Pacific Basin Institute Bhuchung Tsering, Vice President, International Campaign for Tibet Dr. Yang Jianli, President, Initiatives for China Hans Hogrefe, Democratic Staff Director, Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Kara Abramson, Advocacy Director, Congressional-Executive Commission on China Moderator: Louisa Greve, Vice President for Asia, MENA, and Global Programs, NED 5:30 Close
Selected resources: "The expert urged measures to weaken the identity of ethnic groups in policy-making, such as closing ethnic schools to promote more communication between different ethnic groups." (China Daily, June 4, 2010). Society for Threatened Peoples,After the disturbances in Urumqi: Persecution of Uyghurs in China continues, May 2010. Congressional-Executive Commission on China, 198 People in Xinjiang Reportedly Sentenced in Trials Marked By Lack of Transparency, March 26, 2010
Amnesty International, Hasty executions highlight unfair Xinjiang trials, November 10, 2009 Human Rights Watch, We Are Afraid to Even Look for Them, October 20, 2009 Uyghur Human Rights Project, Separate and Unequal: The Status of Development in East Turkestan, September 28, 2009 The Roberts Report, The Information War over the Urumqi Riots and the "Netizens" of China: Are we witnessing the dawn of a new era in Han Chinese nationalism?, July 10, 2009 Human Rights in China, Religious Repression of Uighur Muslims -- Architecture of Xinjiang Suppression Detailed, 2005
» NED In Cooperation with the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Presents "The 10 Conditions of Love"
Published 05/25/2010
THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR DEMOCRACY In Cooperation with the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Presents The 10 Conditions of Love A documentary about the Uyghur people and Rebiya Kadeer Film introduction by Rebiya Kadeer Remarks by Rep. Jim McGovern(D-MA) Chairman, Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Wednesday, May 26, 2010 4-6pm The Pickford Theater The Library of Congress James Madison Building RSVP to kellyd@ned.org 10 conditionsThe 10 Conditions of Love tells the story of the Uyghurs' struggle for basic human rights in China through the remarkable life of Rebiya Kadeer, a Uyghur woman working for the rights of her people at great personal cost. The documentary explores Ms. Kadeer's experience as an entrepreneur in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region/East Turkestan and a member of the National People's Political Consultative Committee, her subsequent imprisonment as a political dissident, and her forced exile in the United States since 2005. Ms. Kadeer works to inform the world about the treatment of her people by the Chinese government while her family remaining in China suffers the consequences of her human rights activism. Ms. Kadeer is Director of the International Uyghur Human Rights and Democracy Foundation, which has received NED support since 2005. In addition, she serves on the Boards of Directors of the Uyghur American Association and the World Uyghur Congress, which also receive NED support for their work to advocate for the civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights of Uyghurs in China. Ms. Kadeer's autobiography, Dragon Fighter, One Woman's Epic Struggle for Peace with China, was published in May 2009. This 53-minute documentary was written and directed by Jeff Daniels and produced by John Lewis. NED and the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission are grateful to the filmmakers for their kind permission to screen the film.
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