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![[Name]](img/highlight/case-name.gif) |
| Shi Tao |
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| Illegally providing state secrets |
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![[Release Date]](img/highlight/case-release.gif) |
| November 23, 2014 |
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Advocacy Update: China Reviewed over Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
[First printed in China Rights Forum, No.3 2005]
A United Nations Committee found that China
needs to do more to ensure that all of its citizens
benefit equally from its phenomenal
economic growth.
The PRC's progress in implementing the International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) came under
review during the 34th session of the United Nations Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (the Committee),
convened between April 25 and May 13 this year.
Under the terms of the ICESCR, each state party agrees to
take steps, to the maximum of its available resources, toward
achieving the full realization of rights recognized in the
Covenant, including the adoption of legislative measures. Furthermore,
state parties must ensure that the progress in achieving
these rights is shared on a non-discriminatory basis among
all segments of society.
By signing the ICESCR on October 27, 1997, and ratifying
it on March 27, 2001, the PRC has agreed to respect and protect
the exercise of the rights included in the Covenant.As
required by the Covenant, the PRC in 2004 submitted its initial
report on implementation of the ICESCR for consideration
during the Committee's 34th session.
As part of HRIC's international advocacy and participation
in UN human rights monitoring processes, in April 2005,
HRIC submitted a 46-page parallel NGO report to the Committee
highlighting the need to review the PRC's progress
within the framework of the widening social and economic
disparities between China's coastal and inland provinces, urban
and rural areas and within regions as China has recorded neardouble-
digit economic growth over the past two decades. In
addition to the NGO report, HRIC also participated in NGO
briefings and meetings with expert members of the Committee.
This advocacy update summarizes the PRC report and
HRIC's report organized along the Articles of the ICESCR, and
reports on the findings and conclusions of the ICSECR following
its review of the PRC report.
The PRC report relies primarily on national aggregated data
and focuses on urban areas, which as of 2002 represented just
37.7 percent of the total population. Furthermore, the pervasive
control and regulation of information by the PRC government
through State Secrets, State Security and other laws, social and
police controls and censorship technology, not only undermines
effective monitoring and review of the PRC government's compliance
with the Covenant, but also impedes the government's
own ability to formulate properly designed policies and programs
that facilitate public scrutiny and participation.
In its report, HRIC looks primarily at the PRC's implementation
of its obligations under the ICESCR specifically as they
relate to "worse-off regions or areas" and "specific groups or
subgroups which appear to be particularly vulnerable or disadvantaged,"
a focus mandated by the Covenant.
HRIC's report addresses the hidden costs of China's
inequitable distribution of the benefits of economic growth
and the excessive burden it has imposed on vulnerable and
marginalized groups, and concludes that the PRC government
needs more concrete and systematic reporting, monitoring
and evaluation of its extensive formal legislation and implementation
efforts. Despite extensive promulgation of reform
legislation and policies that have generated economic growth
of nearly ten percent per annum during the past 20 years, vulnerable
populations¡ªrural inhabitants, ethnic minorities,
women and migrant workers, and their families¡ªare still
largely excluded from the benefits of China's economic growth
due to the preferential development of urban areas and to
mechanisms such as the hukou registration system.
Despite past and present official announcements regarding
reforms or dismantling of the hukou system, the restrictive registration
system still deprives migrants of equal access to housing,
healthcare and work benefits.The actual implementation
of any reforms, including an administrative licensing system
for urban residency, will need to be carefully monitored.
The growing social and economic gap is also fueling
increasing social unrest and instability. Official police data for
2003 acknowledge least 58,000 "mass incidents" involving
more than three million people protesting a range of issues
including corruption, forced relocations and evictions, lay-offs
and unpaid wages.
In short, four years after ratifying the ICESCR, the PRC government
has yet to use "all available means" to take deliberate,
concrete and targeted steps towards realizing the rights recognized
in the Covenant, and has not effectively complied with
its immediate obligation of non-discrimination. It has also
failed to adhere to the principles enumerated in the Committee's
Declaration on the Right to Development: to adopt
national policies that promote fair distribution of the benefits
of development and equal opportunity for all in their access to
basic resources, education, health services, food, housing,
employment and the fair distribution of income.
ICESCR Article 2: Measures Taken to Guarantee the Full Realization of Rights
The PRC's report emphasizes both the hard data of economic
growth and the promulgation of extensive legislation to
demonstrate the steps it has taken to implement the rights
under the Covenant. However, as the General Comments issued
by the Committee outline, obligations of conduct and result
are not necessarily fulfilled through legislative measures alone;
the full range of measures adopted, the basis on which they are
considered most appropriate, and the identification of benchmarks
and goals are important in assessing a state party's
record.
Although the PRC government's report acknowledges a
poverty gap in China, it fails to admit and detail the extent to
which vulnerable populations are increasingly disadvantaged
despite economic growth. By presenting only national aggregate
data on overall economic growth, the PRC report cannot
contribute to an accurate assessment of its implementation of
the rights under the Covenant in relation to worse-off regions
and vulnerable populations, and undermines development of
effective policy interventions.
In order to supplement the incomplete analysis offered by
the PRC report, HRIC's report uses available data and international
standards to analyze the situation of particular groups
and regions, showing serious inequality between China's
urban and rural residents, between its Han and ethnic minority
groups, and between its settled and migrant populations.
The PRC government is also under an obligation to give
effect to the Covenant in its domestic legal order. However, the
legislation it has passed does not clearly and adequately set
forth avenues of redress for individuals and groups who
believe their rights have been infringed. In addition to the formal
legal system, the right to criticize and appeal to the government
(the petitions and visits system) is guaranteed under
Chinese law, and is used by increasingly large numbers of individuals.
Yet the use of Public Security measures and detentions
against petitioners casts doubt on the ability to freely exercise
these rights, and undercuts the petition system as an effective
means of grievance and redress.
ICESCR Articles 6 and 7: The Right to Work and to Favorable Working Conditions
The unequal economic opportunities and income resulting
from development policies that favor urban areas has led to
increased rural-urban migration as rural inhabitants move to
urban areas to seek better employment opportunities.The hukou
system also continues to place an inequitable burden on
migrant workers in terms of unfavorable and unjust working
conditions, including non-payment of wages, unsafe working
environments and working hours that exceed the maximum
under the labor law.These problems are compounded by
China's state secrets regulatory framework, which limits access
to information about workplace health and safety and industrial
accidents.The lack of transparency impacts particularly
those vulnerable groups—migrant workers and rural residents—
who make up a large proportion of those working in
factories and mines.
ICESCR Article 8: The Right to Join a Trade Union
The PRC's declaration regarding Article 8.1(a) states that application
shall be consistent with the relevant provisions of the
Constitution of the People's Republic of China,Trade Union
Law of the People's Republic of China and Labor Law of the
People's Republic of China. However, this declaration sidesteps
the government's obligation to modify its domestic legal order
to conform with and implement its obligations under the
Covenant.The right to join a trade union of one's choice is a
necessary precondition for the ability of workers to seek remedies
where the government may have violated their rights as
guaranteed by the Covenant.The PRC Report maintains that
Chinese domestic legislation protects the right to freedom of
association, and characterizes the All-China Federation of Trade
Unions (ACFTU) as a voluntary mass organization. However,
the fact that the ACFTU is China's only officially recognized
union undercuts the right to join a trade union of one's choice.
ICESCR Article 9: The Right to Social Security
For the migrant workers who comprise a majority of those
employed in factories and mines, the lack of a hukou means that
their access to social security, medical, health and unemployment
benefits is severely limited or non-existent. Despite some
reforms to the system announced in the 1990s, migrants are
still effectively excluded from access to social security. As a
result, in an industrial environment that includes an overwhelming
number of workplace accidents annually, migrant
workers often have to forgo medical treatment for illness or
workplace injuries in the face of prohibitive cost.
ICESCR Article 11: The Right to an Adequate Standard of Living
While the PRC government's report recognizes a poverty gap
between the rural and urban areas, it emphasizes that standards
of living have overall improved, and asserts that no discrimination
exists. The report details the size of housing and the urban
infrastructure and notes the inadequacy of housing for rural
inhabitants, but provides no account of the depth of the divide
between the rural and urban areas. It also does not describe
what concrete measures, monitoring and evaluation mechanisms
the government will take to counter the development
strategies and preferential policies that created this social and
economic gap.
The right to housing in particular continues to be violated
in both urban and rural areas by arbitrary evictions, land grabbing,
corruption, major infrastructure development and urban
renewal. Migrants who face limited housing options under the
hukou system are often consigned by their factories to
extremely poor housing that is overcrowded, unsafe, unhygienic
and lacking in basic heating and electric facilities.
Migrants who are not housed through their factories often
resort to equally inadequate housing on the outskirts of cities.
In the rural areas, development schemes such as the Three
Gorges Project lead to the forcible relocation of upwards of a
million people without adequate consultation or compensation.
Similarly, the demographics and habitat of many of China's
ethnic minorities have been damaged irreversibly by development
policies and decades of migration of Han settlers into
Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia,Tibet and other autonomous regions.
ICESCR Article 12: The Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of Physical and Mental Health
Despite China's rapid economic growth and an increase in total
healthcare expenditure from 1994 to 2004, the percentage of
GDP allocated to public health has shrunk.The inadequate and
reduced financing of health services, particularly for poor
regions, has resulted in a growing health gap between poor rural
and wealthier urban areas. Migrants remain excluded from
healthcare in urban areas due to the hukou system, but the situation
in their home villages is often no better, as the central government's
withdrawal of support has led to a drastic reduction in
the healthcare system that formerly delivered basic healthcare to
the majority of rural residents.While 90 percent of villages were
covered in the 1970s, by 1989, only 4.8 percent were covered.
Unable to afford medical attention, many villagers fall into a
vicious cycle of illness breeding poverty and vice versa.
Increased privatization and high user fees, inadequate preventative
care programs and the resulting spread of infectious diseases
including HIV/AIDS have all contributed to a growing health
crisis in China's rural areas.All available information suggests
that the PRC government falls far short of providing the minimum
core content of its obligations under Article 12.
ICESCR Articles 13 and 14: The Right to Education
The disparity in the implementation of rights in the urban and
rural regions is particularly telling in the area of the right to
education.This has come about in large part because since the
1980s the central government has shifted the burden of providing
education to the local level without a corresponding
transfer of funding, and in 1994 announced that township
governments would be responsible for implementing compulsory
education. Local governments make up for the funding
shortfall through extra-budgetary resources derived from
school fees, tuition fees, book fees and other direct and indirect
fees, resulting in widely varying levels of education quality
and access across China's provinces. Despite abolition of many
fees in 2000, 80 percent of all education funds go to urban
schools. Statistics also indicate that because of the one-child
policy and traditional preference for boys, an out-of-plan girl
may not be registered in the hukou system, and therefore will be
excluded from public education.
The hukou system has created similarly serious problems for
migrants in educating their children. Migrant children cannot
afford to attend urban public schools, and private schools set up
by migrants are unregistered, lack adequate resources, and do
not qualify students to sit for exams for admission to the public
school system.As a result, migrants are denied equal access to
education enjoyed by their settled urban counterparts.
ICESCR Article 15: The Right to Cultural Life and the Benefits of Science
The frequent detention of journalists, Internet activists, intellectuals
and grassroots activists demonstrates that Chinese citizens
continue to face significant restrictions in their access to
uncensored information and in their ability to express any
opinions critical of the government in the media or on the
Internet.The PRC government also fails to adequately protect
and respect the right of minority groups to practice their religions
and engage in cultural activity. In Xinjiang and Tibet in
particular, the PRC government has increasingly invoked
national security and the threat of separatism to curtail cultural
and religious practices that extend to education and publication.
This is in addition to government-sponsored migration
policies that bring an influx of Han settlers, permanently altering
the traditional lifestyles of minority populations.
HRIC Recommendations
HRIC's report concludes with two sets of recommendations,
one directed at the Committee and the second at the government
of the PRC. HRIC suggests methodological improvements
to the reporting process, including greater identification
of public consultative processes, the provision of disaggregated
data and clarification of legal definitions of discrimination in
Chinese law.The recommendations also emphasize the need to
develop a domestic legal order that respects and protects economic,
social and cultural rights by incorporating the
Covenant into domestic law, developing administrative remedies,
including a complaint process, and creating effective
monitoring and transparent reporting processes to measure
implementation.
Furthermore, these recommendations focus thematically
on issues regarding vulnerable populations, including:
- Workers' rights to favorable work conditions;
- Citizen's rights to form independent labor organizations;
- The dismantling of the discriminatory hukou system to facilitate the protection of migrants;
- The right to housing, including the prohibition of forced evictions and relocations;
- Health standards to guarantee an equitable distribution of services and resources to disadvantaged groups;
- Progressive realization of education for vulnerable segments of the population, including girls, migrant children,
rural children and low-income urban children; and
- Protection of the cultural identity of ethnic minorities by allowing the free exercise of religion, language, and culture.
The recommendations, which track the articles of the
Covenant, were submitted as a constructive contribution to the
full review of the PRC report.They also serve as a contribution
to developing concrete steps to monitor and inform legislative
and other measures, and provide benchmarks for assessing
ongoing compliance.
Follow-up
After its 34th session, following review of the PRC report, the
Committee issued a 17-page report of concluding observations
and recommendations.While expressing appreciation for positive
aspects of the PRC's report, the Committee also noted 28
principal subjects of concern, including the lack of comparative
disaggregated data, the economic and social disadvantages
imposed on vulnerable populations by the government's preferential
development policies and the restrictive hukou registration
system, and the restrictions placed on access to
information with regard to academic research, foreign and
domestic publications and the Internet. Significantly, while
recognizing the challenges presented by China's geographic
size, large population and developing country limitations, the
Committee stated, "There are no significant factors and difficulties
impeding [China's] capacity to effectively implement
the Covenant."
The UN Committee's suggestions and recommendations
include:
- The adoption of a National Human Rights Plan of Action;
- Allocation of adequate and increased resources;
- Legislative reforms, including amendments to the Trade
Union Act to allow workers to form independent trade
unions outside the structure of the official All-China Federation
of Trade Unions;
- The provision of detailed information on public consultation
in the preparation of the country report; and
- The removal of restrictions on freedom of information and expression.
The Committee's constructive recommendations provide
the PRC government with an opportunity to demonstrate its
commitment to its international obligations, underscoring the
point that its reputation in the international community will
be measured not only by its economic development and political
influence, but also by the welfare of its most vulnerable
groups.
//
ENDNOTES
[1] The ICESCR was adopted in the General Assembly resolution 2200A in
its 21st session on December 16, 1966 and entered into force on January
3, 1976.There are currently 66 signatories, with 151 parties ratified
or acceded to the Covenant.
[2] See generally, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights. See also, Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
General Comments 3:The Nature of States parties obligations (Art. 2,
para. 1,) E/1991/23, December 12, 1990.
[3] State Parties are to submit their initial report within two years of signing
onto the Covenant and every five years subsequently. ICESCR, Articles
16, 17. International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights, adopted December 16, 1966, entry into force January 3, 1976,
.
//
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