BEIJING (AP) Kidnapping villagers who have traveled to Beijing
to lodge complaints with China's central government and keeping
them in unofficial jails to silence them has evolved into a
lucrative cottage industry that police refuse to crack down on, a
human rights group said Thursday.
The report by New York-based Human Rights Watch on China's
''black jails'' is based mainly on interviews with 38 people who
said they were nabbed by thugs while trying to bring grievances to
the central government. They reported being held for days or months
in makeshift detention centers, deprived of food and sleep, beaten
and threatened. Police allegedly aided the captors or refused to
intervene in several cases, it said.
Black jails emerged in China about six years ago after police
were barred from randomly detaining vagrants. The jails, usually
makeshift lockups in hostels, apartment buildings or abandoned
factories, have been well-documented by human rights groups,
lawyers and the international media.
However, Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang rejected the Human
Rights Watch study and questioned why it was released.
''I don't know what their motivation was,'' he said at a regular
news conference Thursday. ''I can assure you there are no so-called
black jails in China. We put people first, and we are an
administration for the people.''
The report sheds new light on the economics of the jails and why
they evade crackdowns despite violating Chinese and international
law.
It blames a civil service evaluation system that uses a point
system to penalize officials if too many people from their
jurisdiction complain to the central government and rewards those
who are able to minimize grievances. Because bonuses and promotions
are linked to evaluations, it is economical for officials to pay
people to intercept, detain and intimidate petitioners, it said.
The report cites an alleged internal government directive given
to authorities in Shimen, a county in south China's Hunan province,
in 2007 that says officials get two points if they bring
petitioners back from Beijing or the provincial capital of
Changsha, while those who fail to do so have a half-point deducted.
Officials typically pay black jails between 150 yuan ($22) to
300 yuan ($44) per day to hold petitioners until they can be picked
up and returned home, the report said. It estimated that Beijing's
black jails detain up to 10,000 people each year, though that
number includes some people who are detained on multiple occasions.
Police in Beijing and other cities are aware of the jails but
ignore them because they keep potentially troublesome petitioners
away from cities, Human Rights Watch said. In some cases, police
also have ''directly assisted black jail operators,'' it said.
''It's completely illegal, but the national authorities have
done nothing to stop it so far,'' said Andrew Nathan, an expert on
Chinese human rights issues who was not involved with the report.
''At the same time, though, this informal system cuts against
the ability of the central authorities to learn about what's going
wrong at the local level,'' said Nathan, a political science
professor at Columbia University in New York. ''In the long run, it
would be smarter for Beijing to let the petitioners exercise what
are after all their legal rights.''
On the Net:
Human Rights Watch report: http://www.hrw.org/en/node/86423
(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)