Archive for the ‘Laogai News’ Category

Laogai Research Foundation director Harry Wu and his friend, recently exiled Chinese dissident Yu Jie (余杰), spent Valentine’s Day participating in a multiparty protest against Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping’s Washington visit.

Organized by Students for a Free Tibet, a coalition of Tibetan, Chinese, Uyghur, Taiwanese and human rights groups held a joint rally in support of freedom and democracy outside the White House, as Xi Jinping and President Obama met inside. Chinese groups included members of the China Democracy Party, practitioners of Falun Gong, and protesters against the One Child Policy and Chinese government land seizures. The staff of the Laogai Research Foundation stood alongside them, holding posters of Chinese dissidents currently imprisoned in the Laogai.

To watch Harry’s and Yu Jie’s speeches at the rally, and to read an interview with Yu Jie by Nippon Television, click here. You can also go directly to our Youtube channel!

On February 15th and 16th, Laogai Research Foundation hosted an international conference on China’s Great Famine in Washington, DC. From 1959 to 1961, the Chinese people suffered history’s largest famine, which killed an estimated 40 million people. LRF’s conference, “The World’s Greatest Famine: Witnessing, Surviving, Remembering”, brought together academics and authors from around the world to discuss the role Mao Zedong and the Chinese Communist Party played in bringing about the starvation and unnatural deaths of millions. Keynote speakers included Yang Jisheng, author of Tombstone, a comprehensive account of the Great Chinese Famine during the Great Leap Forward; Jasper Becker, author of Hungry Ghosts: Mao’s Secret Famine; and Frank Dikotter, author of Mao’s Great Famine. Visit the Heritage Foundation website to view full video of Day 1 of the conference.

To continue reading, view photos, and download conference participant essays, click here.

Day 2 of the conference was held at the Laogai Museum.

Great Famine experts Yang Jisheng and Frank Dikotter answer questions from participants with moderater Harry Wu.

On Wednesday, January 18th, the Laogai Research Foundation will host a press conference at The National Press Club for Chinese dissident writer Yu Jie. The press conference will give Yu a chance to address the media with his story of imprisonment and torture, his family’s life under year-long house arrest and 24-hour surveillance, and their final flight from China to the U.S. last week.

The press conference will take place on January 18th at 1:00 pm, in the Bloomberg Room at The National Press Club 14th St. NW, 13th Floor, Washington, DC 20045.

To find out more, please see our press conference webpage or contact the Laogai Research Foundation at 202.408.8300 x300 or laogai@laogai.org.

Laogai Research Foundation executive director Harry Wu made a visit to the Heritage Foundation in Washington, DC, to congratulate his friend Congressman Frank Wolf on the release of his new book, Prisoner of Conscience. At the press release, Rep. Wolf condemned Chinese human rights abuse, especially regarding the Laogai system and organ harvesting, while Harry Wu contributed with comments and questions. To read more, see our blog post at the LRF website!

Rep. Wolf introducing his book at the Heritage Foundation

After offering a basket of white roses, Harry makes the traditional bows before the portrait of the deceased.

Laogai Research Foundation founder and executive director Harry Wu paid a visit today to the Czech Embassy in Washington, DC, to offer condolences on the death of Vaclav Havel. The former president of the Czech Republic passed away on Saturday, 17 December 2012. Harry was saddened to hear of the death of such an advocate for truth, democracy and human rights. They had met several times and shared a passionate commitment to exposing the crimes of Communist regimes and liberating their populations.

For the full story and photos, please click here to reach the Laogai Research Foundation’s blogpost.

Cisco on Wednesday released its seventh annual Corporate Social Responsibility Report (see Market Watch press release), detailing how the company “applies its expertise, technology and partnership strategies to address environmental, social and governance issues,” and laying out its 2012 objectives.

The report trumpets that “in 2011, Cisco was included on Ethisphere’s list of the World’s Most Ethical Companies for the fourth consecutive year,” but the Laogai Research Foundation questions the ethics of its self-enriching deals with the People’s Republic of China. Several articles from Cisco’s Chinese website clearly indicate the high degree of cooperation between the American tech giant and China’s Ministry of Public Security.

According to Vice-Chairman of China operations Zhang Sihua, Cisco directly cooperated with the Ministry on the construction of the Golden Shield Project, also known as the Great Firewall of China, which strengthened China’s vast censorship apparatus. Similarly, a 2004 Cisco publication on China’s second-generation ID cards announced that “the backbone of the Public Security system is predominately made up of Cisco networking equipment.”

According to Cisco, its Corporate Social Responsibility Report “includes an expanded discussion of human rights and the Internet, including specific steps the company has taken to address these concerns. The report reiterates Cisco’s commitment to selling products that are built to global standards and its opposition to government efforts to fragment the Internet or undermine freedom of expression.” Contrary to these claims, Cisco is actually providing the very means to insulate Chinese Internet users from the benefits of global online freedom.

The report goes on to proclaim the company’s committal “to protecting the health and well-being of its employees and using its collaborative technology to offer people the freedom to chose how, when and where they work.” This philosophy, guiding the management of Cisco factories and offices in China, is in stark contrast with the philosophy guiding the Laogai system that Cisco technology is aiding to fill up with prisoners. Thousands of Chinese political dissidents, human rights activists and religious practitioners, including members of Falun Gong, have been silenced, disappeared, jailed, or executed, thanks to Cisco-provided network surveillance equipment. Chinese Cisco employees enjoy the freedom to “chose how, when and where they work,” while innocent dissidents, the target of China’s implementation of Cisco technology, are imprisoned and relegated to camps alongside common criminals, who may be forced to labor every day.

Not only has Cisco been proven to have contributed to the Great Firewall of China, but also to the Peaceful Chongqing Project (exposed in a July 2011 Wall Street Journal article). Chongqing, one of China’s most populous cities, will soon be monitored by a citywide network of 500,000 cameras, the world’s most ambitious surveillance system, and Chinese security company Hikvision Digital Technology has commissioned Cisco to provide the technology. Cisco spokespersons have insisted that the company “hasn’t sold video cameras or video-surveillance solutions in any of our public infrastructure projects in China,” but it has not denied selling networking equipment and servers along with support for some large video-surveillance systems.

It is good that Chongqing police will be able to monitor and detain common criminals more easily, but they will also keeping their eye on citizens who wish to exercise their human rights of freedom of thought, speech and assembly. Cisco’s Corporate Social Responsibility Report is a front to mask its complicity in this Chinese version of Big Brother.

To curtail companies like Cisco from collaborating with foreign governments who suppress Internet freedom, Rep. Chris Smith of New Jersey has introduced H.R. 1389, the Global Online Freedom Act. Currently in being debated in the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, and Human Rights, the bill aims to “restore public confidence in the integrity of United States businesses.” The Laogai Research Foundation applauds the act as a much-needed intervention on the part of the US government. The leadership of companies like Cisco must be dissuaded from turning a blind eye to the injustices that despotic regimes perpetrate through use of their products.

Cisco CEO John Chambers commented on the release of the report: “At Cisco, we know that an intelligent network is not only a powerful tool for doing business, but also for transforming lives, building communities, and protecting the environment. Through the network and strategic partnerships, we can increase the capacity for all of us to succeed.” The Laogai Research Foundation, however, has identified that Cisco’s “strategic partnership” with the People’s Republic of China has in fact resulted in an “intelligent network” of secret police to patrol the Web, and “increased the capacity” for the Communist Party to put a choke-hold on the Chinese population.

Laogai Museum founder Harry Wu spoke last night at a meeting of the Oxfam Club at the University of Maryland in Baltimore County. The group of undergraduate students are members of UMBC’s chapter of Oxfam America. According to its website, Oxfam America is “an international relief and development organization that creates lasting solutions to poverty, hunger, and injustice. Together with individuals and local groups in more than 90 countries, Oxfam saves lives, helps people overcome poverty, and fights for social justice.”

The issue of social justice is exactly why Oxfam UMBC invited Harry Wu to speak to them, even during their midterm season. Imprisoned and forced to labor for 19 years for merely voicing his political opinions as a college student, Harry has an acute sense of what is just and what is not. He focused his talk on several injustices currently perpetrated by the People’s Republic of China, including the one-child policy (the majority of these students are women), internet censorship, lack of religious freedom, arrest and execution of political dissidents, organ harvesting of criminals, and illegal exportation of forced-labor goods.

One student, born in mainland China, asked Harry where she could find a list of imported goods. He notified her of our Laogai Handbook, last published in 2008, containing the names of many labor prisons and the goods they produce: Christmas lights, car brakes, you name it. Unfortunately, the origins of most of the Chinese forced-labor products smuggled into the U.S. are unknown, while all forced-labor goods in the U.S. market are sold as legitimate factory products. Harry advised the attendees to buy products made outside China and to raise awareness of the Laogai system with people they know. They were amazed that the U.S. government has been relatively lax in exposing and prosecuting American corporations that knowingly sell Laogai products.

The last student to raise her hand asked Harry why he decided to establish the Laogai Research Foundation and Laogai Museum after his escape, instead of returning to a quiet life. Impassioned, he told the group that he tried to live normally, but at his first hearing on Capitol Hill, a senator asked him, “How many Laogai camps are there? And how many people are in them?” Harry could only reply, “I do not know.” The senator then asked him, “Will you help us find out?”

Harry has spent the last 20 years courageously ”finding out” as much as he can about the Laogai system and China’s other crimes. He told the students that no matter our social background or age, we are all heading in one direction: the graveyard. Freed after 19 years of incarceration and abuse, the only way he can use his freedom and leave the world a better place before arriving at the graveyard is to try to end and prevent the incarceration of other free-thinkers and human rights activists in the Laogai.

Harry’s story was an inspiration to the UMBC Oxfam Club in their weekly sacrifice of time and energy in the fight to save lives, help people overcome poverty, and fight for social justice. You can read a blog post about the event by one of the attendees here!

If you would like Harry Wu to share his incredible story with your student group, non-profit, religious or charitable organization, please contact the Laogai Research Foundation at laogai@laogai.org or 202-408-8300.

October News

Posted: October 31, 2011 in Events, Laogai News, Tours

Hello everybody! October has been a busy month, and we at the Laogai Museum are happy to say that we have been visited by several student groups this fall. The tour groups, which have ranged from high school freshman to Annapolis Naval Academy language students, came to our new Dupont Circle location to gain a greater understanding of the injustices currently taking place in China. The visits began with a speech from Harry Wu, former political prisoner, and ended with guided tours of the museum. Mr. Wu’s story of 19 years in the Laogai prisons and his path to becoming a rights advocate help put a face on these abuses, and also helps students to relate to China’s tumultuous Communist era history. After gaining an understanding about Mao Zedong and the political campaigns he used to consolidate his power, it is easier for museum visitors to put classified CCP documents, prisoner belongings, and information about political dissidents into context. Looking at real products produced inside the walls of China’s prisons, these issues hit home for the students, who are always amazed to find out that the U.S. allows importation of Laogai goods to continue. It is always refreshing to meet young people (and their innovative teachers) who are not only interested in the issue of human rights in China, but who also want to do something to help.

The Laogai Museum also continued its film series into the month of October. Every Saturday, films highlighted different issues in Chinese human rights, with topics that included organ harvesting, the effects of the One Child Policy, and unrest in Tibet.

We hope to have more student groups and visitors in the month of November! If you are interested in organizing a guided tour, contact Laogai@laogai.org. Harry Wu is also available to speak at school and other public events.