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ACTION REQUEST

China: Engineer and Physicist Imprisoned

10 December 1998

Urgent Action

CHINA--ENGINEER AND PHYSICIST IMPRISONED

ISSUES: the right to life, liberty, and security of person; freedom from
arbitrary arrest and detention; freedom of opinion and expression;
freedom of peaceful assembly and association; the right to communicate
freely over the Internet and other telecommunications systems

FACTS OF THE CASE: On a day when most countries are celebrating the 50th
Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, software
engineer Lin Hai and physicist and dissident Wang Youcai sit in jail for
using the Internet to support democracy in China.

The Science and Human Rights Program of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, in collaboration with the Association for
Computing Machinery, the Center for Democracy and Technology, the
Committee of Concerned Scientists, the Committee on the International
Freedom of Scientists of the American Physical Society, Cyber-Rights &
Cyber-Liberties (UK), Derechos Human Rights, the Digital Freedom
Network, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Electronic Privacy
Information Center, Human Rights in China, the New York Academy of
Sciences' Committee on Human Rights, and VIP Reference, has initiated an
e-mail appeal campaign on behalf of Lin Hai and Wang Youcai. We
encourage other groups to share this alert with their constituencies.

Lin Hai was arrested on 25 March 1998 for providing 30,000 Chinese
e-mail addresses to VIP Reference, which publishes a pro-democracy
newsletter described by Chinese prosecutors as a "hostile foreign
publication." US-based VIP Reference distributes reports on dissident
activities, human rights, and other issues to more than 200,000 e-mail
addresses in China. Lin Hai has been charged with "inciting to overthrow
state power." His trial was conducted in secret in Shanghai on 4
December 1998; the verdict is expected to be announced soon. Lin's
arrest has been described as evidence that the Chinese government is
determined to prevent freedom of information on the Internet from posing
a challenge to its leadership.

Wang Youcai, a leader of the 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations, is
scheduled to go to trial on 17 December in the Hangzhou Intermediate
Court on the charge of "inciting to overthrow state power." Among his
crimes is sending e-mail messages to dissidents in the US. Wang was
arrested in July for trying to organize an opposition party. He was then
released and put under house arrest. He was detained again on 2 November
and formally charged on 30 November.

More than one million Chinese citizens reportedly have access to the
Internet. The government encourages this access to promote national
development while, at the same time, fighting to control its use for
political purposes.

The arrests of Lin Hai and Wang Youcai constitute serious violations of
international human rights standards enumerated in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, which was adopted without opposition by the
United Nations General Assembly on 10 December 1948. They include:

· Everyone has the right to life, liberty, and security of person
(Article 3);
· no one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile
(Article 9);
· everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this
right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to
seek, receive, and impart information and ideas through any media
regardless of frontiers (Article 19); and
· everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association
(Article 20).

(Sources of information for this update include Chinese VIP Reference,
the Digital Freedom Network, Human Rights in China, and the New York
Times. Previous sources of information include the Associated Press and
Human Rights in China.)

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send e-mail or fax messages:

· Calling for the immediate and unconditional release of Lin Hai and
Wang Youcai on the grounds that they were arrested solely for exercising
their internationally recognized rights to freedom of expression and
association; and
 · urging Chinese officials to cease their interference with electronic
communications.

To maintain the legitimacy of our efforts, we request that you send only
one message to the e-mail addresses listed below.

Zhu Rongji
Premier of the People's Republic of China
fax: 86 1 512 5810 (via Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

People's Daily
No.2 jin tai xi lu
Beijing
fax: +8610 65092893
e-mail: info@peopledaily.com.cn
e-mail: ly@peopledaily.com.cn

Guangming Daily
106 Yong An Road
Beijing
fax: +8610 63039387
e-mail: gmdaily@public.bta.net.cn
e-mail: sqw@bd748.pku.edu.cn

Jiefang Daily (Shanghai)
No.300 Hankou Road
ShangHai
P.R.China
fax: +8621 63526517
e-mail: wzmao@guomai.sh.cn

China's Central TV
No.11, Fuxing Road
Beijing, bj 100859
e-mail: webmaster@mail.cctv.com
e-mail: michael@NIC.CCTV.COM

Xinhua News Agency
fax: +8610 63071080
e-mail: xinhua@cb.col.com.cn
e-mail: aaron@CHINA.COM

Human Rights of China
Bldg.22, Anyuan BeiLi, Asian Games Village
Beijing, Beijing 100029
fax: +86-10-64912961
e-mail: infornew@PUBLIC.BTA.NET.CN

State Development Planning Commission of China
58# SANLIHE road
XICHENG district Beijing China
fax: +8610 68558560
e-mail: liujg@mx.cei.gov.cn


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The Human Rights Action Network, a part of Derechos Human Rights, distributes appeals on behalf of victims of human rights violations. You are invited to join the network. Please check the date of the present action and do not write if it's over a month old.