Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Michael Clauss. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Michael Clauss. Afficher tous les articles

vendredi 25 août 2017

China's human rights abuses

Germany says Chinese rights activist won't get fair hearing
Reuters

Pro-democracy demonstrators hold up portraits of Chinese disbarred lawyer Jiang Tianyong, demanding his release, during a demonstration outside the Chinese liaison office in Hong Kong, China December 23, 2016.

BEIJING -- Germany’s ambassador to China said on Friday it was “impossible” that a prominent Chinese former rights lawyer who admitted to subversion during a trial this week would get a fair hearing.
Jiang Tianyong, 46, said in court on Tuesday he was inspired to overthrow China’s political system by workshops he had attended overseas, according to videos of him reading a statement released by the court.
Jiang’s wife and activists said the hearing was a show trial designed to discredit him and Jiang was coerced into confessing. 
A date for the verdict has not been released.
We are concerned that throughout the proceedings Jiang Tianyong has not been allowed access to lawyers of his own choosing and that he was obviously prejudged through a ’confession’ aired by Chinese TV before his trial had even begun,” German Ambassador Michael Clauss said in a statement released on the embassy’s website.
Under these circumstances, a fair trial is impossible,” Clauss said, adding that Germany had raised Jiang’s case with Chinese officials since last November.
Western diplomats regularly meet Chinese rights activists and lawyers, but embassies only publicly speak out in cases they consider especially troubling or in instances where private discussion with China has been ineffective.
Germany has been particularly outspoken about a crackdown in recent years on rights activists.
China’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a faxed request for comment.
China has said about similar cases in the past that other countries should not meddle in its internal affairs and that all citizens of China are equal before Chinese law.
Jiang, who was disbarred in 2009 after taking on cases related to sensitive issues such as the banned spiritual movement Falun Gong, had criticized a crackdown on dissent that has been ongoing since the summer of 2015.
Jiang went missing in November 2016 while visiting the family of another detained lawyer, Xie Yang
He was charged with subversion of state power more than six months later.
The U.N. Special Rapporteur on human rights and extreme poverty, Philip Alton, met Jiang during a visit to China last year and has expressed concern that his disappearance was in part reprisal for their meeting.

mardi 7 mars 2017

Protectionism in China is growing, German ambassador says

By Leslie Shaffer

Level playing field for foreign companies needed: German ambassador

China's leaders may be touting efforts to offer foreign investors a level playing field, but on the ground, protectionism appears to be growing, Germany's ambassador to China told CNBC.
"It doesn't matter which trading partner you talk to – be it the Japanese or the U.S. or neighboring countries or European countries. They all feel the same, that there's a growing protectionism here," Michael Clauss, the German ambassador to China, told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Monday.
He noted that the protectionist concerns related to German investments within China.
"The service sector is basically off limits. Many companies that would like to produce here in China and build a factory and start producing are forced into going in a joint venture," he noted.
"It's also frequently they're asked to transfer technology, which is against the rules of the WTO. And the tendency seems to be growing. That's the complaint we get from German businesspeople."
But Clauss pointed to signs that Chinese rhetoric on trade and investment has been changing.
"At the same time, we are here now getting different signals, like the whole speech of Xi Jinping or yesterday's presentation by Li Keqiang saying that they were in favor of free trade, saying that they would go for a level playing field," Clauss added.
"They've been saying all the right things and now we just hope that they will walk the talk."
Over the weekend, Li Keqiang pledged to oppose protectionism and continue to liberalize trade.
That echoed comments from Xi Jinping in a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos in January, which defended globalization and free trade and argued in favor of a level playing field.
Those remarks came after U.S. President Donald Trump vowed during his campaign to label the country a currency manipulator for the purposes of a competitive trade advantage on his first day in office and threatened to impose a tariff of as much as 45 percent on China's exports to the U.S.
More recently, Trump's administration and the Republican Congress have been considering imposing a border tax on imports into the U.S.
"What I can see here from Beijing is the Chinese side believes there will be more trade frictions, maybe even a trade war, which would be a problem for China," he said.
"I don't think it will be a major problem for German companies here in China since those that produce here in China, produce and manufacture almost exclusively for the Chinese market and not for exports abroad."
Data last month showed that China had become Germany's largest trading partner for the first time in 2016, media reports said, with trade volume between the two rising 4 percent to around 170 billion euros.
That displaced the U.S. from first place to third, but left France as No.2, reports said.