Home > 106th Congressional Bills > H.Res. 656 (ih) Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the Government of India should take immediate steps to end the human rights abuses by government forces in India, and for other purposes. [Introduced in House] ...H.Res. 656 (ih) Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the Government of India should take immediate steps to end the human rights abuses by government forces in India, and for other purposes. [Introduced in House] ...
H. Res. 655
In the House of Representatives, U.S.,
June 3, 2004.
Whereas the United States was founded on the principle that all men and women
are created equal and entitled to the exercise of their basic human
rights;
Whereas freedom of expression, assembly, association, and religion are
fundamental human rights that belong to all people and are recognized as
such under the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights and the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights;
Whereas the horrific events of June 3-4, 1989, in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, in
the People's Republic of China, reminded the world that these universal
human rights are denied to the citizens of the most populous nation on
earth by the Communist Party that rules in China;
Whereas in recent days the Communist Government of China has stepped up
harassment of the relatives of people who lost their lives in the 1989
crackdown on democracy protestors in Tiananmen Square, in an apparent
effort to control dissent ahead of the 15th anniversary of that tragic
massacre;
Whereas in recent weeks China's Communist Party leaders have been working to
eliminate the residual influence of Zhao Ziyang, who was purged as
Communist Party chief for opposing the 1989 crackdown on the Tiananmen
protests, and are trying to erase his name from history;
Whereas Zhao was last seen in public on May 19, 1989, when he tearfully begged
student protesters to leave Tiananmen Square, and was then promptly put
under house arrest and purged;
Whereas the Communist Government of China declared martial law the next day and
troops backed by tanks crushed the student movement on June 3-4, 1989;
Whereas the demonstrations in Tiananmen Square were the manifestation of a
democratic movement that had begun to spread across China following the
death of the former General Secretary of the Communist Party of the
People's Republic of China on April 15, 1989, and that had given rise to
peaceful protests throughout China calling for the establishment of a
dialogue with government and party leaders on democratic reforms,
including freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, and the
elimination of corruption by government officials;
Whereas after that date thousands of pro-democracy demonstrators continued to
protest peacefully in and around Tiananmen Square in Beijing until June
3 and 4, 1989, when Chinese authorities ordered the People's Liberation
Army and other security forces to use lethal force to disperse
demonstrators in Beijing, especially around Tiananmen Square;
Whereas the report of the Chinese Red Cross on June 7, 1989, and the United
States Department of State Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for
1989, gave various estimates of the numbers of people killed and wounded
in 1989 by the People's Liberation Army soldiers and other security
forces, and it is now believed by many that thousands were killed;
Whereas 20,000 people nationwide suspected of taking part in the democracy
movement were arrested and sentenced without trial to prison or
reeducation through labor, and many were reportedly tortured;
Whereas the Communist Government of China continues to suppress dissent by
imprisoning pro-democracy activists, journalists, labor union leaders,
religious believers, and other individuals in China and Tibet who seek
to express their political or religious views in a peaceful manner;
Whereas credible sources estimate that the Communist Government of China
continues to imprison as many as 2,000 Tiananmen Square activists, such
as Yang Jianli, and denies such activists their basic human rights, such
as access to legal counsel, contact with their families, and trials
within reasonable times;
Whereas security agents of the People's Republic of China have detained Chinese
citizens who were planning activities to commemorate the 15th
anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, including the preparation
of a video for presentation at this year's United Nations Human Rights
Commission meeting in Geneva on the deaths of their relatives and other
victims who perished in Tiananmen Square;
Whereas coincident with the 15th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre,
the Communist Government of China has frustrated the efforts of Chinese
citizens in Hong Kong to establish a gradual and orderly process toward
universal suffrage and the democratic election of the legislature and
chief executive in Hong Kong as promised at the time of the reversion of
Hong Kong to China in 1997 and as envisioned by the Basic Law of the
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region;
Whereas despite an unprecedented public protest in Hong Kong on July 1, 2003,
reminiscent of protests in Beijing shortly before June 4, 1989, the
Standing Committee of the National People's Congress of the People's
Republic of China declared on April 26, 2004, that universal suffrage
would not apply to the selection of the Chief Executive in Hong Kong in
2007 or to the selection of members of the Legislative Council in Hong
Kong in 2008; and
Whereas June 4, 2004, is the 15th anniversary of the date of the Tiananmen
Square massacre: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) expresses sympathy to the families of those killed, tortured,
and imprisoned as a result of their participation in the democracy
protests of June 3-4, 1989, in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, in the
People's Republic of China, and to all those persons who have suffered
for their efforts to keep that struggle alive during the past 15 years,
and to all the people of China who lack fundamental human rights;
(2) commends all persons who are peacefully advocating for democracy
and human rights in China;
(3) calls upon those nations participating in the 2008 Olympic Games
in Beijing to use opportunities created by the Games to urge China to
fully comply with the United Nations Declaration on Human Rights;
(4) calls upon the Communist Government of China, its National
People's Congress, and any other groups appointed by the Communist
Government of China to honor its pledge of a ``high degree of autonomy''
made at the time of the Hong Kong reversion in 1997, by permitting
immediate elections for the Legislative Council of Hong Kong according
to rules approved by the Hong Kong people through an election-law
convention, referendum, or both, and by leaving all revisions of Hong
Kong law to a legislature elected by universal suffrage; and
(5) condemns the ongoing and egregious human rights abuses by the
Communist Government of China and calls on that Government to--
(A) reevaluate the official verdict on the June 4, 1989,
Tiananmen pro-democracy activities and order formal
investigations into the reported killing, torture, and
imprisonment of democracy activists with the goal of bringing
those responsible to justice;
(B) establish a June Fourth Investigation Committee, the
proceedings and findings of which should be accessible to the
public, to make a just and independent inquiry into all matters
related to June 4, 1989;
(C) release all prisoners of conscience, including those
persons still in prison as a result of their participation in
the peaceful pro-democracy protests of 1989, provide just
compensation to the families of those killed in those protests,
and allow those exiled on account of their activities in 1989 to
return and live in freedom in China; and
(D) release Dr. Yang Jianli, an organizer of the Tiananmen
Square protests of 1989, who has been illegally detained
incommunicado by the Communist Government of China since April
26, 2002, and whose wife and 2 children are United States
citizens, and put an immediate end to the harassment, detention,
and imprisonment of all Chinese citizens exercising their
legitimate freedoms of expression, association, and religion.
Attest:
Clerk.
Pages: 1 Other Popular 106th Congressional Bills Documents:
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