In case you missed it....

...we're on the Huffington Post! LRF's Washington, DC Director Nicole Kempton and our Deputy Director Megan Fluker are contributers to the "The Internet's Newspaper".

Make sure you check out their LRF related contributions China's Horrid One Child Policy Continues and Calling It Quits?.

Locking Up the Best and Brightest

I was saddened this morning to read (via China Rights Lawyers Concern Group) about how human rights lawyer Jiang Tianyong was dragged away from his home by four plainclothes Public Security Bureau officers in front of his crying daughter yesterday.  Jiang was here in Washington last week, courageously testifying in front of Congress on human rights violations associated with China’s One Child Policy and his experience defending blind rights advocate Chen Guangcheng.  Other rights lawyers, including Li Fangping and Li Heping, have been either detained or put under heavy surveillance (ruanjin) for the duration of President Obama’s visit to China.

Rather than celebrating the development of rule of law, the CCP seems intent on systematically harassing and locking up the very individuals who represent the best hope for innovation and civil society development in China.   It’s happening outside the legal sector too.  Environmental whistleblower Sun Xiaodi and his daughter were jailed earlier this year for reporting a potentially devastating uranium leak from a decommissioned mine.  More recently, Zhao Lianhai, parent of one of the babies affected by the tainted milk scandal and organizer of a parents' group called the “Milk Powder Group,” was detained just a few days ago in Beijing.  Aside from reporting corruption and seeking increased accountability, what exactly is Sun and Zhao’s crime?  The CCP will no doubt argue that they were “endangering state security.” (Read more after the jump)

Mo Money, Mo Children

Since China’s One Child Policy was enacted in 1979, women all over China have been subjected to forced late-term abortions (some as late as nine months), forced IUD insertion, forced sterilization, police detention, and even the destruction of their homes.

Additionally, the Policy has created an unnatural gender imbalance – 32 million more men aged under 20 than women – which has lead to increased human trafficking of young boys and women, as well as a host of other problems.

But, as is true in many circumstances in China, money is buying the opportunity to have more children:

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