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-
- A 1979
- Chinese Declaration of Human Rights
-
- This Declaration, which is also known as the "19 Articles on
- Human Rights," was adopted by the Chinese Human Rights Alliance
- in January 1979, soon after its founding. After that, the
- Declaration was posted on Democracy Wall in Peking's Tian An Men
- Square, attracting wide attention to the document and leading to
- a lively discussion of tis contents.
-
- Visitors to the mainland have reported that a large segment
- of the Chinese population has become familiar with the
- Declaration, but that many of its readers seem to agree with
- only parts of it, thus giving the document the air of
- controversy.
-
- The Declaration of Human Rights was published in Chinese in
- the New york-based Peimei News in two installments, on June
- 13-14, 1979. This English translation, prepared by Prof. Ta-ling
- Lee, appeared in Freedom Appeals with the courtesy of Peimei
- News.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The Chinese Human Rights Alliance was formally founded in Peking on
- January 1, 1979. The Alliance discussed and adopted the Human Rights
- Declaration. The Tian An Men Incident, which took place in 1976, has
- become, in the final analysis, a human rights movement, for its
- importance in terms of human rights is much broader, much more profound,
- and it has been a continuing awakening process for the Chinese people,
- as an inevitable development of contemporary history. This year, the
- human rights movement in China, with its enriched content and daring
- spirit, has won universal support and acclaim. It has helped to
- accelerate and promote the normalization of Chinese-American relations,
- further the development of our country's socialist production and
- enhance world peace and progress. We offer the following 19 articles at
- this historic juncture:
-
- 1. The citizens demand freedom of expression and the release of all
- political prisoners. It is equally absurd to write an individual's
- thought into the Constitution as it is absurd to include the name of an
- heir apparent in the Party and State Constitutions. This is in violation
- of the principle of freedom of expression, in violation of a person's
- thinking processes, and in violation of the fundamental principle of the
- "multi-faceted nature of matter" in materialism. The people of the
- country deeply detest an ingratiating attitude, because they know there
- is nothing in the world that is sacred and inviolable. The citizen
- demand the uprooting of superstitious deification and idol worship, the
- removal of the crystal coffin and the conversion of the mausoleum to a
- memorial hall, the construction of Premier Zhou's memorial hall and the
- annual solemn observance of the April 5 Movement (that is, the Tian An
- Men Incident), in order to free faith from superstition.
-
- 2. The citizens demand that the Constitution guarantee the right to
- criticize and evaluate Party and State leaders. In order to spare this
- generation and succeeding ones further misery, to uphold truth and
- justice and to promote productivity, the citizens demand the complete
- abolition of the feudal and despotic standards now in force which equate
- opposition to certain individuals with counter-revolution; the citizens
- further demand that Chinese society be genuinely built on the foundation
- of democracy.
-
- 3. The citizens demand that minority nationalities be given broad
- autonomy. It is important to realize that China is not only a
- multi-national country, but also a multi-party country. In marching down
- the road of socialism, our country must face the multi-party reality,
- allowing representation of all parties in the National People's
- Congress. It is absurd that although according to the law the highest
- organ of the state is the National People's Congress, other parties are
- barred from participating in it. it is against the principle of
- democratic centralism to replace the Government with the Chinese
- Communist Party and to merge the Government and the Chinese Communist
- Party into one; for the result of such a merging is the inevitable
- continuation of rampant bureaucratism. The citizens of our country do
- not want a "window dressing" Constitution.
-
- 4. The citizens demand that nationwide general elections be held to
- choose state and local leaders by direct balloting. Delegates to neither
- the Fourth nor the Fifth National People's Congress were popularly
- elected. This not only made a laughing-shock of our country's socialist
- democracy, but also represented a fraud perpetrated on the human rights
- of the 970 million citizens of China. The citizens demand that a
- "Citizens' Committee" or "Citizens' Board" be elected as a permanent
- organ of the People's Congress to participate in the national
- decision-making process and to supervise the government. The citizens
- further demand that party and state leaders violating the law be brought
- to justice and that party and state leaders be always under the purview
- of the law.
-
- 5. Every citizen of the People's Republic of China must have the
- right to demand that the government make public the following
- information: state budget and gross national income, gross industrial
- and agricultural production, military expenditures, government
- administrative expenditures, investments and revenues, total number of
- industrial workers and cadres, total wages, size of armed forces,
- unemployment figures, workers' insurance, welfare and relief statistics,
- retail price index, foreign trade volumes and foreign economic and
- military aid (including aid to parties not in power or involved in armed
- struggles), production figures in various sectors of the national
- economy, current population and population growth, deaths and injuries
- from industrial accidents, diplomatic agreements, budgetary deficits,
- domestic and foreign debts.
-
- 6. The National People's Congress shall not hold any secret
- sessions. The citizens shall have the freedom to attend the National
- People's Congress, and the meetings of its Standing Committee and the
- Preparatory Committee.
-
- 7. There must be a gradual abolition of the system of state
- ownership of the means of production and a gradual transition to the
- system of ownership by all of society, under which the citizens must
- have the right to supervise the control and distribution of the surplus
- labor of all citizens by the state. This is to prevent further wanton
- exploitation by feudal-socialist swindlers like Lin Biao and the Gang of
- Four, so that the citizens will be spared further miseries which were
- brought about by such campaigns as the slogans: "counter-attacking of
- the rightists," "the maladjustment of ratios," " the tearing up of
- agreements," "the all-out civil war," "the economic stagnation" and the
- one called "bordering on collapse." The citizens demand a voice in
- setting industrial, agricultural and commercial taxes and the amount of
- industrial profits going to the state.
-
- 8. The Chinese Communist Party has revised its perception of Comrade
- Tito and the theory and practice of his Yugoslav socialism, realizing
- that a backward theory inevitable goes together with backward
- productivity. This perception follows the theory of "turning
- revisionist." After a 10-year tragedy involving everyone in the country,
- the Chinese national economy reached the brink of collapse. Ironically,
- what Zhang Chun-chiao and Yao Wen-yuan called "democratic factions
- turning into capitalist-roaders" and "the Soviets turning into
- revisionists," actually share the same theoretical base. In view of the
- major changes in our domestic and foreign policies and lines, the
- allegation of "turning revisionist" has totally collapsed both in theory
- and practice. The objective basis on which the Sino-Soviet ideological
- differences once existed is now lacking. The citizen demand detente. The
- Soviet people are a great people. There should be everlasting friendship
- between the Chinese and American people, between the Chinese and the
- Japanese people, and between the Chinese and Soviet people as well.
-
- 9. The citizen demand adherence to the teaching of Marxism that
- socialism leads to a society which insures individual freedom and that
- the model of a regime of any socialist country is inherited from the
- traditional model of a capitalist regime. Divorced from the capitalist
- materialistic civilization, socialist democracy and freedom cannot
- survive. This is the basic ideology in Marxist classics; it is also an
- important lesson learned by the Chinese people after wandering more than
- 20 years. We need to borrow not only from Western science and
- technology, but also from Western democratic, cultural traditions. The
- citizens demand that the government continue to open up previously
- closed doors, so as to allow ideological shackles to come down and
- freedom to sweep over the land, to allow intelligent Chinese people to
- share in the treasures of mankind, to allow the much-abused present
- generation to have a taste of freedom and the younger generation to be
- spared the same past misery, to eradicate class prejudices and to end
- deceptive propaganda.
-
- 10. Chinese citizens shall have the freedom to enter foreign
- embassies to obtain information materials, to hold press conferences
- with foreign newsmen and to publish their works abroad. The citizens
- demand access to "internal reading material" and "internal motion
- pictures" in order that there may be equality in cultural life. The
- citizens shall have the freedom to subscribe to foreign newspapers and
- journals and to watch foreign television stations. The citizens demand
- that the state give them the right of publication according to the
- Constitution.
-
- 11. The practice of life-time affiliation with a work unit should be
- completely abolished. The citizens demand freedom of employment, attire
- and movement; they demand that a solution be provided for the problems
- of husbands and wives working and living in different locations. Cadres
- demand the freedom to switch jobs; security workers should have freedom
- in their love life and marriage; and middle-school graduates should have
- the freedom not to go to the production brigades in the countryside. We
- oppose coercive enforcement of birth control programs by the government
- and the use of government administrative power to enforce any kind of
- clarion call. The unemployed citizens demand that they have the right to
- receive state compensation.
-
- 12. The citizens demand that the state guarantee the peasants basic
- kou-liang (grain rations) in order to eliminate the need to beg.
-
- 13. Educated youths on state farms shall have the right to receive
- profit distributions. All educated youths in agriculture demand that the
- state abolish their inhuman treatment, accord them political equality,
- improve their living conditions and raise their wages.
-
- 14. The citizens demand that the state prohibit deceptive recruiting
- practices. Units and cadres involved in deception must be brought to
- justice, particularly in cases involving the offering and taking of
- bribes.
-
- 15. In working whole-heartedly for the four modernization, the
- government must also wholeheartedly and realistically serve the
- interests of the people. It must heed the demand for improving the
- shang-fang system ("upward appeal") by the victims of fabricated,
- unjust and mistaken cases, assuring that the upper echolons will handle
- the appeals directly and swiftly.
-
- 16. The secret police and the party secretary of a unit shall not
- have the right to arrest and to interrogate citizens. The secret police
- system is extremely incompatible with socialist democracy and the
- citizens demand that the secret police be abolished.
-
- 17. The citizens demand the abolishment of slums, the practice of
- "three generations living under the same roof" and the custom of grown
- sons and daughters living in the same room. The practice of organization
- controlling admission tickets should also be abolished. All exhibitions
- must be opened up to free admission. Censorship must be abolished and
- there must be a guarantee of the freedom of writing and freedom of the
- press. Political review in college entrance examinations must be
- abolished to insure equality based on examination scores alone.
-
- 18. We are the "citizens of the world" and as much, we demand the
- opening of borders, an active trade, cultural exchanges, export of
- laborers, the freedom to go aboard on work-study programs, and to work
- and travel abroad.
-
- 19. The Chinese Human Rights Alliance appeals to all governments,
- human rights organizations and the public for support.
-
- Revised on January 17, 1979, Peking, Chinese Human Rights Alliance.
- Duplication and posting on walls are welcome.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- ===============================================================================
- | From csf-adm@postgres.Berkeley.EDU Tue Aug 6 03:36:34 1991
- | Received: from postgres.Berkeley.EDU by ahkcus.org (4.1/AHKCUS-Gateway)
- | id AA00186; Tue, 6 Aug 91 03:36:34 CDT
- | Received: by postgres.Berkeley.EDU (5.61/1.29)
- | id AA08747; Tue, 6 Aug 91 01:03:39 -0700
- | From: hszhou@ee.ubc.ca
- | Date: Tue, 6 Aug 91 0:59:04 PDT
- | To: csf@postgres.Berkeley.EDU
- | Subject: Chinese human rights [...]
-