ish’s blog

A blog. By ish.

Archive for Human Rights

Tibetans sentenced to death following Lhasa protests of March 2008

China continues to demonstrate its flagrant disregard for the rule of law and fundamental human rights including the right to legal representation, sentencing two Tibetans to death, with a further two getting death sentences with two year suspensions and one more getting life imprisonment (which is pretty much the same thing in China’s notorious prisons with their track records for torture and abuse).

More details here including what you can do to show your outrage and try to stop these executions from being carried out.

Yet another example of the kind of dispicable and disgraceful behaviour that demonstrates why China should be excluded from international forums until it learns to behave like a civilised nation.

The new ad…

Channel 7 has refused to air our new ad, which we had planned on launching during the closing ceremony.

Basically, they suck.  Enough said – here’s the ad.

The ad will be shown simultaneously on all of the pro-free speech TV stations in this great land of ours (well at least those stations with ads – i.e. Nine, Ten and SBS).

Thankfully the only good shows that 7 have (and that’s not a lot) are also available via download elsewhere…  I’ve survived without watching any Channel 7 since the 8th of the 8th, and now that I know they are basically a puppet of the Chinese propaganda bureau I’ll be steering clear for good.

If you too want to ditch 7 but are worried about missing out on Lost or whatever other crap you are addicted to, check out the Australian iTunes Store that now offers TV shows and movies.

Channel 7 second chance via GetUp! ‘repechage’

GetUp! are going to give Channel 7 a second chance in the media freedom olympics when they attempt to air another pro-human rights advertisement for the closing ceremony.

In one sense it is quite ironic that they pulled our original ad.  It must be about the only ad they haven’t shown during the coverage (which from all accounts had been riddled with a seemingly endless barrage of commercials).

If you missed the ad, here it is again for your viewing pleasure…

The Seven ad fiasco highlighted on Media Watch

After the Channel 7 decision to censor the ATC TV ad, I had contemplated notifying ABC’s broadcasting watchdog – Media Watch.  Of course, they were already on the ball and tonight ran a comprehensive story on the issue.

I love Media Watch.  Nice work Mr Holmes.

By the way, you can view the ad via the ATC website here.

At least Australia has media freedom, right?

Despite (or in line with) the public dispute between GetUp and Channel 7 this week, the network failed to air our ad.  The paid advertisement urging PM Rudd to speak up for Tibet whilst in China for the Olympics was produced by GetUp and the Australia Tibet Council (of which I am a director), had free-to-air approval and was appropriately booked.  Yet, unbelievably, Channel 7 refused to run the ad, citing a bunch of crap excuses.

Regardless of whether Seven took this decision under its own direction or were pressured into this by someone else (such as the IOC, as has been postulated elsewhere), this raises huge questions about media freedom – not just in China, but right here in Australia.

Amnesty International and Reporters Without Borders (amongst many other organisations including ATC) have been trying to highlight the lack of media freedom within China during the lead-up to the Olympics.  Of course, incidents like this one with Channel 7 in Australia are even more disturbing as they highlight the reach of China’s media censorship beyond its own national borders.

I spoke at a public rally last weekend relating to the actions by European Satellite TV company, Eutelsat, in pulling the broadcast into China by the New York based, independent Chinese-language news network NTDTV.  Reporters Without Borders have further details on their site regarding Eutelsat’s disgraceful actions, including a lenghty transcript of a discussion between a Eutelsat employee and someone posing as a Chinese Propoganda Department representative.  Of course, this would be bad enough if it was a Chinese-based company, but Eutelsat is headquarted in France.

This is a worrying trend, but not a new one.  You can find out more by running the incredibly ironic Google search – ‘Google, China and internet censorship’.

Just not in China.

And maybe not for too much longer here either.

Happy birthday, Gedhun Choekyi Nyima

In addition to commemorating ANZAC day today (April 25th), it’s worth mentioning that today is the birthday of Gedhun Choekyi Nyima – the 11th Panchen Lama (Tibet’s second most senior religious leader). He turns 19 today. Of course, he won’t be having a few quiet ales with his mates (not least of all because ordained Buddhist monks don’t drink). The main reason is the fact that he has not been seen since he became the world’s youngest political prisoner upon being kidnapped by the Chinese government on the 14th May 1995 (aged six).

In 1996, the Chinese government admitted to the UN to having taken the boy for his own protection, but they have refused any attempts to verify the well-being and safety of him, his family and attendents (all of whom disappeared).

You can follow this link to add your name to the petition to have Gedun Choekyi Nyima released.

The Torch’s day in Canberra…

Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to make it to Canberra yesterday – I would have liked to show my solidarity with the Tibetans and added one more number to those peacefully demonstrating against the insult of China’s nationalistic torch tour. Instead I sat through a three and a half hour meeting/conference call to do performance reviews for around 30 staff (sounds a lot worse than it actually is; it’s actually very important and very rewarding!).

From the reports I’ve heard from friends that were there it sounds like it was quite a scary place to be for anyone in a Free Tibet shirt or carrying a flag – regardless of whether you were ethnically Tibetan or not. Friends of mine were spat on, cursed, jostled and had their flags torn out of their hands – as well as intervening constantly to try and defuse potentially violent altercations. One story from a friend of mine involved a group of Chinese youths vigorously harrasing a small, elderly Tibetan women. After the youths were shooed away, she apparently swore at them with some fairly strong language, which apparently brought some much-needed comic relief to those within earshot.

The ATC chief minister and the AFP all think the day was a great success – due to their planning, of course. I think it was a success too – probably for different reasons. Our plans never involved attempting to interfere with the torch – so it’s not as if we were curtailed by the security presence. We simply wanted the torch’s tour through Canberra to be inseparable from the Tibetan issue in the mind of the public and the media – and all of the reporting (both here and abroad) that I’ve seen met this objective.

My biggest concern over the past few days was trying to get an objective gauge on public opinion on this issue. For a while there it was looking dicey. Media beat-ups about the extent of so-called ‘violence’ in the torch relay legs in London and Paris, were starting to give the impression that the protesters were the bad guys. But I think three things ended up swinging the balance of public opinion back in our favour by the end of the Canberra leg on Thursday. Firstly, the ridiculously over the top Chinese nationalism that bussed a 15,000 strong pro-China rent-a-crowd into Canberra in an attempt to defend both the torch and more importantly, Chinese pride. Second, the confusion (read arrogant defiance) of the ‘blue trackie crew’ in jostling with the AFP for torch defending honours despite being told unequivocally that they were not to be involved at all. And lastly, the violent thuggery and intimidation used by the pro-China camp against a much smaller Tibetan group who had come to Canberra to exercise their democratic right to express their views through peaceful protest.

I really believe (hope) that a lot of people who know nothing about these issues saw something today that might give them food for thought. This is the power of China. Through years of systematic nationalistic brainwashing, you can get 15,000 people who live in a foreign country to do what you want without asking them to do anything. I really get the sense that, in the eyes of the ‘average aussie’, the strategy of the Australian Chinese community backfired yesterday – they came out looking a little ‘extreme’ and the Tibetans came out looking relatively moderate.

The trick now, of course, is harnessing all of this public awareness and momentum to create some actual change

Coca-Cola AGM and the torch relay

SFT are coordinating an action to fax key decision makers at Coca-Cola, one of the Olympic torch relay sponsors, to highlight the implications of the torch’s planned leg through Tibet and to urge them to intervene. The Coca-Cola AGM is today, so if you can, please visit SFT’s site to join this urgent action.

New “No Torch in Tibet” site

More info on the Olympic torch relay including links to the SFT actions calling on IOC president Jacques Rogge to remove Tibet from the torch relay route.

young

Global day of action

Today’s rally went well – about 200-300 people in Reddacliff place to hear Senator Andrew Bartlett, Ross Daniels, Sasha Jesperson and I talking about the situation in Tibet.

The rallies around the country made the media, including a very brief snippet from ‘yours truly’ on ABC TV News in which I make a complete goose of myself by talking about how PM Rudd should raise the issue of Tibet when he visits China later in the month (note: today is the 31st of March – doesn’t get much later in the month than that). Obviously, I meant next month. Ah, well – you can see the story on the net at www.abc.net.au/news/video/ and click on the story about the torch arriving safely in Beijing.

Still, at least all of the stories by the major news outlets about the torch’s arrival in Beijing have the protests here and abroad attached. Nice to have spoilt the Chinese government’s party a little by highlighting their human rights record in Tibet.

Thanks to everyone who turned out, and to the 1.4 million of you that signed the petition from avaaz.org – apparently according to avaaz this is the worlds largest and fastest growing global online petition in history.

Older entries »