SEOOKE.com: Xie was there, she said, because she was forced to be -
held in a hotel room for eight days after she and her 56-year-old husband, Ma
Haiming, traveled to Beijing in March to protest
the compensation they were given for the demolition of the family's farmhouse
to make way for the expansion of Shanghai's Pudong International
Airport in 2005. When the
couple arrived in Beijing, Xie said they were
picked up by plain clothes police and forced to travel hundreds of miles back
to Shanghai,
then held separately at the hotel.
Xie and her husband were not alone. Three other people
have told CNN they were held against their will at the Holiday Inn Express
Nanhuizui - located in Lingang New City on the outskirts of Shanghai
- to keep them from airing grievances to the central government during the
10-day annual meeting of China's
legislature in March. The hotel management and owners deny their claims.
But people being detained without charge is nothing new
in China, according to Human Rights Watch, which says authorities use hotels,
homeless shelters, mental health facilities, farmhouses and obscure government
compounds as so-called "black jails" -- unofficial prisons where
Chinese officials hold citizens without charge.
Petitioners claim they were evicted from their land for
expansion of the Pudong
International Airport.
Petitioners claim they were evicted from their land for
expansion of the Pudong
International Airport.
"I have not come across an American branded hotel
being used as a black jail," said Phelim Kine, a senior Asia
researcher with the New York-based Human Rights Watch. The InterContinental
Hotels Group (IHG), the UK-based firm that owns the Holiday Inn Express brand,
said there was no indication that guests at the hotel were being held against
their will last March.
Phelim Kine, Human Rights Watch
"We have found no evidence which would confirm
these accusations or any sign that the hotel owner knew or cooperated with (the)
government on this hotel stay and the hotel is operated in accordance with PRC
[People's Republic of China] local laws and regulations," IHG said in a
statement, noting that it had conducted a "thorough investigation" of
the allegations. 'Black jails' in China
According to a 2009 Human Rights Watch report on China's
alleged "black jails," local courts often refuse to take cases from
residents who have complaints against local officials, which means petitioning
Beijing is the only option those residents have.
But their trips to Beijing
present a major problem for local officials, who face demotions or other forms
of retribution from higher levels of government based on the number of
petitioners who come to Beijing,
according to Human Rights Watch. As a result, local governments intervene,
abducting the petitioners either before they leave or once they arrive in Beijing, Kine said.
The forced detention of dissidents has become its own
cottage industry as public security offices subcontract people to work for them
who "are paid per head for each person that they abduct and hold,"
Kine added. "This is a huge grey economy."
As Communist Party officials meet this week to decide China's new
leadership, outside will be people like Wang Yifeng and Fan Jianjiang who are
petitioning government leaders directly for compensation after the demolition
of their homes. Human rights groups say detentions without charge are common,
particularly during times of central government meetings. "We always
expect that around significant political events that there will be a tightening
of surveillance and control over key individuals who the government considers
to be troublemakers," said Catherine Baber, director of Asia
Pacific for Amnesty International. IHG statement
"Phenomenal resources are used for keeping tabs on
[petitioners]," Baber said. A spokeswoman for IHG said that during the
time in question a group of rooms were booked by a government official from the
Pudong district of Shanghai. An official at the Petition Bureau of Zhuqiao Town, home of the five petitioners,
denied their claims. CNN contacted China's Ministry of Public Security
on November 5 for a response to these claims, but there has not yet been a
reply. However, in the past, Beijing has denied
the existence of so-called "black jails" in China. The
central government also last year issued new regulations outlawing violent forced
eviction and offering new protections, including fair compensation.
'Violent forced evictions'
But rights groups say problems remain. "Violent
forced evictions in China are on the rise as local authorities seek to offset
huge debts by seizing and then selling off land in suspect deals with property
developers," according to an October report by Amnesty International,
called "Standing Their Ground."
Chinese activist's family carry scars
China's
migrants struggle
The 85-page report also said there is ineffective
redress for Chinese citizens like Xie and her husband, who - without cash to
hire legal help - petition the central government directly with local
grievances that range from allegations of illegal land seizures and forced
evictions to corruption and abuse from local authorities. They often face weeks
or sometimes years of forced detentions without charge, human rights groups
say.
"From our research and research from domestic
Chinese human rights [groups], they are held from a few days to several months
and routinely subjected to physical abuse, sleep deprivation and very often
they have to buy their way out of custody," Kine said. "The
government has denied there are any such black jail facilities in China. Even
though [Chinese] state media run stories about black jails, there is an
official disconnect."
Baber at Amnesty International said it is hard to
quantify the number of people who are detained illegally in China, but
"it is a large phenomenon," she said. Petitioner: Kept under guard
Xie said there were several guards posted outside of her
Holiday Inn Express room and two women who were living in the room with her
whose job was to monitor her.
Xie took a reporter to the hotel to show where she was
allegedly detained. The rooms were neatly furnished, with a flat screen TV and
abstract art hanging on the walls.
When the front desk worker was asked whether they were
aware people had allegedly been held against their will in the hotel, the
employee said there were a number of guests who were staying in their rooms and
were not leaving, and there were people standing outside their room, but that
they had no idea why.
Violent forced evictions in China are on the rise as local
authorities seek to offset huge debts
Amnesty International report
IHG said they interviewed all employees at the hotel in
June after being first contacted by CNN, none of whom confirmed this story. A
review of hotel security tapes was impossible, the hotel said, because
recordings are erased after one month. The hotel had the employees sign
affidavits attesting to their version of events, a hotel spokeswoman said.
"IHG is committed to operating our company with
integrity and we have a Human Rights Policy applicable across the business. We
have signed up to the UN Global Compact, aligning our operations and strategies
with the ten universal principles that include commitments to human rights and
labor standards," IHG said in its statement. "Our staff is trained to
handle different situations and were a situation to arise, our staff would
report an incident to the relevant authorities and IHG."
China has become a leading market for the
InterContinental Hotels Group, which owns the Holiday Inn Express,
Intercontinental and Crowne Plaza brands. Greater China led its first half,
with a 9.7% increase in revenue per available rooms. IHG, headquartered outside
London, generates revenue from 181 hotels in greater China, with plans to open
160 more hotels, according to the company.
IHG's local partner in the hotel is Shanghai Harbor City
Hotel Investment and Management Co.-- a subsidiary of Shanghai Harbor City
Development Group. Like most of IHG's properties in China, a local partner
legally owns the hotel but IHG manages the property. Zhu Gang, a manager with
Shanghai Harbor City Development, said the company "knows nothing
about" people being detained at the Holiday Inn Express. "No violence
happened in the hotel," he said.
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