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A Chinese music student was convicted on Thursday of U.S. charges that he harassed an activist who posted fliers at the Berklee College of Music in Boston supporting democracy in China and threatened to report her activities to Chinese law enforcement.

A federal jury in Boston found Xiaolei Wu, 25, who sent the activist online messages saying he would chop off her hands and demanding she tear down her "reactionary posters," guilty at the end of a four-day trial.

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The governing DPP, which champions Taiwan’s separate identity, is seeking a third term in elections on Saturday.

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"Our team has diligently worked to establish ourselves as reputable knowledgeable experts in business and human rights. We remain committed to being guided by international human rights standards in our work,” a statement by auditing firm Loening said.

The statement adds to cautious comments by some Volkswagen investors last week who welcomed the audit but said it could not be a one-off and should be the first of a series of steps to improve transparency in the carmaker’s supply chain in China.

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Gao moved to New York in 2009, after years of harassment by Chinese officials believed to be nursing grudges after she exposed a cover-up of the true extent of the AIDS epidemic in central Henan province.

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China under Xi Jinping, its most powerful leader in decades, has progressively clamped down on ethnic minorities living on the country’s periphery: Tibetans, Uyghurs, Kazakhs and Mongols have all been targeted as part of Xi’s broader effort to crush dissent and force assimilation into the Han Chinese majority.

This effort has increasingly spread beyond China’s borders. To combat international criticism and silence diaspora communities, Beijing has used economic leverage and political pressure to enlist other countries to support Xi’s quest for absolute control.

Governments on China’s doorstep face a stark choice about how far to go along with Beijing’s global agenda. Shared culture and language make neighboring countries a natural destination for people fleeing China’s borderlands, but these places are also the focus of efforts to defend against perceived foreign threats.

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Museums will be free of charge as part of a “fun day” to promote the polls, which will include concerts and drone shows. Voters will receive a thank you card and a photo opportunity, while civil servants have been strongly urged to head to polling stations. Cathay Pacific has offered discount flights to encourage Hong Kong residents in mainland China to return. The government is also set to provide funding to elderly homes to ensure seniors head to the polls, while border zone polling booths will allow eligible voters in China to cast a ballot. Vans roam communities with loudhailers promoting the new “patriots only” system.

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After announcing that she would not return to Hong Kong from Canada, the pro-democracy activist says she fears China’s global reach.

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China's government is continuing with its system of state-sanctioned kidnapping, legalised in 2012, that it is using against thousands of people every year.

The Residential Surveillance at a Designated Location (RSDL) is a powerful tool used by the police to primarily coerce confessions and break people’s spirits while a case is “built” against them.

The system, which has been condemned by the UN as tantamount to enforced disappearances, allows for up to six months detention in a secret location where the prisoner has no access to the outside world. And that includes a lawyer, never mind a family member.

They are typically confined to a room, with no access to sunlight, and under 24-hour surveillance, which includes being watched while asleep and going to the bathroom. In such conditions, RSDL detainees are under extreme risk of physical and psychological torture.

RSDL is often only the beginning.

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A most recent State Council Decree by China that entered into force on September 1, 2023, formalizes the establishment of consular volunteer networks, seemingly undeclared to most host nations, the Human Rights Group Safeguarddefenders says.

The network runs through associations and individuals and shows the involvement of the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office (OCAO), on which a January 2022 Federal Canadian Court decision upheld labeling as an entity that engages in espionage and acts contrary to Canada’s interests with concerns over “OCAO’s interactions with the overseas Chinese communities, the information gathered, and the intended use of the gathered information”.

Notices on appointments, trainings and commendation ceremonies throughout the years appear on embassy or consulate websites, such as in Sweden, Italy, Spain, Greece,, Portugal, or France.

The PRC embassy in Prague, Czech Republic, even published a call for applications (pending approval by the embassy), specifying “recruitment targets”: Overseas Chinese, international students, Chinese employees of Chinese-funded enterprises and other individuals in the Czech Republic, overseas Chinese groups, Chinese-funded enterprises and other organizations, institutions and groups.

Similar notices pop up all over the globe, as examples from Trinidad and Tobago, Botswana, Turkey, Malaysia, Johannesburg, Equatorial Guinea, Chile, Japan, or a most recent event - in cooperation with local authorities - in Mongolia show.

To an outside observer, the availability of a close-to-home consular liaison volunteer to assist in what are mundane activities in a democratic society – such as passport or other document renewals – may seem benign or even most convenient. More so even in circumstances where individuals are – rightfully – fearful of visiting official consular outposts as the PRC ramps up its transnational repression efforts.

However, the consolidation of overseas United Front networks as the legitimate providers of consular community assistance not only gives them potential broad access to individuals’ private data, home address and contact information, but may also dangerously enhance their function of control over overseas communities and dissenters. The fact that these functions are carried out under the guidance of local consulates and embassies does not diminish such risks, especially when considering how a series of reports by diaspora communities have pointed towards the PRC’s weaponization of such seemingly mundane services.

Unlike in a democratic society, in the PRC the issuance of passports and other documents such as entry visas are heavily politicized and frequently used as an instrument of control and leverage over residents overseas, for instance to ensure they conform to Party diktats, comply with requests to act as informants within the community, or coerce them into returning to China.

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The chairman and CEO of Chinese video game live-streaming platform DouYu has been arrested, becoming the latest business leader to run afoul of authorities in the world’s second largest economy.

DouYu (DOYU) said in a regulatory filing Tuesday that its chief, Chen Shaojie, had been arrested by police in the southwestern city of Chengdu on or around November 16. The company said it had only been informed of the arrest on Monday 20.

It “has not received any official notice of the investigation against Mr. Chen or the reasons for Mr. Chen’s apparent arrest,” it added, warning that his “ongoing detention and any subsequent related legal proceedings and enforcement actions” could have a material impact on its business.

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On October 31, Weibo, as well as several other major Chinese social media platforms including WeChat, Douyin, Zhihu, Xiaohongshu, and Kuaishou, announced that they now required popular users’ legal names to be made visible to the public. Weibo stated in a public post that the new rule would first apply to all users with over 1 million followers, then to those with over 500,000.

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At a press event in Taipei, activist Rushan Abbas claimed the Chinese government had woefully underreported the death toll from the Nov. 24, 2022 fire and that the figure was actually in the "triple digits."

While China officially maintains that 10 people, all ethnic Uyghurs, died in the fire, this has been disputed by overseas activists citing information from social media.

Abbas has been touring Taiwan since Nov. 17 to screen "In Search of My Sister," which the activist said documents her efforts to find and free her sister Gulshan, a retired doctor, who disappeared in September 2018.

In 2020, Abbas said that the Chinese government had sentenced her sister to 20 years in prison on terrorism charges following a secret trial.

According to Abbas, her sister's imprisonment was likely in retaliation for her advocacy work leading Campaign for Uyghurs, which Beijing considers a terrorist organization.

[Edit typo.]

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Taiwan's ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) unveiled on Monday its presidential ticket for the upcoming January election, with current Vice President Lai Ching-te accompanied by running mate Hsiao Bi-khim, two prominent China skeptics.

In a statement, Hsiao criticized China's assertive military activities in the Taiwan Strait and accused Beijing of interfering in Taiwan's democratic processes.

"Whether Taiwan can defend its democratic values and determine its own future will have a profound impact not only on Taiwan itself, but on the entire world," she said.

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Mrs Van Hoof, President of the Foreign Relations Committee of Belgian Chamber of Representatives, issued a statement on November 16, 2023, concerning the one million Tibetan children forcibly placed in Chinese state-run boarding schools and separated from their families and homes. The President also calls on the Chinese government to put an end the state-run boarding schools for Tibetan children, which aims to eradicate Tibetan language, culture, religion and identity.

The statement wrote, "The forced assimilation of nearly one million Tibetan children in Chinese state-run boarding schools, separated from their families, is a violation of international human rights. The United Nations has confirmed this figure. The boarding schools are just the latest act perpetrated by Beijing on Tibetans with the aim to eradicate Tibetan language, culture, religion and identity. These policies are not acceptable."

"Unfortunately, the issue is getting too little attention in Europe. Action is needed in order to prevent a whole generation of Tibetan children to be lost inside the Chinese system. Tibetans remains subjected to a highly sophisticated surveillance and monitoring system, even collecting their DNA including from children without proper consent from their parents evidenced by reports from Citizen’s lab, Human Rights Watch etc," President Van Hoof said.

"I, therefore, condemn this action in the strongest possible terms and call on the PRC authorities to end the coercion of Tibetan children into state-run boarding schools, to cease repressive assimilation policies and to comply with the PRC’s obligations under international law," the President of the Foreign Relations Committee of Belgian Chamber of Representatives said.

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