What happened in February in The Hague is evidence of China’s transnational repression and should not be condoned.
News China
A House Erased: Beijing Dissident Returns From Prison to Find Her Life Bulldozed
Quan Shixin hoped to return home after serving her sentence. Only, there was no home left.
The Battle of Strasbourg: China Tries Unsuccessfully to Stop a Taiwanese Theater Production
This time, Beijing lost. But in other cases, including Shen Yun’s, theaters surrendered to Chinese pressure.
The Battle of Lufeng: A City Revolts Against a Ban on Religious Fireworks
Scooters, faith, and the smartphone rebellion: how a Guangdong city successfully defied the police.
Uyghur Comedian’s Ban Shows How Women’s Voices Are Silenced in China
Xiao Pa was suspended from Weibo after a simple reflection on domestic burdens was reclassified as “inciting gender conflict.”
Kazakh Scholar Sentenced in Xinjiang for “Misinterpreting” a Poet
Kazakh Scholar Sentenced in Xinjiang for “Misinterpreting” a Poet
Persecuting Folk Religion: Two Cases of Repression in Rural China
In Guangdong, the police tried to prevent the Ying Laoye procession from taking place. In Jiangxi, they violently blocked the construction of an ancestral hall.
China, Zhonggong Was Supposed to Be Dead—But Keeps Being Arrested
Two months after a court verdict in Shanxi, repression continues. It reveals something Beijing does not want to admit: Zhonggong is alive.
China: Christian Missionary Dong Yanmei Still Detained Despite Expired Legal Deadline
Her case is based on a false accusation of “organizing others to cross the national border illegally.”
The Dark Side of the Hong Kong White Paper: Fear Grows After the Jimmy Lai Verdict
China has published a document meant to be reassuring, but that looks more like a threat.









