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Committee to Support Chinese Lawyers highlights case of Gao Zhisheng

Date: 2009-03-31

In a letter sent yesterday, the Committee to Support Chinese Lawyers called on the Chinese Ministry of Justice to investigate the disappearance of
Chinese lawyer Gao Zhisheng.



In a letter sent yesterday, the Committee to Support Chinese Lawyers called on the Chinese Ministry of Justice to investigate the disappearance of
Chinese lawyer Gao Zhisheng.

The Committee acted on reports that Mr. Gao, who in 2001 was recognized by the Ministry of Justice as one of the country’s ten best lawyers, was
reportedly taken from his home on February 4, 2009, by a group of ten people including uniformed police. Mr. Gao has not been heard from since then
and the Chinese government has not responded to repeated calls to confirm his safety.

Mr. Gao is one of China’s most well-known lawyers. He began to take on pro bono work to defend the rights of the poor in the late 1990s, and between
2004 and 2006 also took on cases of Falun Gong practitioners, so-called “house” Christians (Chinese Christians unaffiliated with registered churches
in China), and democracy activists. He defended them against persecution and sentencing without trial to labor camps, where they were physically
and sexually abused. He also wrote an open letter to President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, calling for the end of persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners.

In 2006 he was detained and received a suspended 3-year prison sentence for inciting subversion.?Additionally, his law firm was shut down and his
license to practice law was revoked.

In an account of a two-month detention in 2007 that was released this year, Mr. Gao details the torture he was subjected to, including beatings with
electrified batons, burning his eyes with cigarettes, and other abuses amounting to torture and cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment. He also
states that he was threatened with punishment of death if he released the details of his mistreatment.

Prior to reports of his disappearance this year, Mr. Gao and his family lived under constant police surveillance. Mr. Gao’s family was forced to leave
China in January due to the surveillance and repeated harassment by police.

The Committee to Support Chinese Lawyers emphasized in their letter to the Ministry of Justice that the detention and harassment of Mr. Gao as a
consequence of his professional decision to take on clients in politically sensitive cases undermines the development of a professional and
independent bar and the rule of law in China.

The Committee to Support Chinese Lawyers is housed at the Leitner Center for International Law and Justice at Fordham Law School. It is a group
of independent lawyers from outside China whose goal is to support lawyers in China in their quest to strengthen the rule of law there.