China Interim Government

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A Hubei Judge in Judicial Garb Fails to Find Justice

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By John Young
Epoch Times Staff
Created: Sep 2, 2010 Last Updated: Sep 2, 2010
 

 
A Chinese judge caused a kerfuffle in the legal profession and online last month when he protested on behalf of his wife, dressed in his judicial garb, outside the High People’s Court of Hubei Province.

Feng Bin, now a former judge from Hubei, was attempting to get a fair hearing for the dismissal of his wife from her work after 10 years of employment—Chinese labor laws prohibit the dismissal of workers after 10 or more years of employment.

Feng wore his judge’s black robe, with an official court badge, in what was for several days a mostly peaceful demonstration outside the court building. After his appeals went ignored by court staff for several days, Feng began head-butting every car that came out of the High Court in an effort to get more attention.

Though the court finally scheduled a hearing date, Feng’s high profile appeal and the resulting public sympathy was not enough to preserve his career: at the end of July he was quietly removed from his post, for demonstrating in public as a judge.

While the Chinese constitution in theory gives citizens the right to petition or appeal, Feng’s case shows the difficulties that even a judge faces in attempting to navigate China’s complex appeal and grievance resolution system.

“I want to use my experience to tell society that not all people who appeal are irrational or ignorant about the law. I had to risk my life in order to file a simple case against an employer,” Feng was quoted as saying in Chinese media.

Feng is one of many former judicial employees that have sought to resolve grievances with little or no success.

Wu Zongming, a retired official from the State Bureau of Letters and Calls (also known as the ‘appeals office’), found himself on the receiving end of that department’s infamously ineffectual bureaucracy when his home was slated for demolition in 2008. Wu had been a director of the local Bureau Guiping City, Guangxi Province, for three years prior to retiring in 2001.

The Bureau nominally accepts “petitions” from Chinese citizens and is supposed to resolve grievances that could not be resolved through the court system.

For over a year after hearing the news of the impending demolition, Wu visited the appeals offices of many cities as well as other government agencies and courts to attempt to save his home. None would give a definitive answer, despite his extensive government connections.

Wu in the end admitted defeat: “After years of working in the appeals office, I know that appeals have a very limited effect.” Yet, he wanted justice and fairness for himself and other petitioners he met along the way. After a Beijing-based magazine ran a special report on him, he thought more governmental agencies would pay attention to the case.

He was wrong. His home was forcedly demolished in January 2009. The demolition crew was escorted by over 100 police officers. They came at 5 a.m., instead of the scheduled 9 a.m., and dragged his startled wife out of the building before getting to work.

“Many people go to Beijing to petition just for solace. Our statistics show that only 0.2 percent of all petitioners hear back from the Appeals Office,” says Yu Jianrong, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. “People choose to petition even when they know it’s useless.”

Given the dismal record of China’s appeals system, petitioners are usually realistic about their journey, and some are prepared for the great challenges they will face. Feng told a Chinese media outlet: “Every step of the rule of law in China takes bloodshed. If my blood could awaken the conscience of the judicial system, then my death would be worthwhile.”
Last Updated ( Friday, 03 September 2010 10:31 )  

My Statement on Applying for CIG Citizenship

The First Citizen of the Truly New China: Mr. Liu Guohua(previous law teacher of University of Northeast China, presently residing in U.S.)
I have adequate reasons to trust in our Interim Government which, simillar to countless bud-like transient governments eventually overcoming and taking the place of decayed, atrocious regimes, will be accredited by Chinese people and replace the illegal CCP authority.

Hence I am willing to become the first citizen under the rule of our Interim Government. The citizenship is not only symbolic but also realistic. Hopefully my action will call on more and more patriots home and abroad in vigorously upholding and even participating in the Interim Government. The sea comes from tiny streams. When we get involved, we are creating a truly new China for the future.

Why Do I Stand for CIG?

CIG Special Representative for Negotiation: Mr. Wang Zhaojun (Committee member of Anhui provincial Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, renowned entrepreneur in Mainland)

As I declare my advocacy for the China Interim Government and initiatively pay tax to it, some of my friends feel puzzled. Here is my simple reply: I do so because it is conformable with the trend; meanwhile, Chinese people should have had the right to choose their own government long ago! Now that I am offered this right, why not take it?

The establishment of CIG is not only based on legal principle but also on the understanding by common people. Even if a conceited politician, so long as he is a Chinese sensitive to democratic politics, he should acknowledge and endorse it; let alone those ordinary men who have thought it over. ... It is because it has knocked the gate open for every politician's splendor of political career. Whe do I stand for CIG? Because Chinese people need it so that thousands of their words can only be abstracted into a term: longing!