Chris Buckley
Reuters
August 30, 2011
BEIJING (Reuters) – China wants to cement in law police powers to hold dissidents and other suspects of state security crimes in secret locations without telling their families, under draft legislation released on Tuesday that has been decried by rights advocates.
The critics said the proposed amendments to China’s Criminal Procedure Code could embolden authorities to go further with the kind of shadowy detentions that swept up human rights lawyers, veteran protesters and the prominent artist-dissident, Ai Weiwei, earlier this year.
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“If this was already law, then people like me, Ai Weiwei and many others could have been detained with even fewer problems and obstacles and with a firmer legal basis,” said Jiang Tianyong, a lawyer in Beijing.
4 Responses to “China announces plans to boost secret detention powers”
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Chia will lead NWO with the US.
So, what if we start implanting ourselves with GPS tracking chips (except in the left buttock) and then if one of us wind up “missing”, we’ll know exactly which “unknown” detention center we were taken to?
coming to a nation near you! US wet dream. I bet Biden suggested it while he was there.
We wouldn’t owe one dime to CHINA if Federal Reserve act was repealed, so what is wrong with being a soveriegn nation, for the same reason China has all it’s money, they don’t pay thier worker’s anything. The fix is in China is a player in Globalist playbook, the money they lend us is made up out of thin air too, because China is a pawn to be used as powerplay agaisnt America. We don’t owe China anything, it is made up, just like the swine flu.