-----Original Message-----
From: David Sadoway [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 6:25 PM
To: michael gurstein
Subject: not just thugs watching dissidents; its also "community-economic
development"

Watching dissidents now a booming business in China

AP, BEIJING

Tue, May 29, 2012 - Page 1

Every workday at 7:20am, colleagues pick up Yao Lifa (姚立法) from his
second-floor apartment and drive him to the elementary school where he
taught for years.

This is no car pool. Yao is a prisoner, part of a China boom in outsourced
police control.

By day, Yao is kept in a room, not allowed to work and watched by fit, young
gym teachers and other school staff. At dinner time or later, he is sent
back to the apartment he shares with his wife and three-year-old daughter. A
surveillance camera monitors the building entrance, while police sit in a
hut outside.

“At school, if I have to go to the bathroom, someone escorts me. Most of
the time, I’m not allowed to speak with others or answer the phone,” Yao
said in a recent late-night Internet phone interview from his home in
Qianjiang city. “When they bring me home, they sign me over to the next
shift.”

Like the blind activist Chen Guangcheng (陳光誠) until his escape from house
arrest last month, Yao belongs to an untold number of Chinese activists kept
under tight control by authorities, even though in many cases they have
broken no law.

Co-workers, neighbors, government office workers, unemployed young toughs
and gang members are being used to monitor perceived troublemakers,
according to rights groups and people under surveillance.

Yao has never faced criminal charges. His misdeed is decades of campaigning
for democratic elections.

“They won’t let me teach. They’re afraid of course that I’ll start
talking about democracy to the students,” said Yao, a 54-year-old former
school administrator and science lab instructor with wavy black hair and
possessed of a passionate, fiery manner.

While China has long been a police state, controls on these non-offenders
mark a new expansion of police resources at a time the authoritarian
leadership is consumed with keeping its hold over a fast-changing society.

“Social activists that no one has ever heard of have 10 people watching
them,” said Nicholas Bequelin, a researcher with Human Rights Watch. “The
task is to identify and nip in the bud any destabilizing factors for the
regime.”

Mostly unknown outside their communities, the activists are a growing
portion of what’s called the “targeted population” - a group that also
includes criminal suspects and anyone deemed to be a threat. They are
singled out for overwhelming surveillance and by one rights group’s count
amount to an estimated one in every 1,000 Chinese - or well over 1 million.

Targeted are a growing numbers of people, from typical political dissidents
to labor organizers and, increasingly, ordinary Chinese who want Beijing to
correct local wrongdoing. In method, this new policing represents a break
from recent decades.

In former Chinese leader Mao Zedong’s (毛澤東) radical heyday, colleagues,
neighbors and family members snitched on suspected enemies of the
revolution. Free-market reforms broke the totalitarian grip and gave people
incentive to leave farms and state jobs for work in booming cities and
industrial zones. Private lives and private wealth blossomed, creating less
reason for snooping.

Money now fuels the extensive surveillance system. Budgeted spending for
police, courts, prosecutors and other law enforcement has soared for much of
the past decade, surpassing official outlays for the military for the second
year in a row this year, to nearly 702 billion yuan (US$110 billion).

Allocated by Beijing to the provinces and on down, the money is sometimes
called “stability preservation funds” for the overriding priority the
government now puts on control. As long as trouble is quelled, Beijing does
not seem to mind how this money is spent. It is proving a growth opportunity
for cash-strapped local governments and small-time enforcers.

Along with the police, Yao counts the city education bureau as benefiting
from the funds available for his surveillance. His minders are mainly drawn
from the bureau, his Qianjiang Experimental Primary School and the ranks of
physical education teachers throughout the city school system.

Anywhere from 14 to 50 people a day are on the local government payroll for
his round-the-clock surveillance - what he calls the “Yao Lifa special
squad.” They get 50 yuan for a day shift and twice that for night work.
Often, he said, hotel rooms, transport, meals and cigarettes are thrown in.

The sums add up in Qianjiang, a city of struggling factories and 1 million
people set in the center of the country. Basic pay runs about 1,000 yuan a
month for an entry-level teacher and goes to three times that amount for a
veteran, Yao said.

“This isn’t bad for teachers,” Yao said. “An English teacher probably
wouldn’t take it. They can earn extra money giving private tutoring, but
gym teachers can’t do the tutoring. Besides, their superiors have told them
to do this. They can’t not do it.”

In the deep-south farming county of Yunan in Guangdong Province, more than a
quarter of its 6,700 officials are on the “stability” payroll, the
Chinese-language Caijing magazine reported last year. Township “stability”
offices spent money on vans, motorcycles and computers, and also allocated
reward money - 20,000 yuan in 2010 - for stopping any disgruntled local from
going to Beijing to complain about conditions, the report said.

For Chen, the shock troops of his persecution were his neighbors. After the
daring escape from his rural village outside Linyi in Shandong Province that
eventually took him to New York, Chen detailed the two years of brutal house
arrest in a video, saying more than 100 police and other officials were
involved. He, his wife and mother were beaten and his young daughter
searched and harassed.

Family planning officials bore him a particular grudge for exposing forced
abortions and sterilization under the government’s one-child policy.
However, it was local farmers who guarded his house and the entrances to the
village and plundered the family farm for food. They received 100 yuan a
day, and though they had to kick back a tenth to the head of the
surveillance squad, Chen said it was still a good deal.

“Those people, if they work other jobs, they only make 50 to 60 yuan a day,
but doing this, they don’t have to do anything, and they have three free
meals a day and they are safe. Of course they love to do it,” Chen said in
the video.

He said he was told 30 million yuan was spent on his captivity in 2008 and
by last year that amount had doubled.

The Chinese Ministry of Public Security, the national police agency, did not
respond to requests for comment about the outsourcing policy. Authorities in
Linyi and Qianjiang either did not answer queries or declined comment on
Chen and Yao.

Cases like Chen and Yao “are the tip of the iceberg,” said John Kamm, a
veteran human rights lobbyist.

Research by Kamm’s Dui Hua Foundation found that since the mid-1980s,
Beijing has tasked police throughout China with controlling the “targeted
population.” An initial quota for police to target two in every 1,000
people proved unattainable, Kamm said. He said one in 1,000 is a more
accurate estimate, or 1.3 million people.

Included are recently released convicts, parolees, suspects on bail and
anyone police see as a threat - from activist lawyers to evangelical
Christians. Overtly political cases are a small, expanding subset. However,
once marked, the status is hard to shake.

“Joining the ‘targeted population’ is the last stop on the road to
oblivion for political prisoners,” Kamm said.

Yao’s forays into politics started 25 years ago when he sought to use a new
electoral law to get himself elected to the Qianjiang Municipal People’s
Congress as an independent. After more than a decade of trying, Yao
succeeded in 1998. He made a name for himself as an activist trying to
change the Chinese Communist Party-dominated system. He championed the
rights of farmers rebelling against high taxes and fees.

The party fought back. Yao and 31 teachers and others inspired by him to run
for congresses in 2003 all lost in an election he said was rigged.
Afterward, Yao’s short-term detentions began. However, he also at times
slipped away to meet like-minded activists around the country.

Soon after returning from a trip to Shanghai and Beijing early last year,
the controls tightened. Yao said school vice principal Wang Qian (汪潛),
police and others kidnapped him and drove him 500km to a hotel. He got free
by throwing a note out the window while his captors slept. During another
hotel captivity in July last year, he jumped from a second-story window at
3am, injuring his back and an arm in a failed escape.

By September, the “Yao Lifa special squad” settled into the current
pattern - picking him up in the morning and sending him home at night.

“Usually there are eight people with me at school and those eight people
have a duty: to speak and lecture me without interruption,” Yao said. “One
goal is to keep me from resting. A second is to see my reaction. One person
is tasked with taking notes.”

Some nights, Yao said shady-looking men sleep in a car by his building’s
entrance, in addition to the police in a hut. He said he heard the school
and education bureau were arguing  over US$48,000 for his surveillance.

“I have many acquaintances. Some of them work in police stations,” Yao
said. “They tell me: ‘Really, we could use a Yao Lifa. If we had one, we
could make more money.’”


Published on Taipei Times :

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2012/05/29/2003533984
Copyright (c) 1999-2012 The Taipei Times. All rights reserved.

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