An appeal to the Chinese dictatorship

2560px-Flag_of_the_People's_Republic_of_China.svg.png

 

The letters are below this press release

Benedict Rogers, co-founder and Chief Executive of Hong Kong Watch, will stage a 24-hour fast and hunger strike on Christmas Eve in solidarity with prisoners of conscience and persecuted people throughout China. He has published an Open Letter to Xi Jinping and an Open Letter to “all peoples suffering under the Chinese Communist Party’s repressive rule”, outlining 12 “demands” for the Chinese Communist Party regime and the international community.

Mr Rogers had originally intended to hold a 12-hour protest in a cage outside the Chinese Embassy in London on Christmas Eve, with a seasonal theme based on the “12 Days of Christmas”. He called for “12 Hours of Protest” outside Chinese embassies around the world. However, due to new COVID-19 restrictions in London, he postponed that plan and is instead publishing his Open Letters and undertaking a fast and hunger strike.

His 12 Demands outlined in his Open Letters focus on a range of human rights concerns in China, detailed as follows:

1. Free Hong Kong and all Hong Kong political prisoners, especially Jimmy Lai, Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow, Ivan Lam and the 12 Hong Kong youths imprisoned in Shenzhen

2. Stop Uyghur Genocide

3. Stop atrocities in Tibet

4. Stop persecution of Christians and Falun Gong in China

5. Stop Forced Organ Harvesting

6. Free Gui Minhai, the Chinese-born Swedish national abducted from Thailand and serving ten years in prison in China

7. Free Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, the two Canadian hostages detained in China

8. Free Li Ming Che, a Taiwanese human rights activist jailed in China

9. End Slave Labour in Global Supply Chains and say #NoGenocideTrade

10. End Torture in China

11. To the free world - stop #CCP bullying

12. To the free world – Buy Australian Wine and stand up to CCP bullying

 

“I cannot be with my mother this Christmas, due to the pandemic. But there are many people throughout China who are separated from their families and loved ones because of the Chinese Communist Party regime’s inhumane repression,” said Benedict Rogers.

“This Christmas there are people in prison in Hong Kong and throughout China who can’t be with their parents, spouses, wives, relatives and friends – and worse, are languishing in dire conditions and subjected to physical and mental torture and slavery. I cannot, in good conscience, enjoy Christmas celebrations without remembering my Hong Kong, Tibetan, Uyghur, Christian, Falun Gong and Chinese dissident brothers and sisters. The very least I can do is sacrifice a few hours of my Christmas Eve in a symbolic gesture of solidarity and to call on the world to speak up for them and to confront the Chinese regime’s atrocious human rights violations. I hope others will join me around the world, at least in spirit, in these demands.”

In his Open Letter to Xi Jinping, Mr Rogers says the purpose of the action is “to let the peoples of China – and especially those imprisoned by your regime – know that they are not forgotten and not alone. And as they sit in their prison cells or concentration camps in different places across China this Christmas Eve, I hope they may know in their spirits that there are people in the free world speaking their names, calling for their release, ensuring that the world does not ignore their cries: Free Jimmy Lai, Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow, Ivan Lam, Andy Li, Free the 12 Hong Kong Youths jailed in Shenzhen, Free Gui Minhai, Free Li Ming-che, Free Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, Free Pastor Wang Yi … and all the others whose names we do not know or cannot record here.”

He adds: “In addition to all the individual prisoners of conscience across China, there are the big picture tragedies that keep my soul and conscience awake at night too: the genocide of the Uyghurs, the atrocities in Tibet, the persecution of Christians, Falun Gong practitioners and other religions, the repression of civil society, lawyers, bloggers, journalists, whistleblowers and dissidents, the broken promises and dismantling of freedom in Hong Kong, the barbaric forced organ harvesting, torture and slave labour. These things must stop.”

In a call to the international community, Mr Rogers says: “I want to awaken the world. Your regime, Mr Xi, not only represses its people, it threatens the free world. But we must not allow this to continue. Your regime is a bully, Mr Xi, and if there’s one thing every kid in the world knows in the school playground, it is to stand up to bullies. So this Christmas I urge everyone everywhere around the world – after fasting or hunger striking with me – to buy as much Australian wine as you can, and ONLY Australian wine, and enjoy it.”

Benedict Rogers co-founded Hong Kong Watch in 2017, after being denied entry to Hong Kong on the orders of the regime in Beijing. He is also the co-founder and Deputy Chair of the Conservative Party Human Rights Commission, and a member of the advisory board of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC, the advisory board of the Stop Uyghur Genocide Campaign and the advisory board of the International Coalition to End Transplant Abuse in China (ETAC)”.

For further information or interviews please contact Benedict Rogers on ben@hongkongwatch.org

A copy of the two Open Letters can be found below:

 

A CHRISTMAS OPEN LETTER TO XI JINPING AND THE LEADERS OF THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY REGIME

 

24 December 2020

 

Xi Jinping

General Secretary of the Communist Party of China

Zhongnanhai

Beijing

People’s Republic of China

 

Cc: Carrie Lam, Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region

Cc: Liu Xiaoming, Ambassador of the People’s Republic of China to the United Kingdom

 

Dear General Secretary Xi Jinping and leaders of the Chinese Communist Party regime throughout the People’s Republic of China,

I am writing firstly to wish you a peaceful and blessed Christmas and New Year.

There are some who say “Christmas is cancelled”, but the truth is that Christmas – in its truest sense – can never be “cancelled”: not by pandemics, nor by brutal, inhumane, mendacious and corrupt dictatorships, for “Christmas” is not simply a material event, but an event in history which lives on in the hearts and minds of those who choose to believe it. The Christmas story – and the values and message it represents – is about birth, life, love and liberation, and while you can repress these values with actions that cause death, hate and repression, as your regime does to all your peoples each and every day, you can never imprison or kill the spirit of Christmas. So, I wish you a merry Christmas.

Secondly, I want to say that I love China and its peoples, and I wish all the peoples of China a blessed Christmas. They have suffered so much for so long under the repressive rule of the Chinese Communist Party regime, and yet have developed an economy that has grown with dynamic and impressive speed. It is not your regime, Mr Xi, that is responsible for China’s economic growth, but rather the entrepreneurialism and talent of the Chinese peoples. Imagine how much greater and more prosperous China could be if it were free.

I first went to China when I was 18 years old. I lived and taught English for six months in Qingdao. I made many friends there, and returned many times. I have travelled often in China, from Shanghai to Kunming, from Guilin to Shenyang, from Suzhou and Hangzhou to Yangshuo and Dali, from Guangzhou and Shenzhen to Beijing and Nanjing. I have been to the birthplace of Confucius in Qufu and climbed Taishan. I began my working career in Hong Kong, living in that great city for the first five years after the handover. It is because I love China and the peoples of China that I devote my energies to advocating for their basic rights and dignity. I want China to take its rightful place as a great nation on the world stage – but it can only do so when its regime stops repressing its own people, committing crimes against humanity and flagrant breaches of international treaties, and stops its aggression against its critics beyond its borders too.

It is in that spirit that I had intended to hold a 12-hour vigil and protest outside the Chinese Communist Party regime’s embassy in London on Christmas Eve. I had planned it with the theme of the “12 Days of Christmas” in mind – 12 hours of protest, with 12 demands. I had intended to sit outside your embassy in a cage, and I know others, including Uyghurs, Tibetans, Falun Gong practitioners and Hong Kongers had planned to join me at different times.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the new restrictions we are under, I have had to change plans. But I am not abandoning the essence of what I had planned. Instead of sitting in a cage outside your embassy, I will be at home. Instead of a 12-hour protest, I will stage a 24 hour fast and hunger strike. I call it both a fast and a hunger strike because both terms carry meaning. ‘Fasting’ is a spiritual act, accompanied by prayer. A ‘hunger strike’ is a political act, accompanied by protest. I want to do both. So I will do 12 hours of fasting and prayer and 12 hours of hunger strike and protest.

And with what purpose? To let the peoples of China – and especially those imprisoned by your regime – know that they are not forgotten and not alone. And as they sit in their prison cells or concentration camps in different places across China this Christmas Eve, I hope they may know in their spirits that there are people in the free world speaking their names, calling for their release, ensuring that the world does not ignore their cries: Free Jimmy Lai, Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow, Ivan Lam, Andy Li, Free the 12 Hong Kong Youths jailed in Shenzhen, Free Gui Minhai, Free Li Ming-che, Free Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, Free Pastor Wang Yi … and all the others whose names we do not know or cannot record here.

And in addition to all the individual prisoners of conscience across China, there are the big picture tragedies that keep my soul and conscience awake at night too: the genocide of the Uyghurs, the atrocities in Tibet, the persecution of Christians, Falun Gong practitioners and other religions, the repression of civil society, lawyers, bloggers, journalists, whistleblowers and dissidents, the broken promises and dismantling of freedom in Hong Kong, the barbaric forced organ harvesting, torture and slave labour. These things must stop.

Finally, I want to awaken the world. Your regime, Mr Xi, not only represses its people, it threatens the free world. But we must not allow this to continue. Your regime is a bully, Mr Xi, and if there’s one thing every kid in the world knows in the school playground, it is to stand up to bullies. So this Christmas I urge everyone everywhere around the world – after fasting or hunger striking with me – to buy as much Australian wine as you can, and ONLY Australian wine, and enjoy it.

So, Mr Xi, in keeping with the theme of the ’12 Days of Christmas’, I present my 12 demands.

1. Free Hong Kong and all Hong Kong political prisoners, especially Jimmy Lai, Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow, Ivan Lam and the 12 Hong Kong youths imprisoned in Shenzhen

2. Stop Uyghur Genocide

3. Stop atrocities in Tibet

4. Stop persecution of Christians and Falun Gong in China

5. Stop Forced Organ Harvesting

6. Free Gui Minhai, the Chinese-born Swedish national abducted from Thailand and serving ten years in prison in China

7. Free Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, the two Canadian hostages detained in China

8. Free Li Ming Che, a Taiwanese human rights activist jailed in China

9. End Slave Labour in Global Supply Chains and say #NoGenocideTrade

10. End Torture in China

11. To the free world - stop #CCP bullying

12. To the free world – Buy Australian Wine and stand up to CCP bullying

Mr Xi, I know this Christmas letter is not short. But it’s shorter than the 12 Days of Christmas. And it’s not as long as some of your speeches to the National People’s Congress. And it’s far more comprehensible than Xi Jinping Thought.

In 1949, Chairman Mao declared that the Chinese people had stood up. In 2020 it is up to those of us who have freedom to stand up for the Chinese people – and that’s what I am doing this Christmas Eve. I hope others around the world will stand up with me for the peoples of China and against your repressive and mendacious rule, and that the real spirit of Christmas – the spirit of love and liberation – will enflame our hearts and minds and spread quicker than the virus your irresponsible regime failed to contain, and with much more positive effect.

With my prayers and love for China,

 

Benedict Rogers


 

A CHRISTMAS OPEN LETTER TO ALL PEOPLES SUFFERING UNDER THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY’S REPRESSIVE RULE

 

24 December 2020

 

To everyone throughout China, Hong Kong, the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) better known as East Turkestan, Tibet, Inner Mongolia and beyond – to every prisoner, to every activist, to every religious believer, to every blogger, to every journalist, to every lawyer, to every ordinary person who yearns to be free:

I am writing firstly to wish you a peaceful and blessed Christmas and New Year.

There are some who say “Christmas is cancelled”, but the truth is that Christmas – in its truest sense – can never be “cancelled”: not by pandemics, nor by brutal, inhumane, mendacious and corrupt dictatorships, for “Christmas” is not simply a material event, but an event in history which lives on in the hearts and minds of those who choose to believe it. The Christmas story – and the values and message it represents – is about birth, life, love and liberation, and while regimes, restrictions and viruses can restrict our activities, movements and interactions, they can never imprison or kill the spirit of Christmas. So, I wish you a merry Christmas.

Secondly, I want to say that I love China, its culture and peoples, and I wish all the peoples of China and everyone living under the Chinese Communist Party regime’s rule a blessed Christmas. You have suffered so much for so long under the repressive rule of this regime, and yet you have developed an economy that has grown with dynamic and impressive speed. It is your entrepreneurialism and talent that has grown the economy of China, not Xi Jinping or the Chinese Communist Party regime’s. Imagine how much greater and more prosperous China could be if it were free.

I first went to China when I was 18 years old. I lived and taught English for six months in Qingdao. I made many friends there,  and returned many times. I have travelled often in China, from Shanghai to Kunming, from Guilin to Shenyang, from Suzhou and Hangzhou to Yangshuo and Dali, from Guangzhou and Shenzhen to Beijing and Nanjing. I have been to the birthplace of Confucius in Qufu and climbed Taishan. I began my working career in Hong Kong, living in that great city for the first five years after the handover. It is because I love China and the peoples of China that I devote my energies to advocating for their basic rights and dignity.

I want China to take its rightful place as a great nation on the world stage – but it can only do so when its regime stops repressing its own people, committing crimes against humanity and flagrant breaches of international treaties, and stops its aggression against its critics beyond its borders too. The regime that rules China is rapidly losing friends and reputation in the world, but the people of China will never lose friends or reputation. Let’s learn to distinguish between the two and stand on the side of the people.

It is in that spirit that I had intended to hold a 12-hour vigil and protest outside the Chinese Communist Party regime’s embassy in London on Christmas Eve. I had planned it with the theme of the “12 Days of Christmas” in mind – 12 hours of protest, with 12 demands. I had intended to sit outside the embassy in a cage, and I know others, including Uyghurs, Tibetans, Falun Gong practitioners and Hong Kongers had planned to join me at different times.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the new restrictions we are under, I have had to change plans. But I am not abandoning the essence of what I had planned. Instead of sitting in a cage outside the Chinese embassy, I will be at home. Instead of a 12-hour protest, I will stage a 24 hour fast and hunger strike. I call it both a fast and a hunger strike because both terms carry meaning. ‘Fasting’ is a spiritual act, accompanied by prayer. A ‘hunger strike’ is a political act, accompanied by protest. I want to do both. So I will do 12 hours of fasting and prayer and 12 hours of hunger strike and protest.

And with what purpose? To let you, the peoples of China, Hong Kong, Tibet and East Turkestan (peoples under Chinese Communist Party rule) – and especially those imprisoned by the Chinese Communist Party regime – know that they are not forgotten and not alone. And as they sit in their prison cells or concentration camps in different places across China this Christmas Eve, I hope they may know in their spirits that there are people in the free world speaking their names, calling for their release, ensuring that the world does not ignore their cries: Free Jimmy Lai, Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow, Ivan Lam, Andy Li, Free the 12 Hong Kong Youths jailed in Shenzhen, Free Gui Minhai, Free Li Ming-che, Free Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, Free Pastor Wang Yi … and all the others whose names we do not know or cannot record here.

And in addition to all the individual prisoners of conscience across China, there are the big picture tragedies that keep my soul and conscience awake at night too: the genocide of the Uyghurs, the atrocities in Tibet, the persecution of Christians, Falun Gong practitioners and other religions, the repression of civil society, lawyers, bloggers, journalists, whistleblowers and dissidents, the broken promises and dismantling of freedom in Hong Kong, the barbaric forced organ harvesting, torture and slave labour. These things must stop.

Finally, I want to awaken the world. The regime that Xi Jinping leads not only represses its people, it threatens the free world. But we must not allow this to continue. The Chinese Communist Party regime is a bully, and if there’s one thing every kid in the world knows in the school playground, it is to stand up to bullies. So this Christmas I urge everyone everywhere around the world – after fasting or hunger striking with me – to buy as much Australian wine as you can, and ONLY Australian wine, and enjoy it.

So, friends, in keeping the theme of the ’12 Days of Christmas’, I present my 12 demands.

1. Free Hong Kong and all Hong Kong political prisoners, especially Jimmy Lai, Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow, Ivan Lam and the 12 Hong Kong youths imprisoned in Shenzhen

2. Stop Uyghur Genocide

3. Stop atrocities in Tibet

4. Stop persecution of Christians and Falun Gong in China

5. Stop Forced Organ Harvesting

6. Free Gui Minhai, the Chinese-born Swedish national abducted from Thailand and serving ten years in prison in China

7. Free Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, the two Canadian hostages detained in China

8. Free Li Ming Che, a Taiwanese human rights activist jailed in China

9. End Slave Labour in Global Supply Chains and say #NoGenocideTrade

10. End Torture in China

11. To the free world - stop #CCP bullying

12. To the free world – Buy Australian Wine and stand up to CCP bullying

Friends, I know this Christmas letter is not short. But it’s not as long as some of Xi Jinping’s ridiculous speeches to the National People’s Congress or Carrie Lam’s absurd Policy Address. And it’s more comprehensible than Xi Jinping Thought or Carrie Lam’s statements.

In 1949, Chairman Mao declared that the Chinese people had stood up. In 2020 it is up to those of us who have freedom to stand up for the Chinese people – and that’s what I am doing this Christmas Eve. I hope others around the world will stand up with me for the peoples of China and against the Chinese Communist Party’s repressive and mendacious rule, and that the real spirit of Christmas – the spirit of love and liberation – will enflame our hearts and minds and spread quicker than the virus which the irresponsible regime failed to contain, and with much more positive effect.

With my prayers and love for you all,

 

Benedict Rogers