ChinaAid’s Response to Google’s Stand for Internet Freedom
— “ChinaAid urges other American and Western companies join with Google in standing up against China media censorship, to preserve the basic human right to freedom of speech.”
Category: China
Communist China: Police Officer Says Human Rights Attorney Gao Zhisheng “Went Missing on a Walk”
Communist China: Google – “A New Approach to China” – may pull out after attacks on Human Rights computers
Google is reporting on cyber attacks on Chinese human rights activists and attacks on U.S. and European supporters of human rights for the Chinese people. BBC is reporting that Google is considering ending its operations in Communist China. Google states “We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn.”
The New York Times has also reported on this issue, mentioning how searches on phrases such as “Tiananmen Square massacre,” “Dalai Lama,” and other similar searches have come up blank, as well as blocks on YouTube online videos. In addition, the NYT quotes Wenqi Gao, a spokesman for the Communist Chinese Consulate in New York, who told the Times: “I want to reaffirm that China is committed to protecting the legitimate rights and interests of foreign companies in our country.”
Chinese supporters of Google have sent and laid flowers near the entrance to Google’s China office in Beijing with notes such as “Thank you for holding values over profits!” The NY Times reports that the Google announcement is being censored in news throughout Communist China. The Wall Street Journal’s China Real Time report is providing continuing coverage on this issue.
However, computer industry analysts are writing columns suggesting that Google may not leave Communist China, anticipating that “Google would be willing to settle for a more liberalized version of the censorship it already imposes on Google.cn.”
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) has an online petition for your signature supporting Google’s call for ending censorship on Google.cn and asking them to stand by their decision on “a new approach to China.” We urge you to sign this petition to show Google how we feel at:
http://www.petitiononline.com/flowerch/petition.html

Google Blog reports following statements by David Drummond, Google Senior Vice President, Corporate Development and Chief Legal Officer” — “A New Approach to China”
— “Like many other well-known organizations, we face cyber attacks of varying degrees on a regular basis. In mid-December, we detected a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property from Google. However, it soon became clear that what at first appeared to be solely a security incident–albeit a significant one–was something quite different.”
— “First, this attack was not just on Google. As part of our investigation we have discovered that at least twenty other large companies from a wide range of businesses–including the Internet, finance, technology, media and chemical sectors–have been similarly targeted. We are currently in the process of notifying those companies, and we are also working with the relevant U.S. authorities.”
— “Second, we have evidence to suggest that a primary goal of the attackers was accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. Based on our investigation to date we believe their attack did not achieve that objective. Only two Gmail accounts appear to have been accessed, and that activity was limited to account information (such as the date the account was created) and subject line, rather than the content of emails themselves.”
— “Third, as part of this investigation but independent of the attack on Google, we have discovered that the accounts of dozens of U.S.-, China- and Europe-based Gmail users who are advocates of human rights in China appear to have been routinely accessed by third parties. These accounts have not been accessed through any security breach at Google, but most likely via phishing scams or malware placed on the users’ computers.”
— “We have already used information gained from this attack to make infrastructure and architectural improvements that enhance security for Google and for our users. In terms of individual users, we would advise people to deploy reputable anti-virus and anti-spyware programs on their computers, to install patches for their operating systems and to update their web browsers. Always be cautious when clicking on links appearing in instant messages and emails, or when asked to share personal information like passwords online. You can read more here about our cyber-security recommendations. People wanting to learn more about these kinds of attacks can read this U.S. government report (PDF), Nart Villeneuve’s blog and this presentation on the GhostNet spying incident.”
— “We have taken the unusual step of sharing information about these attacks with a broad audience not just because of the security and human rights implications of what we have unearthed, but also because this information goes to the heart of a much bigger global debate about freedom of speech. In the last two decades, China’s economic reform programs and its citizens’ entrepreneurial flair have lifted hundreds of millions of Chinese people out of poverty. Indeed, this great nation is at the heart of much economic progress and development in the world today.”
— “We launched Google.cn in January 2006 in the belief that the benefits of increased access to information for people in China and a more open Internet outweighed our discomfort in agreeing to censor some results. At the time we made clear that “we will carefully monitor conditions in China, including new laws and other restrictions on our services. If we determine that we are unable to achieve the objectives outlined we will not hesitate to reconsider our approach to China.””
— “These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered–combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web–have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China. We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all. We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.”
— “The decision to review our business operations in China has been incredibly hard, and we know that it will have potentially far-reaching consequences. We want to make clear that this move was driven by our executives in the United States, without the knowledge or involvement of our employees in China who have worked incredibly hard to make Google.cn the success it is today. We are committed to working responsibly to resolve the very difficult issues raised.”
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The New York Times also reported that “many people in Silicon Valley were surprised by Google’s stance. ‘I don’t think anybody is going to run away from China,’ said Joe Schoendorf, a partner at Accel Partners, a Silicon Valley venture capital firm with a major presence in China. ‘Google has Microsoft on the ropes, and China is arguably the world’s most important market outside of the U.S. You don’t walk away from that on principle.’ ”
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Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) urges you to let Google know that you agree with their goals for “a new approach to China,” by signing our online petition, and by contacting Google and letting you know that you support their efforts. Their press office email is press@google.com and their telephone number is 1-650-930-3555.
Google also provides a list of its executive management at:
http://www.google.com/intl/en/corporate/execs.html

The U.S. State Department has a statement on the Google China issue, which reads:
— “We have been briefed by Google on these allegations, which raise very serious concerns and questions. We look to the Chinese government for an explanation. The ability to operate with confidence in cyberspace is critical in a modern society and economy. I will be giving an address next week on the centrality of internet freedom in the 21st century, and we will have further comment on this matter as the facts become clear.”
Media Reports:
Wall Street Journal’s “China Real Time Report” Continuing Coverage on Communist China-Google News
BBC: Google ‘may pull out of China after Gmail cyber attack’
— BBC reports: “Google said the e-mail accounts of Chinese human rights activists were the primary target of the attack, which occurred in December.”
BBC: Chinese surprise at Google pull-out threat
Guardian: Google challenge to China over censorship
Washington Post: China faces backlash from ‘netizens’ if Google leaves
NY Times: Google’s Threat Echoed Everywhere, Except China
— NY Times reports: “Google’s declaration that it would stop cooperating with Chinese Internet censorship and consider shutting down its operations in the country ricocheted around the world Wednesday. But in China itself, the news was heavily censored.”
NY Times: Google, Citing Attack, Threatens to Exit China
Washington Post: Google threatens to leave China after attacks on activists’ e-mail
— Washington Post reports: ” ‘It’s clear that this attack was so pervasive and so essential to the core of Google’s intellectual property that only in such a situation would they contemplate pulling the plug on their entire business model in China,’ said James Mulvenon, a China cyber expert with Defense Group Inc.”
— “Congressional sources said the other companies include Adobe and possibly Northrop Grumman and Dow Chemical. Industry sources said the attacks were even broader, affecting 34 firms.”
BBC: UK officials ‘to debrief Google on China cyber attack’
WSJ: Flowers for Google in China
WSJ: Google’s Watershed Moment in China
USA Today: Google stops short of fingering China for cyberattacks
VOA: Internet Censorship at Center of Google Dispute with China
CNET News: Google’s challenge in China
Guardian: Google blazes a trail with China rift
Guardian: US asks China to explain Google hacking claims
Guardian: Google pulls out of China: what the bloggers are saying
Mirror: Google admits Chinese human rights activists’ Gmail accounts were hacked
PC World: Google Hack Raises Serious Concerns, US Says
Google / Adobe Report Internal Attack from China
WSJ: Google China Employees in Limbo
PC World: Google Pulling Out of China? Don’t Bet On It
WSJ: Testing the Google.cn Filters

Petition Supporting Google Call to End Internet Censorship in China
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) has an online petition for your signature supporting Google’s call for ending censorship on Google.cn and asking them to stand by their decision on “a new approach to China.” R.E.A.L. has posted on this subject at our blog at https://www.realcourage.org
We urge you to sign this petition to show Google how we feel at:
http://www.petitiononline.com/flowerch/petition.html
R.E.A.L.’s petition reads:
We, the members of the world community who stand for our universal human rights of liberty and freedom, support Google corporate management in its calls to end Internet censorship in Communist China. We urge Google corporate management to stand by its call for “a new approach to China.” We support Google corporate management’s position that “We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn.”
Our universal human rights of freedom, liberty, and equality apply to every part of the world, including Communist China. We support Google corporate management’s decision to defend such universal human rights, and we urge all Google corporate management to stand firm to this statement.
Like those in Beijing today who have supported Google’s statement by leaving flowers at Google’s Beijing office, we too extend our “flowers for Google” by supporting their position to be responsible for equality and liberty in China today. We urge other corporations to learn from Google’s statement and recognize that their customers do view our universal human rights as a human priority.
Universal human rights are all of our rights, and all of our responsibility.
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Show Google that corporate responsibility on universal human rights (everywhere – in any language) is the type of responsibility that we share and that we appreciate.

Communist China: Korla Police and Farm Leaders Burn Bibles and Persecute Elderly Christians
ChinaAid reports: “On December 25, 2009, farm leaders and police broke into the home of Wang Qiyue, a 71-year-old widow, disrupting the Christmas gathering and ransacking her home. These “People’s Police” burned Ms. Wang’s furniture, as she was thrown against a police car by the Korla Chief of Security, Yu Fagan. Six farm leaders next barged into the home of 69-year-old hemiplegic He Cuiying, and confiscated more than 30 Bibles and spiritual books. The leaders then burned the materials in a bonfire outside her home, as a means of public humiliation. Later, five elderly Christians were arrested with no cause and fined 5,000 Yuan each.”
Read more about the persecution of the elderly Christians in Korla.
Communist China’s Influence on U.S. Congress Growing
While Communist China continues it totalitarian practices and abuses of human rights, the Washington Post is reporting how Communist China is gaining power in the U.S. Congress. The Post should know, after all, its own Bob Woodward has been a scheduled speaker at cocktail parties at the Communist Chinese embassy. (See also R.E.A.L. article in April 2009.)
— Image showing the millions of dollars that Communist China spends on lobbying in Washington DC
— Washington Post reports: “China’s lobbying efforts yield new influence, openness on Capitol Hill”
— “Ten years ago, U.S. lawmakers publicly accused the China Ocean Shipping Co. of being a front for espionage and blocked plans to expand its Long Beach, Calif., port terminal over fears that Chinese spies would use it to snoop on the United States.”
— “By last year, Congress was seeing the state-owned Chinese behemoth in a far kinder light. Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) authored a resolution applauding the company for employing thousands of Americans and helping keep the waters of Alaska clean. Rep. Stephen F. Lynch (D-Mass.) hailed the firm on the House floor, calling its chief executive “a people’s ambassador” to the United States after it rescued Boston’s port — and thousands of jobs — when a European shipping line moved out.”
— “The congressional about-face illustrates a dramatic increase in China’s influence on Capitol Hill, where for years its lobbying muscle never matched its ballooning importance in world affairs. Members of Congress, lobbyists and other observers said China’s new prominence is largely the result of Beijing’s increasingly sophisticated efforts to influence events at the center of U.S. power — and a growing realization among U.S. lawmakers that China has become a critical economic player across America.”
— “Although many Americans still view China with deep suspicion because of its communist system and human rights record, the results of Beijing’s image-and-influence campaign are clear. Members of Congress ‘are starting to understand that the Chinese are not communist but that the Chinese are Chinese,’ said Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.). China is Oregon’s biggest export market after Canada.”
— “The new openness toward China is often subtle and not shared by all. But an undeniable evolution is taking place, congressional staffers and analysts said, as members of Congress, many with increasing numbers of large and small businesses in their districts that depend on trade with China, are now far more likely to kill or water down measures opposed by Beijing.”
R.E.A.L Postings on Totalitarianism
Additional Selected R.E.A.L. Postings on Communist China
ChinaAid challenges ‘misleading’ report
“Argentine Judge Orders Arrest of Top Chinese Communist Party Officials for Crimes Against Humanity”
Communist China Sentences Liu Xiaobo to 11 years in Prison on Christmas Day
Report: Communist China Mass Murderer’s Image on White House Christmas Tree Ornament
ChinaAid: Gao Zhisheng Tortured, Family Repressed
Communist China: Chinese Human Rights Lawyer Sentenced to Seven Years – Wang Yonghang
Communist China: 5 More Church Leaders Sentenced to Prison Without Trial
Communist China: Church Leaders Complaining About Church Destruction Get 7 and 3 Years in Prison
Communist China: Church Defies Police to Worship
Women’s Rights Defender Jiang Tianyong Arrested, Wife Beaten in Communist China
Communist China: Beijing Continues Relentless Crackdown on Shouwang Church
Communist China: China protesters plead for help from Obama
DC: Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Hearing Announcement – Rule of Law in China
Communist China: U.S. Defense Secretary Gates calls for lasting military dialogue with China
Communist China: 10 More Arrested After Detainees Refuse to Leave Without Fellow Linfen Pastor
Communist China: “One Million Rights Activists Detained in China”
Database Opens to Track Psychiatric Abuse in Communist China
Communist China: Falun Gong Practitioner Dies From Persecution in Beijing
DC: “After Crushed Legs and Dreams, Fang Zheng Stands for Freedom”
US Epoch Times Reports: ‘Gao Zhisheng, My Husband — Where Are You?’
Communist China: US President Barack Obama cancels meeting with Dalai Lama ‘to keep China happy’
Communist China: Mass Arrests of Falun Gong Prior to Communist Anniversary
NYC: Empire State Building Honors China, Critics Protest
Communist China: Beijing crackdown for 60th anniversary gala
Communist China: China Aid Group’s Bob Fu Issues Public Statement on CPC’s 60th Anniversary
September 30: Human Rights Protest at Washington DC PRC Embassy
Communist China: 14 Han Chinese Christians Detained and Interrogated in Xinjiang
ChinaAid reports: On January 7, 2010, Nong Wu Shi PSB officials in the Aksu region raided a house church, arresting 14 house church members. The military PSB detained the members for over 12 hours, on charges of participating in “illegal religious activities.” The next morning, 11 were released, leaving house church leaders Yang Tianlu, He Sujin, and Sujin’s son, He Guangyuan, in detention.
Read more about the raid and arrest of 14 Han Chinese house church Christians.
Communist China: Attorney Li Baiguang Files Appeal for Uyghur Christian Alimujiang Yimiti
ChinaAid reports: On January 7, 2010, Attorney Li Baiguang sent letters of appeal on behalf of Alimujiang Yimiti to the Xinjiang Provincial Government and Chinese Central Government. In the letters, he stated that, by law, the charge of “unlawfully providing state secrets to overseas organizations” and the sentence of 15-years imprisonment were illegal and should be withdrawn. He further requested an immediate review of the case.
Read more about Li Baiguang’s Appeal on behalf of Alimujiang Yimiti.
Philadelphia: Human Rights Activists Celebrate a Night of Chinese Culture of Freedom
On January 2, 2010, R.E.A.L. supporters and other human rights activists from the Voice of the Copts, Pakistan Christian Congress, and Falun Dafa (Falun Gong) attended the Shen Yun Performing Arts show in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Epoch Times reported on this and on our comments at Philadelphia’s Academy of Music.

I accompanied Falun Gong’s Lisa Tao and others from the Washington DC area to the Shen Yun performance in Philadelphia. At R.E.A.L.’s December 10, 2009 press conference at the National Press Club on Human Rights Day, Lisa Tao and Jin Pang told of the torture of their families in Communist China because of their beliefs. Lisa told of her father was “tortured to death” by the Communist Chinese government, and of her own torture. Lisa told the press and the audience on December 10 how “I was also frequently beaten, and many times I was close to being beaten to death.” Jin Pang told of the imprisonment and torture of her mother and her aunt. Her mother and aunt were part of 10,000 Falun Gong supporters arrested during the Beijing Olympics. During the DC press conference, Lisa told of estimates that the Communist government has killed 80 million people, and she told of the countless others tortured, imprisoned, and abused by the Chinese Communist government.
But like during our protest of the 60th anniversary of the Communist Chinese government at the PRC embassy on September 30 (October 1 Beijing time), Lisa does not tire or get discouraged. She glows from the power of hope, love, and freedom that her beliefs have taught her. It is something that the Communists could never take away from her. She found extraordinary strength in her faith and in her belief in human freedom.

On our trip together to see the Shen Yun performance in Philadelphia on a bitterly cold January night, she does not notice the chill, as we stopped together to get a fish sandwich at a nearby McDonalds. (Meantime, I am bundled with layers of clothing and a heavy sweater.)
Quietly, just like Lisa Tao regularly protests at the PRC embassy without publicity or the press, Lisa Tao is also waging a daily battle for human freedom in Communist China. That night Lisa shared with me her efforts that day alone in helping Chinese people to find the courage to stand up and defy the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). From the United States, Lisa calls people in Communist China on the telephone and tells them about Falun Dafa and also encourages them to stand up against the CCP. She is part of a “Quit CCP” movement of Chinese people who publicly renounce their support for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
That day alone, Lisa Tao convinced 10 new people to publicly Quit the CCP. Her efforts won’t be recorded in any local news media. But she has the quiet confidence and satisfaction of someone who is living the courage of her convictions.
The Quit CCP movement states that over 66 million Chinese have left the CCP since December 2004. Public individual statements are posted on the Quit CCP campaign web site. Every day, Lisa Tao and freedom fighters around the world seek to extend a hand to other Chinese people who are lifting themselves up out of oppression.
The march for freedom – for human beings around the world – is just getting started. But every day, there are new members joining that march and taking up the cause.
We share their commitment to universal human rights, and to being Responsible for Equality And Liberty.
Love Wins.

ChinaAid challenges ‘misleading’ report
Baptist Press reports:
— “The human rights organization ChinaAid is challenging a ‘misleading assessment about the true situation of the church in China’ released by the World Evangelical Alliance, a report that praised the Chinese government and state-sanctioned churches for their cooperation in spreading Christianity in the communist nation.”
— “ChinaAid said they felt compelled to respond after Chinese house church leaders and other Christians in the West expressed concern over the glowing report issued by WEA.”
