With the EU’s political and trade relationship with China being actively discussed, Amnesty International today releases its latest report on the use of the death penalty in China and calls on EU foreign ministers meeting today to actively consider the report, which calls for an immediate...
Amnesty International Report – AI index ASA 17/003/2004 dated 22 March 2004 See also the press release “EU-China relations and the death penalty”, go to “Press Releases” tab. Cover page Summary Text
Amnesty International rend public son dernier rapport sur la situation des droits humains en Chine Alors que doit s’ouvrir jeudi à Pékin la rencontre au sommet entre l’Union européenne et la Chine, Amnesty International rend publique ce mardi 28 octobre 2003 sa dernière évaluation de...
Amnesty International Releases Latest Assessment of Human Rights Situation in China In the lead-up to Thursday’s EU-China summit meeting in Beijing, Amnesty International today releases its latest assessment of the human rights situation in China in a 20-page report entitled: “China:...
People’s Republic of China Continuing abuses under a new leadership – summary of human rights concerns (AI index ASA 17/035/2003 dated 28 October 2003). Click this link for the cover page Click this link for the summary and text of the document
28/10/2003 – People’s Republic of China Continuing abuses under a new leadership – summary of human rights concerns (AI index ASA 17/035/2003 dated 28 October 2003).
30/09/2003 – The submission includes a brief note on general EU concerns and a set of country reports for EU and candidate countries which will form part of Amnesty International’s report “Concerns in Europe and Central Asia”. Submission to the EU Network of Independent...
Amnesty International report: “People’s Republic of China: serious human rights violations and the crackdown on dissent continue” (AI index AFR 17/047/2002). Click here for cover page – link to text is available below. Download PDF attachement
On the eve of the summit in Copenhagen between European Union leaders and the Chinese prime minister Zhu Rongji, Amnesty International calls on the EU to put an end to the situation where the so-called dialogue on human rights is in effect a monologue which China ignores. Amnesty International...
Click here to view the annex: “Human Rights in China in 2001 – A New Step Backwards” (Amnesty International Briefing August 2001) Download PDF attachement