China News
News from China with a focus on human rights and religious liberty
Saturday, December 13, 2003

Chinese Sex Slaves Suffer From 'Traffic of Tears' (VOA)
Leta Hong Fincher


View Leta Hong Fincher's report (high speed connection) (RealVideo)
View Leta Hong Fincher's report (low speed connection) (RealVideo) 

China faces a growing problem of cross-border trafficking of women and children. The United Nations says that as many as 10,000 Chinese women every year are abducted and sold into sexual slavery in southeast Asia. VOA’s Beijing correspondent Leta Hong Fincher recently traveled to Yunnan in Southern China, and shows us how the slave trade in women has affected two families there in this traffic of tears.


 

 

9:55:38 AM    comments []

FOUR DEAD AS TRAIN PLOWS THROUGH CHINESE LAND PROTEST  (RFA)

Four people have died and a further seven have been injured in the central Chinese province of Henan, after an express train cut through a protest against forced evictions which had gathered on the main Beijing to Guangdong railway line, RFA's Mandarin and Cantonese services report.

9:48:19 AM    comments []

Taiwan president repeats referendum pledge, vows not to yield to China (CNA)
9:42:28 AM    comments []

CHRISTIAN DIES IN POLICE CUSTODY

(Compass) -- Reliable sources have confirmed the death of a house church Christian in police custody on October 30. Mrs. Zhang Hongmei, 33, was arrested by local police in Dongmiaodong village on October 29. Police summoned Zhang’s family and asked them to pay a bribe of 3,000 RMB (about $400). They were unable to raise the money, a sum that is well over a year’s wages for them. Later as Zhang’s family pleaded with police officers, they saw Hongmei bound with heavy chains, visibly injured and unable to speak to them. On the following day, police told the family that she had died at noon. In another incident, Zhang Yi-nan, a Christian, was badly beaten on November 11 by fellow inmates at the request of prison guards upon his arrival at a labor camp just outside Ping Ding Shan city. According to a veteran China watcher, the two incidents prove China’s lack of commitment to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

(www.compassdirect.org)


9:14:57 AM    comments []

URBAN MIGRATION CAUSES HOUSE CHURCH CRISIS

(Compass) -- China’s rural house churches are reeling from the impact of rapid urbanization. The flow of young peasants to the cities in search of employment has become a tidal-wave. When the communists came to power in China in 1949, only 10 percent of the population was living in cities. However, about 20 million peasants migrate to the cities every year, many of them Christians. By 2015, the Chinese government estimates that fully half of the total population of 1.3 billion will be urbanized. House church evangelists admit that almost all of the Christian young people in rural congregations have left to find jobs in the cities, leaving many house churches to face the danger of imploding through lack of trained young pastors. However, positive opportunities do exist. Properly trained Christian migrants could become a potent force for urban evangelism.

(www.compassdirect.org)


9:11:03 AM    comments []





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Last Update: 4/4/2004; 9:19:18 AM

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