While most readers recognize that under China’s one-party system, the judiciary functions differently than in a democratic society, few realize the extent to which China’s legal system remains subject to the whims of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). With China’s hundreds of thousands of lawyers, thousands of judges and brand new court buildings, do Falun Gong adherents who are wrongfully imprisoned have a place to appeal? Are those who are abused able to press charges against their torturers?
The answer is that, despite rhetorical references to the “rule of law,” obtaining justice through the Chinese legal system remains an impossibility for Falun Gong practitioners.
Indeed, as the articles in this section vividly illustrate, the campaign against Falun Gong is a continuing reminder of the CCP’s ability to override the constitution, to tightly control the judiciary, and to blatantly disregard commitments made under international human rights treaties:
Il 2 giugno 2026, sull’isola di Jeju, in Corea del Sud, tre uomini cinesi hanno… Read More
La Corte europea dei diritti dell’uomo ha stabilito che la Serbia ha violato le libertà… Read More
Il signor Liu Wansheng, un praticante del Falun Gong di 71 anni della città di… Read More
La signora Cong Peishan ha 87 anni e la signora Li Xianghong 63. Dopo anni… Read More
Gli episodi di repressione transnazionale contro i praticanti di Falun Gong e la Shen Yun… Read More
Articoli pubblicati per la prima volta da Minghui.org, il 10 marzo, poi ripresi da Weiquanwang… Read More