by CAP Liberté de Conscience | Nov 18, 2018 | news
After the second cycle of UPR, China has turned down most of the recommendations concerning civil and political rights, including the recommendations calling for China to revoke extrajudicial and arbitrary detention.
1.2 Although several Christian groups are persecuted in China, we focus on the most blatant and dramatic case, concerning the Christians of The Church of Almighty God. In addition to others religious believers, human rights activists, and dissidents, during the span between 2014 and 2018, members of The Church of Almighty God have been subjected to continuous arbitrary detention and imprisonment in China.
by CAP Liberté de Conscience | Nov 18, 2018 | CAP LC United Nations, UN UPR
2018 United Nations Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review China Omnium des Libertés
by CAP Liberté de Conscience | Nov 18, 2018 | CAP LC United Nations, UN UPR
In China, in 1989, a religious revival involved both the House Churches (i.e. the Protestant Churches whose activity is not authorized by the government) and the religious movement known as the Shouters, originating from the Chinese preachers Watchman Nee (1903–1972) and Witness Lee (1905–1997). In the same year 1989, the person later identified as Almighty God by her followers began participating in meetings of the Shouters. In 1991, she began to utter words that followers compared, for authority and power, to those expressed by Jesus Christ. Many Christians started reading these utterances and believing they were “what the Spirit says to the Churches” (Rev 2:7, 17). Among these was Zhao Weishan, who would later become the administrative leader of the movement. Not until 1993 did the readers of the utterances start believing that their author was the incarnate God, the second coming of Jesus Christ and Almighty God, the unique God. The movement, born in 1991, became known as The Church of Almighty God (CAG, also known as Eastern Lightning). While stating that God incarnated in our time in a female human being, the CAG never mentions her name. Several scholars identify her with Yang Xiangbin, a woman born in 1973 in northwestern China.
by CAP Liberté de Conscience | Nov 12, 2018 | France
Source La Croix 6/11/2018 https://www.la-croix.com/Monde/Asie-et-Oceanie/droits-lHomme-Chine-sujet-dexamen-lONU-2018-11-06-1200981236 EXPLICATION – Le conseil des droits de l’Homme étudiait mardi 6 novembre à Genève les droits de l’homme en Chine. L’occasion d’aborder...
by CAP Liberté de Conscience | Oct 11, 2018 | France
PÉTITION URGENTE : À l’attention de M. le Président de la République Populaire de Chine Pour information, à: M. le Secrétaire Général des Nations Unies Comité des Droits de l’Homme des Nations Unies M. le Secrétaire Général du Conseil de l’Europe M. le...
by CAP Liberté de Conscience | Oct 10, 2018 | Signing letters, Signing letters 2018
URGENT PETITION : For the Attention of the President of the People’s Republic of China For information, to: Secretary General of the United Nations United Nations Committee for Human Rights Secretary General of the Council of Europe President of the European...
by CAP Liberté de Conscience | Oct 8, 2018 | news
Indo-Canadian engineer retired, Neelam Makhija, 71, spends two months in prison and is held against his will in France for two and a half years. His crime, being a friend of a coach who hosted, once a year, meditation seminars! Despite his acknowledged innocence...
by CAP Liberté de Conscience | Oct 7, 2018 | CAP LC United Nations, HRC 39
Written statement* submitted by Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience, a non-governmental organization in special consultative status The Secretary-General has received the following written statement which is...