Detention of women activists makes a mockery of China's rule of law aspirations
Jerome A. Cohen says rights campaigners deserve Beijing's support
Although a veteran observer of Chinese efforts to secure a just and stable legal system, I was surprised when Chinese police formally detained five women opponents of sexual harassment ahead of International Women's Day.
They are being investigated for alleged "provocation and causing a disturbance", in violation of one of the vaguest and most abused provisions of the Chinese criminal code.
It is difficult to determine how these women could have caused a disturbance.
They were detained before they actually distributed any literature, and the literature that they planned to distribute did not challenge the authorities or urge disobedience to the Communist Party. They were merely calling for citizens to comply with Chinese law by not groping their fellow passengers in crowded subways and buses.
Nothing in their message resembled the sort of inflammatory statements that, according to Supreme People's Court interpretations, are the intended targets of the criminal law's notorious Section 293(4).
Chinese law forbids sexual harassment, and Beijing officials have acknowledged that sexual harassment of women on public transport is a problem.