History, asked by grahamreiter, 7 months ago

Explain how civil rights and liberties are limited in China.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

in \: china \: a \: singl e \: party \: the \: communist \: party \: \ \\ controls \: the \: government \: this \: means \: that \: other \: political \: parties \: are \: not \: allowed \: and \: most \: people \: do \: not \: have \: opportunity \: to \: participate \: in \: government \: \\ hope \: this \: helps \: you \: \\ plz \: mark \: me \: as \: brainliest \:  \:  \\ and \: follow \: me \:

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Answered by smartbrainz
15

The Chinese government has proceeded to draft and enforce a number of controversial national security regulations, according to Amnesty International, which posed significant challenges against civil rights protection. All year long, there has been a nationwide suppression of human rights lawyers and activists. Human rights critics and supporters have been routinely tracked, threatened, pressured, imprisoned and detained.

Explanation:

  • Several human rights groups in China have reported the government's civil rights issues as a mismanagement, including: the death penalty, one children's policy and Tibet 's political and juridical position and the lack of press freedom in mainland China. The inability to accept civil rights constitutionally and the absence of an impartial judiciary, the rule of law and the due process (the state should respect all legal rights which are owed to a person) are also problems of concern.
  • Some human rights issues include the severe lack of labor rights, in specific, the hukou system that limits freedom of movement for migrant workers. The system of Hukou had become one of recent history's most strictly-imposed apartheid systems. Through this, urban dwellers benefit from a number of financial, economic and cultural advantages, whereas  rural workers, the majority of the Chinese populace are treated as second-class citizens.
  • Further, civil rights and liberties volation incluce the absence of autonomous trade unions, the claims of discrimination against agricultural workers and ethnic minorities; and the inability to uphold freedom of religion – rights groups have highlighted repression of the Christian
  • References to some of the contentious incidents and political activities, as well as the web pages which the PRC officials view as "threatening  or dangerous to national stability," are blocked on the Internet in the PRC. In various newspapers the content which PRC authorities challenge or condemn is is absent from many publications,
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