<p><img width="350" height="219" src="/media/17259695/china-communist-party 350x219.jpg" alt="China communist party meeting" class="ImageFloatLeft"/>A spokesperson for an international non-profit organization that believes religious freedom is the first freedom, which lays the foundation for all other basic human rights, says a couple of lawyers in China who are being punished for doing their job are fulfilling a verse from Proverbs.</p>
The SS Nazis used hunger bunkers to end the lives of their rebel prisoners, the Communists of China – where a totalitarian and military regime proliferates even more cruel for the number of death sentences and its long duration favored by continued economic complicity of the West even after the Tiananmen Square massacre – to save appearances before the international community, they force prisoners to survive the hunger strike by feeding them with a nasal tube.
Father Maximilian Kolbe survived the hardships of block 11 of the Aushwitz concentration camp with three other inmates, heartened by the prayers of the Franciscan friar who had volunteered for the German reprisal as an alternative to a father of a family. He was then killed with the other condemned by a lethal injection but his enterprise became an emblem of Christian heroism.
Hu Xijin claimed Zhang s imprisonment was a tragedy caused by the West
The editor of the Global Times accused external forces of bewildering her
The US and EU demanded that China release the 37-year-old former lawyer
Zhang was jailed for four years for picking quarrels and provoking trouble
She criticised Wuhan government s handling of the virus during its outbreak
Screenshot from video
Jailed citizen journalist Zhang Zhan, who was sentenced to four years imprisonment for posting reports from Wuhan during the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic in the city, spoke up in court and challenged the judge during her trial earlier this week, RFA has learned.
Zhang, 37, appeared in the Pudong New District People s Court in a wheelchair on Tuesday after being force-fed during a hunger strike in the Pudong New District Detention Center.
She was found guilty of picking quarrels and stirring up trouble, a charge frequently used to target critics of the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP), on the basis that she had published false information about the pandemic on social media sites.