Daughters of Zhang Lin Plead for his Freedom

Zhang Anni has been known as “China’s youngest prisoner of conscience.”  She was detained as a 10-year-old, denied food water and a blanket, and then prevented from attending school — all because of the pro-democracy activism of her celebrated father, Zhang Lin.  Zhang Anni and her sister, Zhang Ruli, arrived in the United States in September 2013.  Both sisters are living in the home of Reggie Littlejohn and her husband, Robert.  Here is the Open Letter of the two sisters, pleading for the freedom of their father, whose trial date is set for December 18.

Zhang Anni with her father, Zhang Lin. Photo credit: Hu Jia

Open letter to President Obama, President Xi Jinping, United States Congress, European Parliament, British Parliament and Canadian Parliament:

We are Zhang Lin’s daughters, Zhang Ruli and Zhang Anni. Our father is currently detained in Number One Detention Center of Bengbu City, Anhui Province. His trial is set for December 18. This time he is accused of “gathering a mob to disturb public order.” This accusation, however, is completely groundless. We strongly demand that the Chinese government release our father unconditionally, as soon as possible!  We call on and urge Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, President Obama, President Xi Jinping and other heads of state, parliaments, and human rights organizations to pay attention to this blatant human rights abuse. Your attention could cause our father to be released!

In February of this year, our father took Anni to transfer to another primary school in Hefei. We were planning a new start, but to our surprise, our father was taken by local police three days later. With no guardians, my sister, 10-year-old Zhang Anni, was imprisoned by four male strangers for several hours. After that, Anni was frightened, and she would only stay at home and refuse to go out. After this incident, our father sought justice for his daughter, and was supported by many internet users in China after he released the information. This April, Chinese netizens spontaneously gathered around Hefei, seeking justice for our father and Anni, in the hopes that Anni could return to school. Contrary to their wishes, they did not receive justice. Rather, these friends were subjected to different levels of detention as a punishment. In addition, my father and Anni were monitored by Bengbu City’s National Security Guards, 24 hours a day since that time.

Because Anni could not attend school, our father’s friends contacted the president of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, Reggie Littlejohn, hoping that she could shelter Anni and allow her to go to school. To our surprise, during the process of contacting Reggie, our father was arrested and detained. In desperation, our father’s friend, uncle Yao Cheng, escorted us to Shanghai City, but he was taken away by local police on the first day, when we arrived at Shanghai, and has been detained till today. After we left China, two more uncles were detained because of Anni, namely, Li Hua-Ping and Zhou Weilin. The Chinese authorities are still hunting uncle Chai Bao-Wen. Now, we are living a free life in Reggie’s home in the United States, but our father and our uncles still cannot see the light of the day in the Chinese prison!

Prior to this, because our father Zhang Lin has adhered to the path of democracy, he has been imprisoned four times during his life and lost his freedom for a total of thirteen years.  Because of the long-term imprisonment and the abuses he had in prison, our father has suffered many diseases, from which he has not been cured. Because of this adherence to the path of democracy, our father dedicated almost his entire life, but finally he still got mired in imprisonment, and his children have been forced out of their home country.

Now, we are very concerned that his physical condition can no longer endure the torture of jailing. After meeting our father, the lawyer said that his physical condition is now has greatly worsened. When he was most recently detained, his left eye was almost blind due to infection; now the weather is getting cold, the detention center is cold and wet, and his joints are probably suffering bursts of pain. Not only is he suffering physical pain, but the more difficult is the mental torture. He has not done anything wrong, but again and again has suffered great persecution.

Therefore, make our appeal: we ask people from all over the world to pay attention to Zhang Lin, Yao Cheng, Zhou Weilin, Li Hua-Ping and Chai Baowen, and many other imprisoned Chinese political prisoners, and urge the Chinese government to unconditionally release them as soon as possible!

Finally, as two girls in exile in a foreign land, for our father and uncles in prison, we cry out to you again: Please focus on them! Please use your influence, because your attention can make them free!

Ruli and Anni Zhang, Daughters of Zhang Lin

(Translated by Linghou Ba)

Posted in Reggie Littlejohn, Uncategorized, Zhang Anni, Zhang Lin | Comments Off on Daughters of Zhang Lin Plead for his Freedom

Both Daughters of Zhang Lin Now Welcomed in the Home of Reggie Littlejohn

Reggie Littlejohn greets the daughters of Zhang Lin at the San Francisco airport, September 7, 2013

The ten-year-old daughter of Zhang Lin, Zhang Anni, arrived in San Francisco on September 7, on a flight from Shanghai, accompanied by her 19-year-old sister, Zhang Ruli. The two stayed at the home of Reggie Littlejohn and her husband, Robert. After several days, Ruli flew to visit relatives in New York. Last week, she returned to San Jose to be reunited with Anni, who cried with joy to see her.

Reggie Littlejohn and Anni Zhang greet Ruli Zhang at the San Jose airport, as the sisters were reunited last week.

Littlejohn made the following personal statement: “We are absolutely thrilled that Anni and Ruli have come to stay with us in the United States, and that the sisters are now together. I would like to thank those who worked hard to help make this happen, including Congressman Chris Smith, Jing Zhang (President of Women’s Rights in China), Ann Noonan (Executive Director of the CUSIB), Yao Cheng, Hu Jia, Li Huaping, Zhou Weilin, Chai Baowen and other friends in the United States and China who assisted greatly but cannot be named at this time. It is my delight to be able to help the family of Zhang Lin in this personal way. My husband and I are overjoyed to be able to care for and love two such fine daughters of China.”

Littlejohn continued, “My husband and I are very proud of Anni. She is a smart and

Anni and Ruli stand in front of their first Christmas tree, in Reggie's livingroom.

determined girl. In her first three months in the United States, Anni has been attending school, learning English quickly, making strides in her piano lessons, and has learned to swim. She also has a quick sense of humor and a magnetic personality. She will be a leader one day. We are just getting to know Ruli, and are already impressed with her intelligence, sensitivity and insight. We have no doubt that she will be a force for good in the world.”

Posted in Chris Smith, Jing Zhang, Reggie Littlejohn, Uncategorized, Zhang Anni, Zhang Lin | 1 Comment

China: One Child Policy Linked to Breast Cancer — Study

TIANJIN, CHINA. A medical study from China, released last week, has revealed an additional way in which women are victimized by the One-Child Policy: significantly increased risk of breast cancer.

Researchers in China have found that the dramatic rise in breast cancer in China is associated with the prevalence of induced abortions (IA) under the One-Child Policy. The study, conducted by a team of epidemiologists from Tianjin Medical University Cancer Hospital, analyzed data from over 36 different studies in both the United States and China. Their conclusion:

“IA [is] significantly associated with an increased risk of breast cancer among Chinese females, and the risk of breast cancer increases as the number of IA increases.”Specifically, the study found that one IA increases a woman’s risk of breast cancer by 44 percent, two by 76 percent, and three by 89 percent.

The study notes that historically, China has had low breast cancer rates when compared with Western nations, but “the incidence of breast cancer in China ha[s] increased at an alarming rate over the past two decades.”The study notes that this rise “was paralleled to the one-child-per-family policy.” The introduction of the policy has led to a dramatic increase and acceptance of induced abortion in China, where “approximately 40 pregnancies are aborted for every 100 living births.”

While the One-Child Policy has received criticism for perpetuating gendercide, forced abortion and other forms of coercion, this new study shows an additional harm to women. Women’s Rights Without Frontiers President Reggie Littlejohn released the following statement in response to the Tianjin study:

“This groundbreaking study reveals yet another human rights violation in connection with China’s One Child Policy:  forcibly aborted women are also at significantly higher risk of breast cancer.   Not only do the women of China have to endure the tremendous trauma of late term forced abortion, taking their babies from them; but also, years later, breast cancer, taking their health and even their lives from them.  The strong association of abortion and breast cancer established by this study brings the women’s rights violations under the One Child Policy to a new level:  a woman pregnant in China without a birth permit is subjected to both government imposed forced abortion, and also breast cancer as a result of it. Where abortion is forced, the subsequent development of breast cancer becomes a violation of women’s rights in itself.”

Sign our petition against forced abortion in China:
http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=sign_our_petition

 

Posted in China, China's One Child Policy, coerced abortion, Forced Abortion, Reggie Littlejohn, Uncategorized, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on China: One Child Policy Linked to Breast Cancer — Study

Hong Kong: WRWF’s Reggie Littlejohn Presents at Amnesty International’s Premiere of “It’s a Girl” Documentary

Hong Kong. Women’s Rights Without Frontiers’ President Reggie Littlejohn was a featured speaker in Amnesty International’s film series against gender violence.

Littlejohn, an internationally-recognized expert and opponent of China’s One-Child Policy, presented after the Hong Kong premiere of It’s A Girl, a feature-length documentary that focuses on gendercide and forced abortion in India and China. Littlejohn is featured in the film, which vividly details rampant coercion under China’s population policy. Screenings of the documentary took place at the Hong Kong Arts Centre on November 18th and 19th.

Littlejohn’s visit demonstrates a growing international opposition to forced abortion as violence against women and is a significant moment for Women’s Rights Without Frontiers. While Littlejohn has addressed the issue before the United States Congress, European Parliament, British Parliament, United Nations and Vatican, this visit was her first time speaking against forced abortion and gendercide from Chinese soil. Littlejohn’s remarks were broadcast into mainland China by Voice of America.

In connection with the film screening, she met with top human rights leaders, lawyers and legislators to discuss the state of China’s population policy.

“I am thrilled to come to Hong Kong at the invitation of Amnesty International, and to speak at the Hong Kong premiere of It’s a Girl. The timing of my visit occurred just after China’s announcement that it was making a modification of the One Child Policy. I was able to discuss with the human rights community in Hong Kong that this is not a major step forward, as touted by the media. Rather, it is a minor modification that will not end forced abortion or gendercide in China. We need to continue the battle to end these atrocities. I am grateful for the warm reception I received from the Hong Kong human rights community and hope to develop friendships and collaborations with the outstanding activists I met, for years to come.”

Learn more about the “Save a Girl” Campaign to combat gendercide in China http://womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=end-gendercide-and-forced-abortion#

Sign our Petition Against Forced Abortion in China
http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=sign_our_petition

Watch Hong Kong: Women’s Rights Organization Says Two-Child Policy Does Not Relax One Child Policy (Video)
http://www.voachinese.com/media/video/woman-rights-20131119/1793194.html

Watch the trailer to the “It’s a Girl” documentary (3 minutes)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISme5-9orR0

Posted in abortion, China's One Child Policy, coerced abortion, European Parliament, Forced Abortion, gendercide, It's a Girl, One Child Policy, Reggie Littlejohn, Save a Girl, Uncategorized, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on Hong Kong: WRWF’s Reggie Littlejohn Presents at Amnesty International’s Premiere of “It’s a Girl” Documentary

China Backtracks: “Birth Policy Changes Are No Big Deal”

Under the misleading headline, “China to Ease One-Child Policy,” Xinhua News Agency reported last Friday that China will now lift the ban on a second child, if either parent is an only child. Similarly, last Friday the mainstream media ran such optimistic headlines as “China Reforms: One-child policy to be relaxed” and “China to ease One Child Policy.”

In apparent response to quell speculation that this small adjustment represents a major reform, Xinhua ran another report over the weekend: “Birth policy changes are no big deal.” In this second report Xinhua quotes Wang Pei’an, deputy director of the National Health and Family Planning Commission (NHFPC), at length. In an interview, Wang told Xinhua that “the number of couples covered by the new policy is not very large across the country.”

In addition, Wang stated that “there is no unified timetable nationwide to start the new policy, as regions will implement it at different times based on their local situation.”

Wang “suggested that regions which have many suitable couples should promote a reasonable birth interval to avoid birth accumulation.”

He concluded that “the basic state policy of family planning will be adhered to over a long period of time.”

Reggie Littlejohn, President of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, stated, “to say that China has ‘relaxed’ or ‘eased’ its One Child Policy under these circumstances is completely unwarranted. To the contrary, Xinhua’s weekend report makes it clear that the minor modification of the policy announced Friday:

1) will not affect a large percentage of couples in China;

2) is not currently subject to a timetable in which to implement it;

3) retains the dreaded “birth intervals” between children (if a woman gets pregnant before the interval has lapsed, she may be subject to a crushing fine or forced abortion);

4) makes no promise to end the coercive enforcement of the Policy; and

5) promises to continue the One Child Policy “over a long period of time” – which could be decades.”

Littlejohn continued: Headlines stating that China has ‘eased’ or ‘relaxed’ its One Child Policy are detrimental to sincere efforts to stop forced abortion in China, because they imply that the One Child Policy is no longer a problem. In a world laden with compassion fatigue, people are relieved to cross China’s One Child Policy off of their list of things to worry about. But we cannot do that. Let us not abandon the women of China, who continue to face forced abortion, up to the ninth month of pregnancy. The One Child Policy does not need to be adjusted. It needs to be abolished.”

Sign our petition against forced abortion in China. http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=sign_our_petition

Watch our video, “Stop Forced Abortion: China’s War on Women” (4 mins)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjtuBcJUsjY

Read the Xinhua Article: “Birth policy changes are no big deal”
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/indepth/2013-11/16/c_132893477.htm

Posted in China's One Child Policy, Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, Reggie Littlejohn, Uncategorized, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on China Backtracks: “Birth Policy Changes Are No Big Deal”

Do not believe reports that China will “ease” its One Child Policy

Under the misleading headline, “China to Ease One-Child Policy,” Xinhua reports that China will now lift the ban on a second child, if either parent is an only child. This minor reform will not “ease” the One Child Policy. It will merely tweak it.

All the reasons for this adjustment are economic or demographic: China’s dwindling labor force, the country’s growing elderly population, and the severe gender imbalance. Completely absent from the discussion is the issue of human rights violations. China has not promised to end forced abortion, forced sterilization or forced contraception. The coercive enforcement of China’s One Child Policy is its core.

Reggie Littlejohn, President of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, stated: “While we are glad for the second babies who will be born under this adjustment, instituting a two-child policy in certain, limited circumstances will not end forced abortion or forced sterilization. The problem with the One Child Policy is not the number of children “allowed.”  Rather, it is the fact that the CCP is telling women how many children they can have and then enforcing that limit through forced abortion, forced sterilization and infanticide. Even if all couples were allowed two children, there is no guarantee that the CCP will cease their appalling methods of enforcement.  Regardless of the number of children allowed, women who get pregnant without permission will still be dragged out of their homes, strapped down to tables and forced to abort babies that they want, even up to the ninth month of pregnancy.  It does not matter whether you are pro-life or pro-choice on this issue.  No one supports forced abortion, because it is not a choice.

“Further, instituting a two-child policy will not end gendercide. Indeed, areas in which two children currently are allowed are especially vulnerable to gendercide, the sex-selective abortion of females.  According to the 2009 British Medical Journal study of 2005 national census data, in nine provinces, for “second order births” where the first child is a girl, 160 boys were born for every 100 girls. In two provinces, Jiangsu and Anhui, for the second child, there were 190 boys for every hundred girls born. This study stated, “Sex selective abortion accounts for almost all the excess males.”  Because of this gendercide, there are an estimated 37 million Chinese men who will never marry because their future wives were terminated before they were born. This gender imbalance is a powerful, driving force behind trafficking in women and sexual slavery, not only in China, but in neighboring nations as well.

“Moreover, the Chinese Communist Party periodically modifies the One Child Policy, but the coercion at its core remains. Reports of these tweaks — especially when mischaracterized by western media — throw the human rights world into confusion and blunt genuine efforts to end forced abortion in China.  On September 9, 2010, for example, TIME ran the headline, “China Could Overthrow One-Child Rule.” Myriad other news sources followed suit. This dramatic headline was based on the fact that China proposed to run a pilot program allowing some couples to have two children.  Soon afterwards, on September 25, 2010 – the 30th anniversary of the One Child Policy – a top population control official praised the policy and stated that China “will stick to the family planning policy in the coming decades.”  Moreover, despite this pilot program, numerous reports of late-term forced abortions have surfaced since 2010, including the forced abortion at seven months of Feng Jianmei in June 2012.”

For a discussion of forced abortion cases that have arisen in 2011-2012, read WRWF’s Complaint to the UNCSW. http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/blog/?p=717

For a discussion of forced abortion and other egregious violations of human rights in connection with coercive population control, read WRWF’s 2013 Complaint to the UNCSW.
http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/blog/?p=1254

Read the Xinhua Report: “China to Ease One-Child Policy”
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/china/2013-11/15/c_132891920.htm

Posted in Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, One Child Policy, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Do not believe reports that China will “ease” its One Child Policy

China has no business on the U.N. Human Rights Council

It is a travesty that China has returned to a seat at the U.N. Human Rights Council, which is “responsible for the promotion and protection of all human rights around the globe.”  In the words of U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, “All victims of human rights abuses should be able to look to the Human Rights Council as a forum and a springboard for action.”

Reggie Littlejohn, President of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, stated, “The Chinese government does not promote or protect human rights, even of its own citizens.  To the contrary, the Chinese Communist Party is a brutal, totalitarian regime — one of the greatest human rights violators in the world.  How can it then be a watchdog over human rights in other nations?  This is like the proverbial fox guarding the chicken coup or the wolf guarding the sheep.  Rather, China will likely turn a blind eye to serious human rights abuses in other nations, to discourage other nations from challenging it on its own abysmal human rights record.   China has no business on the U.N. Human Rights Council.  Its presence damages the credibility of the Council.

“One example of the CCP’s brutality is the coercive enforcement of China’s One Child Policy.  China is the only government that forcibly aborts women, up to the ninth month of pregnancy.  It also practices forced sterilization and coercive birth control.  China’s coercive low birth limit has led to gendercide, the widespread systematic elimination of baby girls.   The resultant gender imbalance has led to sexual slavery.  Add to this China’s other well-documented human rights abuses:  persecution of Tibetans and the Falun Gong, violent suppression of dissent, and abuse of the death penalty, just to name a few. Instead of returning China to a seat at the table, the U.N. Human Rights Council should be taking action against China for being one of the most massive violators of human rights in the world.”

Sign a petition against forced abortion in China:  http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=sign_our_petition

Posted in Forced Abortion, One Child Policy, Reggie Littlejohn, Uncategorized, United Nations | Comments Off on China has no business on the U.N. Human Rights Council

Our “Save a Girl” Campaign Saved a Surprise Boy

This boy was almost aborted because the ultrasound said he was a girl. WRWF’s “Save a Girl” Campaign saved his life.

An administrator at a local hospital in rural China places a secret call to a Women’s Rights Without Frontiers fieldworker. A woman’s ultrasound shows a girl, he says. The family is known to practice gendercide, and the mother is being pressured to abort.

One of our fieldworkers visits and learns the husband’s family insists on the abortion. To help the mother keep the child, we offer monthly support for a year – part of our “Save a Girl” Campaign. She uses these much-needed funds to push back against the pressure to abort the baby because it’s a girl.

Then comes the birth of a healthy baby . . . boy!  The ultrasound was wrong. In tears, the mother thanks us for saving her son, almost lost because he was expected to be a girl.

* * *

Please help us save lives in China by donating to our
“Save a Girl” Campaign today!

* * *

Today, October 11, is International Day of the Girl Child.  It was established by the UN in 2011 “to recognize girls’ rights and the unique challenges girls face around the world.”  It is a “girl’s right” not to be deleted from existence just because she’s a girl.  It is the “unique challenge” of girls in China and India to emerge from their mothers’ wombs alive, so that they may draw breath upon this earth and see the light of day.

For most of us, hearing “it’s a girl” is cause for enormous joy, happiness and celebration.  But in many countries, this announcement is a death sentence.  Experts estimate that up to 200 million women are missing in the world today due to gendercide, mostly in China and India.

This should not be a pro-choice or a pro-life issue.  This is a human rights issue. Gendercide is violence against women and girls.  No one supports the systematic elimination of females.

Or so I thought.  Just last week it was reported that it is now legal to selectively abort girls in the UK.

Where is the “feminist” outcry? How does it advance women’s rights to selectively abort hundreds of millions of girls, simply because they are future women? When faced with human rights atrocities of this scale, silence is complicity.

All too often, gendercide is not a choice. There is a strong correlation between sex-selective abortion and coercion. Crushing social, economic, political and personal pressures in cultures with a strong son preference trample women carrying girls.  Women in these cultures hardly select their daughters for abortion. They are forced.

In China, the birth ratio of girls to boys is the most skewed in the world: approximately 100 girls born for every 119 boys. Sons traditionally carry on the family name, work the fields, and take care of their parents in old age. A daughter joins her husband’s family at marriage. There is a saying: “Raising a girl is like watering someone else’s garden.” The One Child Policy exacerbates the underlying son preference. When couples are restricted to a coercive low birth limit, women often become the focus of intense pressure by their husband and in-laws to ensure a boy.

Because of systematic, sex-selective abortion there are an estimated 37 million more males than females living in China today. The presence of these “excess males” is the driving force behind human trafficking and sexual slavery, not only within China but from surrounding nations as well.

Finally, China has the highest female suicide rate of any country in the world. According to the most recent U.S. State Department China Human Rights Report, the number of female suicides has risen sharply in the past several years, from 500 women per day to 590.

It is a woman’s right to choose to give birth to her daughters. Together, China and India comprise one third of the world’s population. That one-third of the world’s women are deprived of their right to bear girls is the biggest women’s rights abuse on earth. This violent discrimination against women and girls deserves a passionate response from groups that stand for women’s rights, whether on the right or on the left.

These problems are not confined to China and India.  Female feticide happens in the United States and in many countries all over the world.

Every struggling mother deserves help to keep her daughter. Together, we can end gendercide and sweep sex-selective abortion into the dung-heap of history, where it belongs.

* * *

You can help save lives in China by donating to our
“Save a Girl” Campaign today!

* * *

Posted in gendercide, International Day of the Girl Child, pro-choice, pro-life, Save a Girl, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Our “Save a Girl” Campaign Saved a Surprise Boy

One Child Policy Still Massive Threat to Women, Expert Warns

Reggie Littlejohn Meets Pope Francis during the 2013 MaterCare International Conference in Rome. Photo Courtesy of Women's Rights Without Frontiers

This article is reprinted with the permission of the Catholic News Agency.  Read the original article by Elise Harris here: http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/one-child-policy-still-a-massive-threat-to-women-expert-warns/

Rome, Italy, Sep 25, 2013 / 04:07 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In wake of the 33rd anniversary of China’s one-child policy, a women’s rights activist has raised concern about those who believe the policy has ended, warning of the dangers it still poses.

“The one child policy is definitely still happening. Any report that states that China is abandoning the one-child policy is false,” Reggie Littlejohn said in a Sept. 22 interview with CNA.

Littlejohn is the founder and president of “Women’s Rights Without Frontiers,” an international coalition aimed at exposing forced abortion, gendercide, and sexual slavery in China.

Wednesday marks the anniversary of the country’s one-child policy, which was instituted during the Mao era in China in 1979 as a means of population control. The measure restricts most Chinese families to one child each, and uses a quota reward system for the Family Planning Officials who carry out the birth control policies.

“The one-child policy causes more violence towards women and girls than any other official policy on earth, than any other official policy in the history of the world,” Littlejohn said, adding that the Chinese communist party has boasted about having “prevented four hundred million lives” through the policy.

“Women are forced to abort babies up to the ninth month of pregnancy, and sometimes these forced abortions are so violent that the women themselves die along with their full-term babies.”

In addition to her advocacy for China’s women, Littlejohn also led the international effort to free Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng, who arrived in the United States in May, 2013.

Known as an international expert on the country’s one-child policy, she has testified at the U.S. Congress as well as the European, British and Irish Parliaments, and has briefed the White House, the U.S. Department of State, and the Vatican on the issues of women’s rights in China. Most recently, she addressed a maternal health care conference in Rome, where she was able to meet Pope Francis.

Littlejohn rejected media perceptions in the West that the one-child policy is waning, countering that “when the Chinese communist party tweaks the policy, makes a minor adjustment to it, for some reason that fact gets reported as ‘China is abandoning the one-child policy,’ which is not true.”

According to her, coercion involved in the one-child policy is being used to keep the communist party in power.

“The core of the policy, the centerpiece of the policy, is not how many children the government allows a woman to have, it’s the coercion with which they enforce the limit,” she said.

Littlejohn added that even if a couple is granted a second child, they would still need to have a birth permit – if they do not get one, the mother is still subject to a forced abortion until the end of her term.

Outside of forced abortion, the one-child policy has opened the door to other human rights issues, such as human trafficking and gendercide, Littlejohn said.

“The fact that the Chinese government imposes this coercive low birth limit, combine that with the preference for boys and what you end up with is sex-selective abortion, or gendercide.”

“Right now there are thirty-seven million more men living in China than women,” she said, “and that’s driving human trafficking and sexual slavery, not only within China but the surrounding countries.”

Littlejohn said that the coercion used to enforce the one-child policy serves the double purpose to also keep the communist party in place in China, stating that when the policy was initiated, the birth rate was about 5.9, whereas now it “more like 1.7, which is well below 2.1.”

“China’s population problem is not that they have too many people, it’s that they have too few young people. So I believe that it has transformed into a policy of social control that’s a way for the Chinese government to demonstrate its power.”

She also listed China’s system of informants, who are specifically assigned to watch women and report anyone whose abdomens “look bigger than they should,” and the money that the government makes in profit from the “exorbitant” fines they charge to families with more than one child, among the reasons she believes that the policy is being used to keep the current party in place.

When the informants catch a woman, Littlejohn said, China’s Family Planning Police come “in the middle of the night, grabbing women out of their beds, strapping them down to tables and forcing them to abort babies they want up to the ninth month of pregnancy.”

“That is a form of violence against women, its official government rape in my opinion, and it’s a way of terrorizing the entire population.”

Littlejohn emphasized the need to raise awareness about the one-child policy, pointing to the resources on her group’s website as a place to start. The video, “Stop Forced Abortion: China’s War Against Women,” gives a short, but good introduction that can easily be shared on social media to help spread information, she said.

She also suggested her organization’s “Save a Girl” campaign, which offers a monthly stipend for a year to mothers who are considering aborting their babies, simply because they are girls, as a way to give assistance.

After being offered the stipend, in “ninety-five percent of the cases, women choose to keep their daughters,” Littlejohn noted.

“Whenever I feel sort of frustrated about the enormity of ending forced-abortion in China,” she said, “I’ve got this binder of all these beautiful faces of these baby girls that we’re saving.”

“We’re ending gendercide, we’re ending forced abortion one baby at a time.”

Tags: Human rights, One-Child Policy, Violence against women

Posted in China's One Child Policy, coerced abortion, Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, gendercide, One Child Policy, pro-life, Reggie Littlejohn, reproductive health, reproductive rights, Save a Girl, Uncategorized, war on women, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on One Child Policy Still Massive Threat to Women, Expert Warns

WRWF’s Reggie Littlejohn Meets Pope Francis at the Vatican

Reggie Littlejohn meets Pope Francis in the Vatican on September 20, 2013

Last week, while in Rome, Reggie Littlejohn had the opportunity to meet Pope Francis during an audience arranged by MaterCare.  Littlejohn stated, “I have greatly admired Pope Francis but never thought I would have the opportunity to meet him face to face.

WRWF's Reggie Littlejohn Meets Pope Francis

It was an overwhelming experience to shake his hand and to tell him of our work fighting forced abortion and saving baby girls from sex-selective abortion.  He has a warm, humble and profound presence.”  Littlejohn was in Rome to address the tenth anniversary international conference of MaterCare International, a Vatican-related non-profit that provides maternal healthcare to impoverished African women.

Littlejohn was also the featured speaker at the Rome premiere of the “It’s a Girl” film about gendercide and forced abortion in India and China.  She had previously spoken — together with filmmakers Evan Grae Davis and Andrew Brown — at the premieres of the film at the European and British Parliaments, as well as at the United States Capitol.

Click here for more information on MaterCare International.  http://www.matercare.org

Reggie in front of the Trevi Fountain with Rosanna del Buono, who organized the Rome premiere of “It’s a Girl.”

Click here for more information on the “It’s a Girl” film.  http://www.itsagirlmovie.com

Posted in Evan Grae Davis, It's a Girl | Comments Off on WRWF’s Reggie Littlejohn Meets Pope Francis at the Vatican