Showing posts with label Human Rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Human Rights. Show all posts

06 July 2026

How China’s Military Cyber Elites and a Hidden Party Control Loop Subvert Civil Justice


An investigative analysis of Chinese state corporate filings, statutory codes, and official prosecutorial archives has exposed a highly institutionalized "military-procuratorial-corporate" apparatus operating from the highest echelons of power in Beijing.

The findings map out a seamless command chain that ties the suppression of domestic speech and international hostage diplomacy directly to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) core leadership, utilizing state-sponsored tech giants and active-duty military personnel to systematically manipulate China's civil prosecution system.

The Shadow Control of "Private" Tech Giants

For years, conglomerates like Huawei Technologies have claimed autonomy from the Chinese state, presenting themselves as employee-owned cooperatives. However, corporate financial ledgers and statutory laws reveal a definitive state ownership pipeline.

Under Huawei’s official registry, more than 99% of its shares are held by the Huawei Investment & Holding Co., Ltd. Trade Union Committee. Under the Trade Union Law of the People's Republic of China and the official Statutes of Chinese Trade Unions, all grassroots trade unions in China lack independent legal autonomy and are strictly subordinate to the All-China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU) through a highly centralized, vertical leadership structure.

ACFTU’s official annual budgetary and accounting reports explicitly state that the federation operates under the absolute leadership of, and answers directly to, the Secretariat of the CCP Central Committee.

Armed Parliamentarians and the Subversion of Civil Procuratorates

The investigation further highlights how this political-corporate nexus weaponizes China's state prosecution apparatus. Under the PRC Constitution, the Supreme People’s Procuratorate (SPP)—the nation’s highest civil prosecution agency—is mandated to report annually to the National People’s Congress (NPC).

However, the NPC includes a powerful, insular bloc of over 260 active-duty military delegates from the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and the People’s Armed Police. This institutional structure subjects civil prosecutors to intense military oversight, forcing the state procuratorate to align its policies with the strategic and commercial interests of the defense apparatus under CCP's Central Military Commission.





This institutional capture was formalized in a series of top-level national directives. In January 2017 and April 2020, the SPP and the CCP Central Military Commission Political and Legal Affairs Commission jointly issued national mandates, including the Opinions on Strengthening Collaboration between Military and Local Procuratorial Organs in Public Interest Litigation. These directives formally ordered local civil procuratorates to implement an "integrated, unified mechanism" with military procurators to safeguard "national defense interests" and the "reputation and image of the military."

The Technocratic Enforcers: From "Remote Erasure" to International Hostages

Archival records from the SPP reveal how these mandates translate into executive action. Active-duty military cyber elites, such as Professor Zhang Xiongwei of the PLA Army Engineering University's Cyberspace Security Department(中国人民解放军陆军工程大学指挥控制工程学院教授张雄伟), routinely leverage their dual status as NPC representatives to descend upon provincial procuratorates, supervising local dockets.



This mechanism has driven high-profile domestic crackdowns, including the landmark prosecution of internet personality "Labixiaoqiu or “辣笔小球”案" (Qiu Ziming "仇子明"), which the SPP explicitly heralded as a triumph of military-civil judicial collaboration in "defending the reputation of martyrs."

Crucially, this permanent infrastructure for "joint operations, joint command centers, and information-platform integration" provides the exact operational framework for international political warfare. Experts note that when the overseas "defense interests" of the Secretariat's tech subsidiaries are disrupted, this joint military-procuratorial network is seamlessly mobilized. The formal indictments of Canadian citizens Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor by municipal procuratorates in Beijing and Dandong perfectly mirrored the institutional flow and joint-coordination mechanisms established under the 2017 and 2020 military-procuratorial pacts.

Implication for International Law and Sanctions

What international observers and foreign policy analysts frequently overlook is the structural anomaly inherent to China’s legal anatomy—a distortion that directly enables this military infiltration. In any standard constitutional democracy, a prosecutor functions strictly as the "prosecuting party" (the state’s attorney), standing on equal procedural footing with the defense before an independent, neutral judge. 

However, under the PRC statutory framework, the Procuratorate is concurrently designated as the state's sovereign "Legal Supervisory Organ" (法律监督机关). This dual identity creates a dystopian paradox: the entity bringing the charges is textually empowered to "supervise" the very civil judges presiding over the case, wielding the administrative authority to audit proceedings and issue formal reprimands under the guise of procedural oversight. 

When the Central Military Commission (CMC) Political and Legal Affairs Commission interlocked its operations with the SPP via the 2017 and 2020 joint pacts, it did not merely ally with a branch of prosecutors; it hijacked a system of "paramilitary overseers" who hold a permanent institutional knife to the throats of local courts. For military cyber-technocrats like Professor Zhang Xiongwei, the procuratorate is the ultimate tactical weapon: an agency that can unilaterally orchestrate targeted arrests, suppress domestic speech, and fulfill transnational political mandates, all while using its "supervisory" status to immunize its operations from any check by the civilian judiciary.

This comprehensive paper trail offers international legal bodies, sovereign courts, and trade regulators an unassailable framework to bypass standard "sovereign immunity" defenses.

By utilizing the Chinese government’s own corporate registries, statutory laws, and official gazettes, international litigators can demonstrate that China’s civil procuratorates are not independent judicial actors, but highly integrated arms of a single, unified state enterprise acting under the direct command of the CCP Secretariat and the Central Military Commission.


#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

13 June 2026

走向现代文明的法理与自由:论不同华语地区独立建国的正当性与可行性



在日常的地缘政治讨论中,“大一统”常常被赋予一种神圣不可侵犯的历史宿命感。仿佛只要共享相似的文化、跨越相同的历史,不同地区的人民就必须被强行塞进同一个庞大的中央集权政权之中。

然而,当我们剥离宏大的宏大叙事与情感绑架,回归现代文明的普世价值与国际法的理性框架,我们会清晰地发现:任何华语地区、不同的人群,在满足特定事实要素并基于人民自由意志的选择下,皆拥有独立建国、享有独立主权的完全合法性与现实可行性。

这一立论的正当性,不仅深深扎根于现代国际公法的底层逻辑,更在250多年前美国《独立宣言》所昭示的普世原则中找到了跨越时空的文明共鸣。

一、 杰斐逊原则与“被统治者的同意”

1776年,托马斯·杰斐逊在美国《独立宣言》中写下了现代民主政治最伟大的宣告:

“人人生而平等,造物主赋予他们若干不可剥夺的权利,包括生命权、自由权和追求幸福的权利。为了保障这些权利,人类才在他们中间建立政府。”

《独立宣言》确立的核心政治原则在于:政府的正当权力,来自于被统治者的同意(Consent of the governed)。

这意味着,没有任何一个政权可以仅仅因为“历史纽带”、“血缘文化”或“同文同种”,就天然地、永久地拥有对某个地区人民的统治权。政府的本质是人民为了保护自身自由而订立的契约,而不是反过来奴役人民的枷锁。

当年美国脱离英国独立,并非因为北美移民与英国人在文化或语言上存在鸿沟——在当时,他们同属于不列颠文化圈。美国独立的根本原因在于,大英帝国对其进行了长期的专制压迫与掠夺,侵犯了臣民本应享有的自由。

同理,不同的华语地区完全可以因为对自由、民主、人权等核心价值的追求,拒绝接受单一专制主权的控制。当一个政权展现出长期的滥用职权,企图把人民置于绝对的专制与军国主义统治之下时,推翻这样的强权,或者与之划清界限、宣布独立,不仅是人民的权利,更是人民的义务。

二、 现代国际法的法理基石:事实宣告与有效控制

在现代国际公法框架下,“自古以来”的历史宣称在判定主权归属时的权重极低。现代国际法是一套冰冷、务实的技术标准,它更关注的是当下的有效治理人民的自决权

1. 《蒙特维多公约》的四个硬性要素

根据1933年《蒙特维多国家权利义务公约》第一条,一个实体只要在事实上同时具备以下四个要素,在法理上就已经完成了作为国家的“初始确认”:

  • 固定的居民

  • 界定的领土

  • 有效的政府

  • 与他国交往的能力

更重要的是,该公约第三条明确确立了“宣告说(Declarative Theory)”:“国家的政治存在不依赖于他国的承认。”

如果某一个华语地区已经发展出了行使稳定且有效管辖的政府,拥有明确的边界、独立的法律、税收与防卫体系,并能够自主开展对外交往,那么在国际法的底层逻辑中,它就已经构成了一个事实上的独立国家。它不需要任何外部强权的恩赐、御批,也无须等待地缘政治大国的法理承认。

2. 时际法原则对历史叙事的解构

现代国际法中的“时际法(Intertemporal Law)”原则规定,判定某一历史时期的行为和状态,必须依据当时的法律,而非今天的标准。

中国历史上的朝贡体系、宗藩关系或模糊的封建疆域,在现代国际法意义上并不等同于现代主权国家相互排他、边界清晰的“国家主权”。用几百年前的帝国版图去框定现代居民的政治归属,既不符合现代法理,也是对现代地缘秩序的践踏。现代国际法保护的是“活在当下的切实治理”,而不是“躺在历史账本上的宣称”。

三、 可行性验证:多元治理的全球文明常态

在实践层面,单一文化源流、同一语言族群演进为多个独立的主权国家,是人类文明的常态,而非变态。

  • 不列颠文明的开枝散叶: 英国、美国、加拿大、澳大利亚、新西兰等国,共享相似的语言与文化背景,但它们是完全独立的、互不隶属的主权国家。

  • 德意志语言圈的多元并存: 德国、奥地利、瑞士(德语区),同样在各自的独立主权下运作良好,并发展出了极具建设性的国际合作关系。

对于不同的华语地区和人群而言,走向独立主权、独立建国的路径在现实中完全可行,这已经在历史和现实中得到了验证:

  • 体制可行性: 摆脱宏大叙事的捆绑,地方政府可以根据本地区居民的实际需求,量身定制最高效的民主治理模式,避免本国人民的福祉成为地缘政治野心的牺牲品。

  • 经济与对外交往可行性: 在现代多边贸易体系和国际法保护下,只要一个实体具备稳定的法律环境与独立的对外签约能力,它就能深度参与全球供应链。一个地区的繁荣取决于自身的治理效能与开放程度,而非取决于其版图有多大。

结语:将人的福祉置于国家神话之上

现代文明的标志,是承认多元治理的合法性,并将个人的自由、安全与福祉置于虚幻的国家神话之上。

正如《独立宣言》所昭示的真理,当任何形式的政府变成损害这些目的的强权时,人民就有权改变它或废除它,并建立新政府。不同的华语地区、不同的人群,完全有权在符合现代国际法要素的前提下,凭借自身的有效治理与居民的集体认同,自由地选择独立建国。

这不仅是一条符合现代国际法理的阳光大道,更是对人类追求自由、抗击专制这一文明逻辑的勇敢践行。世界的未来不需要更多庞大而臃肿的强权帝国,而需要更多自由、民主且尊重法治的现代主权实体。

#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

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