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Inside a Chinese Prison: An American’s Perspective
Prison Legal News ^ | 06/22/14 | Stuart B Foster

Posted on 11/15/2017 11:00:19 AM PST by EBH

I grew up around jails and prisons in the Upstate of South Carolina. My grandfather was born in jail, with the punch line being his father was the sheriff and had brought his pregnant wife to work. My father was the county judge and the jail next to his office was my playground. My first job was running errands between the courts, lawyers and prisoners. Studying sociology in college, I focused on penology and visited many prisons across my home state. After 15 years of teaching I received a scholarship to work and travel in Asia. My interest in prisons continued as I visited the world’s most notorious jails like the “Hanoi Hilton” in Vietnam and “S-21” in Cambodia. However, throughout my lifetime fascination with jails I never imagined that one day I would be incarcerated under the brutal, authoritarian forced labor camp system of the People’s Republic of China.

Events in April 2013 led me to be imprisoned for eight months in Southern China, where I assembled Christmas lights for up to 10 hours a day. Suffering from a serious head injury after a collision with a bus, and while in a dreamlike state, I took a large sum of money from a colleague at the Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, where I taught. Following the theft I was immediately hospitalized; the Public Security Bureau (PSB) retrieved me from the hospital for investigation, thus denying me medical treatment.

In the middle of the night the PSB took me to White Cloud District Detention Center in the city of Guangzhou, where I would spend the next 280 days. I was in shock and denial as I was processed and then taken down a long dank corridor to my cell. Opening the corridor door to cell B218 revealed an empty, moldy room the size of a racquetball court. As I was pushed inside I was full of terror. The corridor door closed and a side door to the “inner cell” opened, with native Chinese prisoners motioning me inward to the sleeping and working quarters.

The inner cell was the same size but held 30 prisoners, all sleeping on the concrete floor. There were no blankets or pillows and the room was so crowded that most prisoners slept on their sides with arms draped over each other like embracing couples. Near the back was an older prisoner indicating he was making room for me to lie down. Dazed and confused, I crossed the cell like a cat, careful not to step on the heads, arms or bodies of other prisoners. My concussion and the long day of coercive interrogation had left me exhausted and I lay down to sleep.

In Chinese jails, prisoners begin working on their first day of detention regardless of the circumstances. The right of having a phone call upon arrest is unheard of, and most have no contact with the outside world throughout the entire time they are incarcerated. Many are jailed for months without ever being formally charged, then released without going to trial.

Each day at 6:30 a.m. the cell leader woke everyone by clapping his hands to begin another routine day. Thirty men lined up to brush their teeth while simultaneously using a single hole in the ground as our only toilet. After washing and using the toilet, prisoners arranged themselves in rows sitting cross-legged to chant communist slogans and recite detention regulations. Once the chanting was complete, prisoners would stand for an hour of military-style marching in place. Any who didn’t enthusiastically chant or march briskly received beatings or various other types of punishment.

Each cell was run by a gang who pushed work production through a series of rewards and punishments. While there was one leader, he surrounded himself with what we called “the lieutenants” – forming what we called “the regime.” After work quotas were issued, prisoners would line the wall to assemble Christmas lights all day with two ten-minute breaks for lunch at 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. for dinner. No uniforms were issued, so most prisoners sat in their underwear. Later, in the shower, I noticed many prisoners had bedsores from long hours sitting on the concrete floor.

Due to my mental state, shock and the dim lighting, I was unable to do even the simplest work tasks. As a foreigner and due to the language barrier, the leader gave me a little slack, but for native prisoners anything short of the 6,000-light quota per day would promptly be met with punishment.

On my second day, our cell guard came to check on me. When any prison official visited, prisoners would squat on their heels and lock their hands behind their heads in a non-threatening position we called “the squat-n-lock.” Noting my poor condition, the guard stated he would take me to the infirmary, but it was three days before he returned to our cell. Sometimes we wouldn’t see a guard for 4-5 days, leaving us under the total control of the leader and his “regime.”

During the workday the regime would stroll around shouting “Kuai-dian” (“faster”). Anything from slow work production to a “wrong look” would bring a slap to the head or kick to the ribs. If slow production persisted or a prisoner back-talked, the regime would bring them to the front of the cell for a series of kicks, blows and punches.

The most common punishment was withholding the daily ration of two hand-rolled cigarettes. If that didn’t increase work production, prisoners would have their food rations cut in half. Each meal we were fed rice, turnips and a little pork fat, which tasted horrible but was enough to sustain life. A cut in food rations was devastating and I saw a few prisoners start to look skeletal.

Much harsher punishment awaited prisoners who caused further problems or continued to fail to adjust. Along the floor of the cell were three bull rings. Prisoners who fought or rebelled were shackled and chained to the floor 24/7, from 3 days up to two weeks. When chained to the floor another prisoner would need to bring a bucket to use as a toilet. Also while chained, food and water rations were reduced, leaving some prisoners to wither near death.

The worst punishment was reserved for the rare occasion when a prisoner disrespected a guard. Such prisoners were taken to an empty cell, chained to the floor, flogged with Christmas light cords and left for 2 to 3 days in solitary confinement without food. Usually the threat of no tobacco was enough to bring prisoners in line, and I was aware of only three floggings during the eight months I was incarcerated.

Being an American, I was spared the harshest of punishments. According to an international treaty, the U.S. Consulate is notified within 72 hours of an American being detained. The Consulate contacted my family and was able to quickly hire legal representation for me; once a month, Consulate staff came to check on my health and safety, and facilitated communication with my loved ones. In the words of the Consulate General, their mission was “to ensure I was afforded the rights guaranteed under Chinese law.” Of course they couldn’t make them follow U.S. law. Sadly, for the most part the prison officials didn’t follow their own policies regarding native Chinese prisoners. Thanks to the Consulate’s involvement, the prison adopted a “hands off” approach and I was rarely beaten or physically mistreated.

Other foreigners, such as Africans, sometimes languished for over a year without a court date or outside communication. Likewise, most of the Chinese prisoners had simply disappeared from the outside world without their family knowing if they were dead or alive. Due to the involvement of the U.S. Consulate, I had my first court date within three months and was granted “my right” to a psychiatric evaluation. I was sentenced to time served at my second trial instead of the 3 to 4 years imprisonment recommended by the PBS and the prosecutor. Without the U.S. Consulate, today I would still be assembling Christmas lights for no pay and sleeping on a concrete floor while surviving on rice, turnips and a little pork fat.

Although I was imprisoned in a foreign country, it was the American attention to human rights that helped me survive and receive a more just verdict – even though atrocities exist in U.S. prisons, too. The Chinese prison officials and guards sometimes resented the U.S. monitoring and evaluating their treatment of American prisoners. However, at the same time they agreed the U.S. stance on human rights was correct.

I left America in 2002 for adventure and got much more than I had bargained for. I refuse to feel bitter, however, and choose to look at my time in White Cloud District Detention Center as a learning experience with respect to both American and Chinese penal systems.

Stuart Foster was released from a Chinese prison in December 2013; he provided this account of his experience exclusively for Prison Legal News.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; History; Reference
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1 posted on 11/15/2017 11:00:19 AM PST by EBH
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To: EBH
Image and video hosting by TinyPic
2 posted on 11/15/2017 11:10:34 AM PST by tumblindice (America's founding fathers: all armed conservatives)
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To: EBH

The pretty, twinkling lights on houses and trees were assembled by Chinese convicts.

Thanks for ruining Christmas for me.


3 posted on 11/15/2017 11:23:41 AM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: EBH

I think that it is unfortunate that President Trump decided to intervene in the basketball players’ situation. They should have had to face justice in China with several years in a Chinese prison. That would have sent a much better message than walking away free.

Now all athletes think that they are more invulnerable than they felt before.


4 posted on 11/15/2017 11:24:41 AM PST by spel_grammer_an_punct_polise (Note to all foreigners: Please.....GET OUT and STAY OUT!)
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To: EBH

Most foreign prisons are wise to avoid. Learn what to do & not do before going to a foreign country for a visit. Reducing the likelihood of landing in one. American prisons are like hotels compared to the majority of foreign prisons.


5 posted on 11/15/2017 11:30:06 AM PST by Robert DeLong
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To: spel_grammer_an_punct_polise

Politically he had to get them out. Or it would have been used against him next election. I can see the campaign commercials already...Trump visiting the family of Otto Warmbier fading to three black basketball players who are rotting in jail.


6 posted on 11/15/2017 11:32:08 AM PST by SamAdams76
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To: EBH

So the fella went to some foreign hell hole and something bad happened to him? Who’d a thunk?


7 posted on 11/15/2017 11:35:12 AM PST by End Times Sentinel (In Memory of my dear Friend Henry Lee II)
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To: SamAdams76

Yes, I know that he HAD to do it. It is still unfortunate.


8 posted on 11/15/2017 11:35:24 AM PST by spel_grammer_an_punct_polise (Note to all foreigners: Please.....GET OUT and STAY OUT!)
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To: Buckeye McFrog

Sorry...didn’t mean to ruin your Christmas.

Was thinking more about those UCLA players...


9 posted on 11/15/2017 11:48:59 AM PST by EBH ( May God Save the Republic)
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To: Buckeye McFrog

...lights on houses and trees were assembled by Chinese convicts.
Thanks for ruining Christmas for me.


I was telling this story to co-workers at lunch yesterday. I prefaced it by saying “This is going to ruin Christmas for you”.

I put up lights on the house this time of year, but this time, I’m going to be thinking of what amounts to the slave labor that made them. And now I know why strings fail every year—slave labor and quality control don’t usually go together.


10 posted on 11/15/2017 12:10:13 PM PST by hanamizu
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To: Buckeye McFrog

Actually, the fact that Christmas lights “made in China” are assembled by forced labor of prisoners has been known for some time. This is another good reason not to buy things made in (Communist) China.


11 posted on 11/15/2017 12:33:49 PM PST by free-in-nyc (Freeping from the heart of the occupation)
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To: free-in-nyc

The trouble with Christmas Lights is that there appear to be no American manufacturers of them anymore.

There may be other places than China that make them, though.


12 posted on 11/15/2017 1:17:12 PM PST by Jamestown1630 ("A Republic, if you can keep it.")
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To: hanamizu

Gulag labor will often sabotage their own product as a cry for help, and to deny profits to their captors.


13 posted on 11/15/2017 1:20:36 PM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: Buckeye McFrog

I think the Nazis had a similar problem—at least with their war production.


14 posted on 11/15/2017 1:24:40 PM PST by hanamizu
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To: EBH

This story is strange.

But a kid who spent time in the clink when he was a baby ? I’m surprised the bacteria and virii didn’t get him before his 1st birthday.


15 posted on 11/15/2017 2:03:30 PM PST by Celerity
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To: SamAdams76
Believe me, this isn't going to change their vote. Dems will still get 95% of the black vote.

He may have even lost the votes of those that feel he shouldn't have intervened.

16 posted on 11/15/2017 2:11:52 PM PST by Eagles6
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To: EBH

Another article:

U.S. Teacher: I Did 7 Months Of Forced Labor In A Chinese Jail

17 posted on 11/15/2017 3:38:09 PM PST by Albion Wilde (I was not elected to continue a failed system. I was elected to change it. --Donald J. Trump)
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To: EBH

“Suffering from a serious head injury after a collision with a bus, and while in a dreamlike state, I took a large sum of money from a colleague”

yea, right. I don’t think that excuse would fly over here, let alone in China. Like President Trump said, they do not play games.


18 posted on 11/15/2017 4:38:59 PM PST by beef
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To: spel_grammer_an_punct_polise

We used to intervene for any American anywhere and this is why it was taboo to abuse or kill Americans around the world. The apologizer in chief (obama) hurt that status. Trump is bringing it back.

The thieves got kicked out of basketball and college. That’s punishment.


19 posted on 11/15/2017 9:49:29 PM PST by SaraJohnson ( Whites must sue for racism. It's pay day.)
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To: EBH

Bump for later.


20 posted on 11/16/2017 2:05:34 AM PST by Springman (Rest In Peace YaYa123, Bahbah, and Just Lori.)
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