Suzhou government violently arrests petitioners before the two sessions of the Chinese Communist Party

With the two sessions of the Communist Party of China (CPC) to be held in March, governments around the world are hiring hooligans and black security guards to kidnap petitioners, restrict citizens’ personal freedom, or detain them in black jails.

On February 28, Jiangsu petitioner Zhu Yongjian was kidnapped from the northern station of Suzhou high-speed railway station by a dozen petition officers and police officers from the police station, and then sent back Home for residential surveillance.

At 2:00 p.m. on the 28th, Zhu Yongjian sent several videos to the Epoch Times reporter, saying that he was besieged at the Suzhou High Speed Rail North Station, where Xukou petition leader Ma Wenguo and a number of police officers and unidentified people were blocking him from getting a ride. He repeatedly called the police, the police did not come out.

Zhu Yongjian said he was about to take a train to Beijing to meet with his lawyer and add some information about the evidence for the second trial session, before he left the subway station to get to the train station and was intercepted. The men took his luggage and beat him on the ground, injuring his body in many places.

Zhu Yongjian reported to the police three times, the onlookers also reported to the police, but the police just did not come to deal with.

The two sides have been stalemate, to 5 p.m., the police forcefully kidnapped Zhu Yongjian to the car. Zhu Yongjian said, “They tied me up, in the car with my hands tied behind my back, urinating on the pants. I want to report that they act as an umbrella for black and evil forces.”

At 10:00 p.m., Yongjian Qiang went home from the Xukou station, but there were many triad hoodlums monitoring around his residence, and he lost his personal freedom again.

The company’s main business is to provide a wide range of services to the public.

The company’s main business is the development of a new product, the “Caixiangjing” village in Wuzhong District, Suzhou, Jiangsu Province. Zhu Yongjian believes that the court bypassed the law, and after his release from prison, he insisted on appealing, and later petitioned to Beijing.

Zhu Yongjian has been locked up in a psychiatric hospital six times and reeducated through labor three times for defending his rights.

In May 2013, he was intercepted again in Beijing, and the police set up a “duty post” outside his home, with a dozen black security guards working day and night shifts in front of and behind Zhu Yongjian’s home to monitor him.

In June 2018, he was again placed under residential surveillance for his solidarity with Zhenjiang veterans’ rights, and was sentenced to 23 months in prison after police broke into his home and took him away on September 14 of the same year, and the case is currently under appeal.