China arrests Christians who opposed removals of crosses

Human rights lawyer and church activists understood to be among people detained after Communist party campaign to take down religious symbols

A cut-down cross on a church roof in Zhejiang province. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP

A cut-down cross on a church roof in Zhejiang province. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP

Chinese security forces have launched a roundup of church activists who opposed a Communist party campaign to remove crosses.

“At least nine people I know have been taken away by the police and that figure is still rising,” a church leader in the eastern province of Zhejiang – the operation’s focus – told the Guardian on Thursday afternoon.

“We think it is a campaign targeting church leaders across the province. It can only be a co-ordinated action initiated by the provincial government.”

Among those understood to have been detained is Zhang Kai, a prominent Beijing human rights lawyer who had been offering legal support to a number of churches in the region.

Friction between the Communist party and the church has been building in in Zhejiang since late 2013 when authorities initiated a demolition campaign that they said targeted illegal buildings.

So far more than 1,200 crosses have been removed, activists say. Several churches have been completely demolished, including the Sanjiang mega-church in Wenzhou, a city known as “China’s Jerusalem” because of its large Christian congregation.

In recent months there have been series of protests against the intensifying campaign, with one Catholic leader denouncing the cross removals as an “evil act”.

Authorities appear to have been angered by the growing pushback. This month China’s government-controlled media warned Zhejiang’s Christians not to resist the removals or to speak out to foreign journalists.

On Tuesday a wave of detentions – apparently designed to extinguish any further dissent – began. Plainclothes officers arrived at the homes of their targets with a list containing the names and photographs of local Christians, the church leader said.

“They said people who were taken away would be put under residential surveillance,” the pastor said. “We are all very angry. They didn’t inform people what charges they were being held on and they didn’t produce any documents. There are people outside my house. I know if I go out they might arrest me too.”

Zhang Kai, known for his work defending underground Christians, was seized in the early hours of Tuesday, activists told RFA, a US-funded news organisation.

“They did it on the quiet, in the middle of the night,” a church member said. “They didn’t tell anybody in our church that this would happen. By the time we got there, he had already been taken away.”

William Nee, Amnesty International’s China researcher, said his group was monitoring the “very worrying” situation in Zhejiang.

China Detains Lawyer in #Zhejiang Amid Ongoing Cross Demolition Program http://t.co/O1HaeJM99E Release #ZhangKai now! pic.twitter.com/lLgALATJR6

China Detains Lawyer in #Zhejiang Amid Ongoing Cross Demolition Program http://t.co/O1HaeJM99E Release #ZhangKai now! pic.twitter.com/lLgALATJR6

“Zhang Kai’s case is incredibly important because it represents the intersection of China’s unprecedented campaign against human rights lawyers and the ongoing campaign against Christianity and other unauthorised forms of religious expression,” Nee said.

Since July, some of China’s most respected civil rights lawyers have been detained as part of a sweeping crackdown. They include Li Heping, 45, and Wang Yu, 44, whose whereabouts are still unknown.

In an email, Bob Fu, a US-based Christian activist, attacked the wave of detentions. “The persecution in Wenzhou has entered into a new phase,” he said.

The church leader said Zhejiang’s Christians would not be cowed by the police operation. “We are not intimidated by their tactics. We have not done anything wrong or against the law. Our actions are all restrained and reasonable while theirs are shady.”

En: theguardian

The Administrative Procedure Act (APA)

The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) governs internal procedures of administrative agencies, including how they interact with the public. The APA is codified at 5 U.S.C. §§ 551-559, and encompasses the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) (5 U.S.C. § 552) and the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. § 552a). The APA defines an “agency” broadly, and does not explicitly exclude the Office of the President, though it is generally believed that Congress would have to expressly act in order to apply APA requirements to the President.

The APA serves to police improper agency behavior, protect public safety, and secure proper entitlements. The APA governs all three main agency functions: rulemakings, adjudications, and licensing.

Rulemakings

The APA defines a “rule” as “the whole or a part of an agency statement of general or particular applicability and future effect designed to implement, interpret, or prescribe law or policy or describing the organization, procedure, or practice requirements of an agency and includes the approval or prescription for the future of rates, wages, corporate or financial structures or reorganizations thereof, prices, facilities, appliances, services or allowances therefore or of valuations, costs, or accounting, or practices bearing on any of the foregoing.” In short, an agency creates a rule when it seeks to “implement, interpret, or prescribe law or policy.”

The APA describes a particular rulemaking process with which agencies are required to comply. Typically, the agency must give a notice of a proposed rulemaking, published in the Federal Register. The Federal Register “is the official daily publication for rules, proposed rules, and notices of Federal agencies and organizations, as well as executive orders and other presidential documents.” The notice must include the date the rule will come into effect, the legal authority the agency has proposed the rule under, and the substance of the rule.

After notice is given, the agency is required to solicit and accept public comments on the rule. There is no minimum period specified for the comment period to remain open, and it often varies with the complexity of the rule. Most comment periods last between 30 and 60 days, and some are re-opened if the agency believes that there was insufficient time for the public to respond or that the agency did not receive as much feedback as it would like. The agency must then consider all of the comments that are submitted in passing the final rule.

In certain cases, an agency must undergo a formal rulemaking, which requires a courtroom-style hearing. During formal rulemaking, decisions are reached on the basis of evidence given and received on the record. Formal rulemaking is appropriate in two cases: (1) where a statute provides that rules are “required to be made on the record after opportunity for an agency hearing”; and (2) in rulemakings that involve adjudicative facts, or facts specific to the rights of an individual. A statute that requires more than an informal notice and comment rulemaking, but is less stringent than a formal rulemaking, may result in a hybrid rulemaking that blends elements of each.

The APA also describes certain cases where the notice and comment rulemaking process is not required, including 2 general exceptions and 2 specific exceptions:

General Exception 1: the Rule involves a military or foreign affairs function of the United States

General Exception 2: The Rules involves a matter relating to agency management or personally or to public property, loans, grants, benefits, or contracts

Specific Exception 1: Cases of interpretative rules, general statements of policy, or rules of agency organizations, procedure, or practice

Specific Exception 2: When the agency finds for good cause that the notice and comment process is impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.

Note that courts employ a functional analysis to determine if a rule is procedural or substantive, in that substantive rules embody value judgments or substantially alter the rights or interests of parties (see Air Transp. Ass’n of Am. v. Dep’t of Transp., 900 F.2d 369). Also, under Specific Exception 2, the agency’s own delay cannot bring about good cause that the notice and comment process is impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.

Adjudications
Like rulemakings, adjudications come in two forms – formal and informal. A formal adjudication is expressly required by statute to be held “on the record after opportunity for an agency hearing,” though certain limited exceptions apply. The APA does not set out rules for informal adjudications, leaving it to each agency to determine its own procedures. However, formal adjudications require the same measures as formal rulemakings, including evidence introduced on the record.

Notice must be given to an individual subject to a formal adjudication, including the time, place, and nature of the hearing, the legal authority and jurisdiction, and the matters of asserted fact and law. An agency does not need to have a private party plaintiff – instead an agency can choose to initiate action to explore an issue or an alleged violation of some law or rule (see Office of Communication of United Church of Christ v. FCC, 359 F.2d 994). However, when a private party would have standing to appeal a decision, they will also have the right to intervene in a formal adjudication.

Formal hearings (and rulemakings) are presided over by an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). The ALJ renders a final decision on the record, which can be held as final or appealed to the full agency. Final agency decisions are subject to judicial review.

Adjudications are subject to due process requirements when two requirements are met: (1) the hearing involves issues of adjudicative facts, or facts that effect a small, individualized group, and (2) the hearing involves the possibility of a deprivation of a property or liberty interest. That interest must be created and defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from independent sources (see Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564).

Licensing

When a license is required by a law, the agency in granting that license must comply with the same procedures governing formal rulemaking and adjudication. Application for all other licenses is governed by internal agency rules. An agency cannot revoke a license while an application for a new license remains pending. Further, licenses cannot be revoked unless the agency gives notice as to what action has provided cause for the revocation and has allowed the licensee an opportunity to correct that action.

Judicial Review

Final agency decisions are subject to judicial review. Generally, challenges to agency regulations have a six-year statute of limitations.

Scope of Review

The reviewing court shall decide “all relevant questions of law, interpret constitutional and statutory provisions, and determine the meaning or applicability of the terms of an agency action.” The reviewing court must (A) compel agency action that was either “unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed” and (B) find unlawful and “set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions” that are: (1) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law; (2) contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity; (3) in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right; (4) without observance of procedure required by law; (5) unsupported by substantial evidence in a case subject to sections 556 and 557 of Title 5 (Government Organization and Employees) of the United States Code or otherwise reviewed on the record of an agency hearing provided by statute; or (6) unwarranted by the facts to the extend that the facts are subject to trial de novo by the reviewing court.

Standards of Review

There are three standards of review: (1) substantial evidence; (2) arbitrary and capricious; and (3) statutory interpretation.

The “substantial evidence” standard of review is required for formal rulemaking and formal adjudication. Courts are required to uphold a rule if they find the agency’s decision to be “reasonable, or the record contains such evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Agency actions that are invalidated by substantial evidence review are typically abandoned.

The “arbitrary and capricious” standard is mainly applied to informal rulemakings. In Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe (401 U.S. 402), the Supreme Court held that in order to find agency decisions arbitrary in informal adjudications, courts must first “consider whether the decision was based on a consideration of the relevant factors and whether there has been a clear error of judgment.” In performing this inquiry, courts cannot inquire as to why agencies relied upon particular data to make their decisions; however, courts can inquire as to what data the agency reviewed. Typically, when agency action is invalidated under the arbitrary and capricious standard of review, the action is remanded to the agency to substantiate the record. In the Motor Vehicle Manufacturers Association of the United States, Inc. v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance, the Supreme Court held that “the agency nevertheless must examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action” including a “rational connection between facts and judgment . . . to pass muster under the ‘arbitrary and capricious’ standard.”

The “statutory interpretation” standard of review involves a two-step analysis, which derived from Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council (468 U.S. 1227). Under Chevron, courts must first assess whether Congress has spoken to the “precise question at issue.” To do this, courts must look to the language and design of the statute, as well as look to the traditional canons of construction. If the court finds that Congress has not directly addressed the precise issue, the court must then determine if the agency’s action is based on a “permissible construction of the statute.” Under Chevron, legislative regulations are given deference unless they are arbitrary, capricious, or manifestly contrary to the statute.

Mixed Judicial Review

Mixed judicial review encompasses judicial review of both law and fact. Judicial review of law investigates the statutory authority that permits the agency to make its regulation; judicial review of fact investigates the agency’s factual findings that guided its decision-making process.

Standing

Persons who suffer a “legal wrong because of agency action” or are “adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute” has standing to receive judicial review of the agency’s action (5 U.S.C. § 702). There are four elements that must be proven to gain judicial review: (1) injury in fact; (2)causation; (3) redressability; and (4) zone of interest.

Injury in Fact

In Sierra Club v. Morton (405 U.S. 727), the Supreme Court held that agency action which affected environmental, aesthetic, or recreational interest, could qualify as injury in fact for standing purposes. The Supreme Court also held that agency action must directly affect personal interests, not simply those of a corporation. Additionally, if government action or inaction injures a third person in a direct fashion, that person has suffered sufficient injury in fact for standing purposes.

Causation

Causation is the connection between the injury and the agency action.

Redressability

Redressability analyzes whether judicial review of agency action is likely to bring relief to the complaining party.

Zone of Interest
The”zone of interest” requires the complaining party to demonstrate that her injury is the type of injury protected by the statute or regulation.

EPIC’s APA Comments
Since 1997, EPIC has consistently submitted extensive public comments to federal agencies pursuant to the APA. EPIC has also submitted administrative comments to state and international agencies. Through these comments, EPIC makes detailed recommendations, grounded in both policy and law, for stronger privacy protection. A list of comments that EPIC has submitted since 1997 can be found at EPIC: EPIC Administrative Procedure Act (APA) Comments.

Resources:
The Federal Register

Regulations.Gov

In: epic.org

Perú rumbo a la OCDE (2021)

Desde hace unos años, el Perú es miembro del Comité de Inversiones y del Centro de Desarrollo en la Organización para la Cooperación Económica y el Desarrollo Económicos (OCDE). Como se sabe, la OCDE es el organismo que reúne al mayor número de países desarrollados, y que en años recientes, también ha admitido a algunos países en vías de convertirse en economías desarrolladas. Los países miembros de la OCDE producen las dos terceras partes de los bienes y servicios del mundo, y por esta razón, entre otras, es considerada como una de las organizaciones más influyentes del planeta. El Gobierno Peruano, en coordinación con la OCDE, ha iniciado el “Programa País”, que es un trabajo de análisis de brechas y recomendaciones de políticas en los principales temas a mejorar. Este esfuerzo permitirá intercambiar experiencias, sobre temas fundamentales para el desarrollo, con las
economías más avanzadas del mundo.

Ser miembro de la OCDE no solo asegura la asistencia necesaria para la implementación de las políticas que fomenten la prosperidad y la reducción de la pobreza en el país, sino que además conferiría una suerte de “sello de garantía” a las políticas y lineamientos que llevarían al Perú a ser una economía desarrollada en un futuro próximo.

Pero el camino hacia el estadio de país desarrollado es muy arduo, pues hay todavía brechas por cerrar. Sobre todo, existe mucho trabajo pendiente en temas de institucionalidad, corrupción, infraestructura, servicios públicos, educación, salud, conflictos sociales, redistribución de la riqueza y desarrollo sostenible. En esta dirección, y en el marco de la búsqueda de una visión concertada de país hacia 2021 (año de nuestro bicentenario como nación independiente), es de vital importancia establecer un objetivo-país que refleje la aspiración de llegar hacia esta meta y que guíe los esfuerzos y voluntades de todos los peruanos hacia ella: trabajar para que el Perú sea admitido como miembro pleno de la OCDE. (*)

PERU A LA OCDE 2015

(*) En: Peru 2021: OECD Member Country

Documental: Alimentos del futuro

¿Hay comida para todos? Las previsiones más alarmistas aseguran que en el 2050 10.000 millones de personas habitarán el planeta. Alimentar a esta población es el gran desafío al que se enfrenta la humanidad. Sería necesario triplicar la producción actual de alimentos para darnos de comer a todos. Un reto enorme teniendo en cuenta que todavía hoy, mueren de hambre 30 personas cada minuto. ¿Será la tecnología la que nos salve? ¿Comeremos todos gracias a los alimentos transgénicos? ¿O la alternativa estará en el mar?

Yen se deprecia frente al dólar, alza de acciones mejoran humor de mercados

En los mercados cambiarios, los inversores reaccionaron deshaciendo recientes movimientos que habían impulsado tanto al yen como al euro.

dolares

(Reuters).- El yen se depreciaba frente al dólar hoy debido al retorno de la calma a los mercados cambiarios gracias al alza de las acciones globales, incluyendo un avance del 5 por ciento en Shanghái, que apuntaló el apetito por el riesgo y redujo la demanda por monedas consideradas como refugio.

Los comentarios de un influyente funcionario de la Reserva Federal de Estados Unidos el miércoles que desestimó las posibilidades de un alza de las tasas de interés de ese país en setiembre ayudaron a mejorar el humor en el mercado.

En los mercados cambiarios, los inversores reaccionaron deshaciendo recientes movimientos que habían impulsado tanto al yen como al euro.

Un reciente aumento de la aversión al riesgo había provocado coberturas en corto en el yen y el euro, que son divisas populares para financiar operaciones de “carry trade”, u operaciones en que se venden monedas de bajo rendimiento para comprar divisas y activos de mayor rendimiento.

Sin embargo, la demanda por el yen y el euro parecía disminuir ante el fortalecimiento del dólar junto a los mercados bursátiles globales.

Operadores dijeron que cualquier revisión al alza en el dato de crecimiento de Estados Unidos en el segundo trimestre podría apuntalar al billete verde.

El dólar se apreciaba un 0.3% frente al yen, a 120,24 yenes, y bastante por sobre el mínimo de siete meses de 116,15 yenes que alcanzó esta semana.

El euro, en tanto, se fortalecía un 0.4% frente al yen, a 136,10 yenes, mientras que operaba estable frente al dólar, a 1,1320 dólares, bastante por debajo del máximo de siete meses que alcanzó esta semana de 1,1715 dólares. El índice dólar subía a 95,223.

En: gestion

Amenazan de muerte a periodista que reveló beneficios en penal de Lurigancho

La reportera Dayana Cieza publicó un informe sobre la existencia de una discoteca en el centro penitenciario. El Instituto de Prensa y Sociedad exigió la intervención del ministro del Interior en este caso.

En julio pasado, el programa Panorama publicó un reportaje, realizado por la periodista Dayana Cieza, sobre la existencia de una discoteca en el penal de Lurigancho, así como otros beneficios que tenían los presos.

El informe tuvo buen impacto y generó diversas consecuencias. Una de ellas fue la investigación y posterior destitución del director de dicho centro penitenciario, Eduardo García de la Cruz.

Sin embargo, lo más preocupante es que también provocó que la periodista empiece a recibir mensajes en los que la amenazan de muerte.

La captura del texto, que está circulando por las redes sociales, demuestra la advertencia: “crees que ya nos olvidamos de ti, unos días más y te cag… ya verás basura. Te mueres”, se lee.

Cieza, quien ya sentó la denuncia ante la Policía, ha recibido el apoyo de diversos usuarios en las redes sociales, quienes exigen que se pueda dar con el origen del teléfono celular, cuyo número es el 993556821.

Frente a lo ocurrido, el Instituto de Prensa y Sociedad (IPYS), se pronunció y exigió al ministro del Interior, José Luis Pérez Guadalupe, que intervenga en el caso para acelerar la investigación y “frenar el peligro que corre la periodista”.

Se reveló que una de las últimas amenazas que recibió Cieza fue cuando se dirigió a la Defensoría del Pueblo para exponer su caso y fue seguida por sujetos en moto.

En: larepublica

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