Xu, Huabin: Law enforcement officers of the Chinese Communist Party regard law as a trifling matter
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Date: 6/18/2016 3:00:16 PM
Sender: Xu, Huabin
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Xu, Huabin: Law enforcement officers of the Chinese Communist Party regard law as a trifling matter
许华滨(Xu, Huabin)
In mainland China, such a thing happened frequently: a group of police suddenly came to the door, did not produce any documents, did not come up with any court documents, not even any reason to directly ask the owner to open the door.
If refused, it will break into the forced search, but also to prevent the official charges will be home owners handcuffed away.
Citizens' residences are protected by law and are inviolable without due process of law, which is almost a well-known and well-known concept of the rule of law.
The United Nations Declaration of Human Rights states that citizens' homes and homes must not be arbitrarily or unlawfully invaded and that the State shall not interfere in the private life of citizens.
Even if the CCP's own constitution stipulates that citizens of the People's Republic of China's houses are inviolable, it is forbidden to illegally search or illegally intrude into the houses of citizens.
The criminal law of the Chinese Communist Party further stipulates that judicial personnel must abuse their power to intrude into citizens' houses and must be punished severely.
However, the Chinese mainland police knowingly break the law, depending on the law as a child, do not know what is the rule of law, this phenomenon should be changed.
Xu, Huabin
June 18, 2016
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