U.S. bans CCP members immigration, shakes the Chinese circle | tuidang | Quit CCP

   

China Observer - Vision Times

 

Published on Oct 10, 2020

China and the Chinese react to the US enforcing a ban on Communist Party members

In 2020, the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP, is facing unprecedented international pressure and domestic crisis. To counter these challenges, it has been emphasizing the Communist Party’s totalitarian control and encouraging more Chinese to join the Party.

At the same time, the United States has been getting tougher on the Communist Party and its authoritarian rule. On Oct. 2, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, or USCIS, issued policy guidelines emphasizing that any member or associate of a Communist Party is generally ineligible for immigration to the U.S. USCIS also prohibits immigration by members or associates of other “totalitarian parties.”

The news has had tremendous repercussions in the overseas Chinese community as well as in mainland China. Many Party members either live in the United States, have relatives who are U.S. residents or citizens or desire to move to the U.S.

According to the staff at the Flushing-based Global Service Center for Quitting the Chinese Communist Party, the number of people symbolically renouncing their ties to the CCP on the website tuidang.org shot up by dozens of times the normal rate.

Western countries are a favorite safe haven for top Chinese officials and businessmen, almost all of whom have close ties to the Communist Party. In 2012, Hong Kong media outlet “Dong Xiang” cited internal CCP statistics showing that up to 90 percent of the CCP’s Central Committee had family members residing overseas.

In recent years, the United States and other countries have stepped up pressure on communist China for its illicit trade practices, human rights abuses, and hegemonic international ambition.

In addition, there has been a significant increase in the number of people who are not seeking a Certificate of Resignation but are simply declaring that they are resigning from the Communist Party and are doing so under their real names.

Xi Jinping became the Chinese Communist Party's supreme leader in 2012. He hoped to hold on to the red regime. But in all likelihood, he would see with his own eyes the rapid disintegration of the CCP under his leadership.

#China #CCP#QuitCCP#Tuidang#USimmigration
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