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Asian Week: Falun Gong Practitioners Overflow Board Meeting By Ethen Lieser October 12, 2001 As the San Francisco Board of Supervisors weekly meeting on Tuesday was
about to begin, police officers and City Hall officials ordered
everyone to
evacuate the building - there was a bomb threat. Hundreds gathered in front of City Hall and waited until the building
was
searched. Nearly 45 minutes later, people were finally allowed to
re-enter
the building. While the bomb scare could have been the fireworks of any other board
meeting, this day was different. Over a hundred Falun Gong activists
crowded
into the legislative chamber to see whether a resolution urging the
Chinese
government to end persecution of Falun Gong practitioners would pass.
There
were so many people that some had to be transferred to another room due
to
lack of space. However, no voting on the resolution took place, as Supervisor Leland
Yee
referred the resolution to the neighborhood services and parks
committee. "I think the issue of human rights is an important one, and I think it
strikes a chord within all of us," Yee said. Board President Tom Ammiano acknowledged the resolution at the
beginning of
the meeting and allowed 30 minutes for public comment. Only a few were
able
to speak and many were still snaked around the chamber's rear benches
when
the allotted time for public comment ended. The delay in the voting
will
allow many more speakers to be heard. [...] The Falun Gong practitioners responded with personal stories of family
members and friends who have been allegedly subjected to often cruel
and
torturous treatment by the Chinese government. Other speakers felt the
Board
shouldn't make a decision on the resolution. They believed it should be
handled by human rights and religious organizations. "The resolution is very significant because the people in China have no
voice," said Sherry Zhang, the spokesperson for the Falun Dafa
Information
Center in San Francisco. "They exhausted all legal channels to get
their
voices heard, but in return, every time they try to appeal, they get
arrested, tortured and even beaten to death. I think [international]
pressure can really help the Chinese government rethink what they are
doing." With the prospect of Mayor Willie Brown going to Shanghai within the
next
several weeks, Zhang is hoping he will raise the issue of the Chinese
government's human rights violations. "Falun Gong has no political agenda and no interest in politics," Zhang
said. "All we're asking from the Board is to support the most basic and
the
most fundamental human rights, religious freedom and freedom to
believe." http://www.asianweek.com/2001_10_12/bay_supes.html
Posting date: 10/16/2001
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