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Feature Article of Yorkshire Post (England): An exercise in Chinese intolerance Chris Bond (Clearwisdom.net) December 2, 2001 LITTLE Minghui You only learned to walk a few months ago and dressed in a
rose-covered jacket she stumbles around like any other 20-month-old baby eager
to explore her new-found freedom. But Minghui is not like most other babies -- she has no official identity,
has had her passport cancelled and faces an uncertain future, all because her
mother refuses to give up her spiritual beliefs.
Twenty-nine-year-old Zhengfang Mo, along with millions of other Chinese
people, took up Falun Gong to help to improve her mental and physical fitness.
The self-study technique, which involves controlled meditation exercises, was
introduced in China in 1992 and was, at one time, practised by over 70 million
people.
But as its popularity soared, the Chinese authorities became increasingly
concerned about what they perceived as [...] and in July 1999 Falun Gong was
banned.
Since then, the communist government has systematically detained
practitioners in "reform centres" aimed at rehabilitating them back
into normal life.
The Chinese authorities deny allegations of murder and brutality, but
according to Amnesty International, at least 77 Falun Gong followers have either
died in custody, or shortly after release.
Stories of torture, people being unlawfully detained in labour camps, or fed
mind-altering drugs in state hospitals, have emerged with alarming regularity in
the past two years, but because of the shackle on information coming out of
China the true scale of the persecution is unknown.
Zhengfang, from Chengdu in central China, was one such practitioner who
experienced at first-hand the brutality of the Chinese authorities. She visited
Leeds with her baby daughter as part of a nationwide tour to highlight alleged
atrocities carried out in her homeland.
Zhengfang and her husband Yi You, who were living in Swansea while he was
studying at university, returned to China in November 1999, to join a peaceful
protest in Tiananmen Square, but the pair were arrested within hours of arriving
in Beijing.
Zhengfang, who was eight months pregnant, claimed she was beaten up by guards
and kept in a police cell for seven days.
"They asked if we were Falun Gong practitioners, and I said 'yes', so
they kicked and punched us, but fortunately they didn't hit my stomach -- I was
terrified," she said.
After seven days in a cell where she claimed she was forced to sleep on a
table, the pair were deported back to Britain.
A month later Zhengfang gave birth to Minghui and last July travelled to the
Chinese Embassy in London to register her daughter.
She claimed she was questioned about Falun Gong and had her passport
confiscated because she refused to write a statement renouncing the spiritual
movement.
After a month her passport was finally returned but the page for her daughter
had been cancelled leaving Minghui, to all intents and purposes, a non-national
refugee.
Zhengfang, who finishes her degree in applied computing at Dundee at the end
of this month, is worried about her family's future.
"Maybe I will have to apply for asylum because my student visa runs out
at the end of the month.
"I can't return to China because I will be arrested immediately, my name
is on a blacklist," she said.
"It's a difficult situation -- my baby has no identity but she is
innocent, why does she have to suffer?"
Human Rights organisations differ over the extent of the persecution in
China, but according to the Falun Gong Information Centre, 274 followers have
died in police custody, while tens-of-thousands have been detained in labour
camps.
"There is absolutely no question that there is serious persecution of
Falun Gong members in China," said Brendan Paddy of Amnesty International.
"Falun Gong members are subjected to serious torture to try and get them
to renounce their beliefs [...]."
The Chinese authorities continually deny any human rights violations against
Falun Gong followers and refute Zengfang's allegations.
[...]
A spokeswoman for the Foreign office admitted that the treatment of Falun
Gong practitioners was a "serious concern" and said that high-level
discussions with the Chinese authorities were continuing.
But as Zengfang travels around Britain with Minghui to raise awareness about
the continuing persecution in her homeland, she wants little more than the
freedom that most of us take for granted.
http://www.ypn.co.uk/scripts/editorial2.cgi?cid=39&aid=414808 Posting date: 12/2/2001
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