Northern California Bohemian: SSU protester Arrested in Tiananmen Square
By Patrick Sullivan
(Clearwisdom.net)
China Syndrome: SSU student Brad Carson (right) at the Great Wall
Issue of November 29-December 5
Brad Carson has the typical problems of an average college student. His car
is on the fritz, he's juggling theater courses and a job in Sebastopol, and he's
got a tired look in his eyes from staying up late to write a paper.
But unlike his classmates at Sonoma State University, Carson also now has an
arrest record in China.
The 20-year-old college junior was one of 35 foreigners (including six
Americans) arrested on Nov. 20 for staging a human rights demonstration in
Beijing's Tiananmen Square, the infamous site of a pro-democracy rally in 1989
that ended in the violent death of an unknown number of student protesters.
Carson and his companions were protesting the Chinese government's violent
crackdown on Falun Gong, a Buddhist-like spiritual movement. The protesters--all
Falun Gong practitioners--posed as tourists for the demonstration, faking out
the Chinese cops who always patrol Tiananmen Square by staging a group photo and
then suddenly sitting down and unfurling a banner that read "Truthfulness,
Compassion, and Tolerance"--the three main principles of Falun Gong.
Carson says he dropped into a double lotus position, but he didn't have to
wait long for police to respond.
"We sat there for a couple of seconds, and then police vans started
surrounding us," he explains. "[The police] started to pull us into
the vans, and that's when they started beating people . . . Some girls from
Australia were holding up a banner, and they kicked one girl to the ground and
started dragging her by her hair."
Carson was not injured.
A nearby cameraman running a live video feed sent footage of the protest to
Europe, and the demonstration was soon major news around the world. "Ten
minutes after it happened, it was already on television," Carson says.
China outlawed Falun Gong as [...] back in 1999. Since then, tens of
thousands of adherents have been sent to prisons and mental hospitals. About 300
have died in custody, according to Falun Gong spokespersons.
Carson and his companions fared much better by comparison. Police took their
passports and questioned them. The protesters were held in police custody for
more than 30 hours, given a warning for disrupting public order, and then
deported. "They brought us to the airport and forced us onto a flight to
Vancouver," Carson explains.
Demonstrations by foreigners are rare in China, which has one of the worst
human rights reputations in the world. But Carson, who began practicing Falun
Gong a year and a half ago, says his faith kept him from feeling too much fear.
"My purpose wasn't to go there and get beat, to be a martyr,"
Carson says. "My purpose was to tell the police what's going on. Most of
these guys don't know people are being sent to psychiatric hospitals or crazy
work camps . . . They don't know that 80-year-old women get beaten to death.
"
"We were aware of the possible danger," he continues. "But
when I see injustice, when I know good people are dying for someone else's
political gain, I feel like I have to do everything I can to try to stop that.
And this was one thing I could do."
http://www.metroactive.com/sonoma/china-0148.html

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