CNA: Lawyer For Canadian Falun Gong Explains Lawsuit Against Daily
December 21, 2001 Ottawa, Dec. 21 (CNA) Civil rights lawyer Rocco Galati
said Friday that Canadian Falun Gong practitioners had
been "very patient" before suing the Sing Tao Daily
newspaper for libel, slander, negligence and
incitement of hatred. More than 150 Falun Gong practitioners filed a lawsuit
Dec. 19 at the Province of Ontario's Supreme Court
against the mass-circulation Chinese-language
newspaper. The main piece of evidence the plaintiffs presented to
the court was a full-page spread from the Sept. 20
edition of the Sing Tao Daily entitled "Radical
Religious Advocate Destroying the World." The page carried photographs and commentary placing
Falun Gong alongside such reportedly violent and
doomsday religious cults as that of Aum Shinrikyo
which released poison gas in a Tokyo subway several
years ago, as well as comparing it to the terrorists
who carried out the Sept. 11 attacks in the United
States. Shortly after the printing of the articles and photos,
Falun Gong practitioners sent two separate letters to
the Sing Tao Daily to complain about the slanderous
reports. They later hired Galati to send another
letter in October, but they said the daily failed on
each occasion to respond satisfactorily. As Canadian law regarding slander allows only a period
of three months for the filing of a lawsuit from the
date of the alleged infraction, the practitioners
decided to file their suit Dec. 19, one day before the
deadline in this case. Galati told the press in Toronto Friday that the
practitioners had been very patient and had given the
Sing Tao Daily every opportunity to resolve the issue
prior to filing the suit. The Statement of Claim filed with the court states
that the daily, "in publishing the expose, did engage
in inciting hatred against an identifiable religious
(spiritual) group which is contrary to the Criminal
Code of Canada," and that the defendants "are parties
and coconspirators in these hate crimes and crimes
against humanity for which civil liabilities arise." The 156 plaintiffs, including three from Hong Kong who
had a photo of them meditating carried on the
controversial page admitted as evidence, are each
demanding general damage amounting to C$50,000,
punitive damages amounting to C$20,000, a published
front-page apology and retraction, and an injunction
restraining the defendants from publishing any article
about Falun Gong except the said apology. Falun Gong was very popular in mainland China before
1999 when the Communist regime banned the movement and
launched an all-out propaganda campaign and
persecution against the spiritual and health movement
allegedly due to fears that the number of
practitioners had grown to outnumber the number of
[party's name omitted] members. Galati said Falun Gong is practiced in at least 53
countries around the world and that "only in China is
it being targeted with persecution and propaganda." "The entire world has condemned this persecution. The
U.S. Congress and the European Parliament have passed
resolutions (condemning the persecution). For the Sing
Tao to stand on the side of this persecution is
unacceptable," he added. The filing of the lawsuit in Toronto came only nine
days after the Superior Court of Quebec issued a court
order that Les Presses Chinoises, a Chinese-language
newspaper in Montreal, immediately stop publishing and
circulating articles slanderous to Falun Gong. (By
S.C. Chang) http://www.taipei.org./teco/cicc/news/default.htm
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