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Australian Homepage: Falun Gong members face harassment in Australia By Rebekah Van Druten 22nd November 2001 Australian practitioners of Falun Gong believe the [Jiang Zemin] Government's
[persecution] on the spritual movement has spread to Australia. Rebekah Van
Druten reports. The [Jiang Zemin] Government's insistence that Falun Gong is a [Jiang Zemin
government's slanderous term omitted] [...] led to a violent [persecution] in
1999 that saw more than 25,000 [practitioners] detained. Two years after the
initial arrests, which saw many Falun Gong members tortured and killed, the [Jiang
Zemin] Government has again orchestrated a campaign to wipe out the movement,
and it seems they may have their sights on the rest of the world including
Australia. Griffiths-Park is a strong-minded, middle age woman who was born and bred in
Australia. She stumbled upon a Falun Gong book some three years ago and was
inspired by Li Hongzhi's teaching so she began practicing. Griffiths-Park said when she began practicing she was unaware of the Chinese
government's oppression of Falun Gong members but since becoming an organiser of
the movement she has experienced similar methods of intimidation in Australia
first hand. She said just because the western world had adopted this practise didn't mean
the persecution against practitioners was stopped, especially in Australia. "We held a vigil, in Centenary Park, for all of the practitioners that
have died at the hands of the [Jiang Zemin] government. In that time three of
our cars were broken into and another one was stolen. "Fortunately, they don't take any of our belongings but they do ruin all
of our Falun readings," she said. Griffiths-Park added staff of the Chinese Consulate in Sydney tried to
influence the Bankstown City Council and advised them to stop letting Falun Gong
practitioners hire practice halls. "They have also broken into Falun Gong
members' houses and some people believe their phones are being bugged," she
said. She said often it is only the spokespeople for Falun Gong that are targeted,
especially those involved with the Falun Gong web site. Yao, who resides in Sydney and is the webmaster for www.faluninfo.net
said the web site is constantly being hacked and tampered with and when his
house was broken into in 1999 all they took was his address book full of Falun
Gong contacts, in Australia and China, and his phone. National Falun Gong spokesperson, Zhao, said these methods of intimidation
have become so common that the Australian Federal Police have recommended that
members of Falun Gong put together a document listing all disturbances and hand
it to the Australian Government. "The police and the government in Australia know very well that the [Jiang
Zemin] government are behind most of these activities but they need hard
evidence before they can charge anyone," she said. The Australian Federal Police would not confirm if they were involved in an
investigation relating to Falun Gong, however a spokesman did admit that crimes
against its members had been reported, however these were often classed as
common assaults or burglaries and were usually handled by state police. The most recent of these crimes, according to Zhao, occurred on October 6. She recalled how three women [who can not be named for security reasons]
received police permission to hold a peaceful protest outside the Chinese
Embassy in Canberra. "The protest had been going well and then late in the afternoon a
Chinese diplomat came out of the embassy and began to shout at them ... he was
being very coarse and defamatory towards all three women and so one of them
begun to take photos of him in the hope that the police could later charge him. "This made the gentleman very angry and so he came and grabbed the
camera out of the woman's hand and slapped her across the face[...]while another
called the police on her mobile, but other men from the embassy came and took
the diplomat away before the police arrived. "It was a very frightening experience for the women," said Zhao. Queensland University of Technology (QUT) Human Rights lecturer, Ross
Daniels, confirmed Ms Zhao's and Ms Griffiths-Park's accusations through his own
contact with the Chinese community. "It is probably not the [Jiang Zemin] Government itself employing people
to break into houses and cars, but you can be best assured there's a little
world going on that we know little about," he said. "There's whispering behind doors and people have to be very careful
about what they do and say." Daniels said many in the Chinese community had family or business links in
China that made their participation in Falun Gong circumspect [...] And yet these comments do not seem to have deterred the some 100 million
Falun Gong followers throughout the world. However there are grave concerns in
the movement that China continues to demonise Falun Gong throughout the Western
world, while detaining torturing and killing its practitioners in China. [...] Yet with every new claim of human rights abuses, the Falun members seem to
grow more determined. Caterina, a practitioner of Falun Gong in Melbourne, said although it is now
becoming dangerous to practise Falun Gong in Australia she would continue to
practise the meditation ritual and plans to return to China regularly to further
the Falun case by distributing books and protest letters. This is despite the fact that Australians have already been arrested in China
for protesting about the government's treatment of Falun Gong. Just last month four Australians, Kate Douglas, Chris Cominos, Myrna Mack and
Kay Belonogoff, were among the dozens of foreign protestors arrested and
detained by Chinese police while taking part in a meditation protest in support
of the banned [group]. Caterina said the four were rounded up when they unfurled pro-Falun Gong
banners after disguising themselves as a tour group to get past guards and onto
the square. "We were quite worried about their safety because we were not sure what
they [the police] would do. "We really hoped that they will just get deported. I think it's pretty
good that they haven't suffered any mistreatment, although they have been
slapped around a bit," she said. "It's scary, but we will fight for many years to come." http://www.aushomepage.com.au/article/727/ Posting date: 12/30/2001
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