Ottawa Citizen: Montreal Woman Arrested for Practicing Falun Gong; Ying Zhu's freedom lost on China visit
Randy Boswell
May 25, 2001
Falun Gong practitioners are again appealing to the Canadian government for
help in securing the release of a Montrealer believed jailed during a visit to
China this month.
Ying Zhu, a 35-year-old permanent resident of Canada described as being
"very close" to obtaining her citizenship, disappeared on May 10
during a trip to visit her parents in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong.
Prior to her trip to Guangdong, Ms. Zhu had joined a pro-Falun Gong
demonstration in Hong Kong, where the Beijing crackdown against the meditation
movement is less draconian than in mainland China.
Yesterday, the Hong Kong Human Rights Information Centre confirmed that Ms.
Zhu had been arrested and is one of tens of thousands of Chinese citizens being
held for practicing Falun Gong.
Earlier this year, pressure from the Canadian government prompted the release
of former Montrealer Kunlun Zhang -- who holds both Chinese and Canadian
citizenship -- from a Chinese labour camp.
Mr. Zhang, a renowned sculptor who had lived in Montreal for seven years,
returned to China in 1996 to help care for his ailing mother. He was arrested
last summer for practicing Falun Gong in a public park.
Initially, Chinese officials refused Canadian requests for his release
because Mr. Zhang had returned to his homeland using his Chinese passport. But
in January, apparently bowing to pressure from international media and Foreign
Affairs Minister John Manley on the eve of a Team Canada trade mission to
Beijing, China released Mr. Zhang.
Today, Falun Gong practitioners in Montreal will press Canada to urge China
to release Ms. Zhu.
Spokesman Yumin Yang said last night that Ms. Zhu is a landed immigrant who
has been in Canada for several years. He said her husband, Yan Sun, is a
Canadian citizen and that the couple have a business that operates both in China
and Canada.
Falun Gong, which [...] combines spiritual teachings and gentle stretching
exercises, gained enormous popularity in China in the 1990s. But by 1999, when
an estimated 100 million people had become part of the movement, Chinese
President Jiang Zemin began to view Falun Gong as a threat to the [party's name
omitted] party's authority, declared the movement an "[Chinese government's
slanderous term omitted]" and launched a violent crackdown.
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/national/010525/5050868.html
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