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CHINA CRISIS NEWS BULLETIN #89 - 06/29/2001 Monitoring News of the Persecution of Falun Gong MONTREAL, Jun 23, 2001 -- (Montreal Gazette) Ying Zhu arrived
back in Canada a free woman as suddenly and as secretively as she disappeared in
China as a perceived threat to state security. The Montreal resident, Concordia
University student and Falun Gong practitioner surprised the friends who had
been working tirelessly to find her when she arrived home in the wee hours of
Thursday morning. Yesterday she publicly recounted the tale of her
disappearance, detention and imprisonment in China. "It was a nightmare," Zhu
said, looking tired with bags under her eyes, but remaining composed. "I was
kidnapped, I was thrown in a room for 30 days and I was mentally tortured." Zhu
was last seen May 10 on a train platform in Hong Kong. She was on her way to her
hometown in China to visit her parents and husband, but she never arrived.
Friends back home were alarmed at first and then terrified when they learned she
had been arrested at a "610" office, the security force responsible for
enforcing China's ban on the Falun Gong, a spiritual meditation and exercise
practice....
HONG KONG, Jun 26, 2001 -- (Agence France Presse) Hong Kong
followers of the Falun Gong spiritual group called Tuesday on Beijing to stop
torturing mainland practitioners, claiming 233 of them had died in custody.
Falun Gong spokeswoman Sophie Xiao said the death toll among followers of the
quasi-Buddhist sect had reached an "alarming stage" with at least 20 reported to
have died in police custody last month alone. This brought to 233 the number of
deaths since Falun Gong was outlawed as an "evil cult" on the mainland almost
two years ago, she said from Hong Kong, where the sect remains legal. "We hope
to bring to people's attention to the inhumanity suffered by Falun Gong
followers in China to mark the UN international day in support of victims of
torture," on Monday, said Xiao. "We again call for global help to eradicate
torture and inhumanity of Falun Gong practitioners on the mainland," she
said.... They also prepared a petition to Chinese president Jiang Zemin calling
on him to stop torture. "The brutality is beyond people's imagination and the
methods used in torture is beyond the limit people can endure," said Xiao,
citing the use of water torture as well as electrocution and sexual abuse....
BBC excerpt of a report by Radio TV Hong Kong audio web site,
21 June -- The chief secretary for administration, Donald Tsang, says the
government is not legislating against the Falun Gong. Speaking at the Foreign
Correspondents' Club, Mr Tsang said press reports that Hong Kong would craft an
anti-cult law, along the lines of one recently passed in France, were pure
speculation. Tsang said: "Hong Kong, as I said all along, survives on certain,
very important convictions which makes up to me the strongest underpinnings of
our prosperity. And one of these underpinnings is the freedom of religion,
freedom, and that is certainly not a thing that we want to negotiate away. You
said there was a rumour about legislating and that's exactly what it was. We are
not legislating."
The South China Morning Post in Hong Kong reports (June 18)
that Swiss journalist Daniel Wermus had interviewed Alain Vivien, who heads
France's Inter-Ministerial Mission Against Sects. He was quoted as saying: "In
France, this movement [Falun Gong] is quasi non-existent. It has never gone
against the law. It is only a free association in conformity with French law. We
cannot mistake the word cult, and use it for any religious movement, be it old
or recent. "According to French law, it [Falun Gong] does not [deserve to be
called a cult]."
CNN.com, June 19, 2001 reports that an editor at a popular
Chinese newspaper has been fired and other journalists forced to undergo
political instruction in the latest spate of sackings signaling a new media
crackdown. Ma Yunlong was removed as deputy editor-in-chief of a Henan province
newspaper after he approved articles that exposed corruption among health
officials and business regulators... Journalists and media watchers say a new
spate of firings, closures and intimidation is under way to rein in the Chinese
media, seen as challenging the communist party's controls on coverage.... "The
party has no intention of allowing a free press, but now they have to contend
with growing professionalism among journalists, profit seeking by media and the
effects of exposure to media outside China," said Joseph Cheng, a China watcher
at City University of Hong Kong.
On June 25, Reuters reports - Chinese propaganda authorities
have temporarily shut a newspaper in the eastern province of Jiangsu for
publishing a sarcastic article about President Jiang Zemin, a Hong Kong-based
rights group said on Monday. The Business Morning Daily was the latest target of
a crackdown on newspapers which pushed the boundaries of China's censors to
attract readers in an increasingly competitive market, the Information Centre
for Human Rights and Democracy said.
Things took a violent turn recently as Stephen Shaver, an
American photographer with the Agence France-Presse (AFP), was punched in the
head and ribs, knocked over, and dragged along the ground while taking
photographs before the Three Tenors concert in the Forbidden City. The
concert was staged to promote Beijing's bid to host the 2008 Olympics, AFP said.
Reuters reports (June 26) that the U.S. embassy and an international news agency
lodged protests with China's Foreign Ministry on Tuesday after the incident.
"The allegation raises question marks over Chinese officials' pledge to allow
the thousands of reporters who would descend on Beijing for the Olympics the
freedom to report wherever and whatever they like. Half a dozen plainclothes and
uniformed police officers attacked Shaver after he took a picture of a lone
protester detained by police in front of the venue, AFP said. He was released
but assaulted again when leaving the concert by a group of policemen including
one of those involved in the initial incident, it said." [It is not known if the
protestor was a Falun Dafa practitioner].
Hundreds of people throughout America will journey to
Washington D.C. from all over the country to raise global awareness about the
urgent need to rescue Falun Gong practitioners from the brutal persecution in
China. Some will be walking all the way from as far away as Boston and New York
while others will bike several hundred miles from Orlando, Florida to the
nation's capital. Once there, they will be joined by caravans from Seattle, San
Francisco, Los Angeles, Atlanta and Houston.
The Falun Dafa Info Center receives daily reports of torture,
brutal beatings, illegal detention, and other atrocities against people who
practice Falun Gong in China. These reports, as well as background information,
are available upon request. Please contact faluninfoctr@nycmail.com. Posting date: 6/29/2001
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