![]() | ||||
|
"Clarify the truth thoroughly, eliminate the evil with righteous thoughts, save all beings, and safeguard the Fa with determination" (Dafa is Indestructible) Amnesty International Spokesman Discusses Plight of Falun Gong Practitioners on United Nations Day in Support of Victims of Torture Darren Altmayer
Dear Editor,
On June 26, UN International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, the
Amnesty International University of Waterloo Campus Group held an information
session for the Human Rights of Falun Gong in China. (Reported in http://minghui.ca/mh/articles/2001/7/6/12935.html)
This meeting was held in cooperation with the Waterloo Public Interests
Research Group and Kitchener-Waterloo Falun Gong Group. During the meeting, Mr.
Darren Altmayer, the spokesman for Amnesty International of the University
ofWaterloo, gave an impressive opening presentation, which follows:
Today, June 26 marks the United Nations Day in Support of Victims of Torture.
Unfortunately, torture by state forces remains commonplace, and 3/4s of all
nations have had cases reported.
Amnesty International is a worldwide human rights organization, with local
groups active in over 160 countries. Turning forty this year, Amnesty has dealt
with tens of thousands of prisoner cases.
Amnesty International's story began in 1961. British lawyer Peter Benenson
was disturbed to hear the story of two Portuguese students that were sentenced
to seven years imprisonment for raising their glasses in a public toast to
freedom. Benenson and several other activists organized a one-year "Appeal
for Amnesty" campaign, which they launched in a newspaper article printed
May 28, 1961.
Amnesty International has four goals:
Because human rights are indivisible and interdependent, Amnesty also
promotes public awareness and understanding of the full range of human rights as
enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international
covenants, conventions, and treaties.
Amnesty International is independent of any government, political persuasion,
or religious creed. It is funded by its members and donors. No funds are sought
or accepted from governments. Amnesty International is impartial. It does not
take sides in political conflicts. It neither supports nor opposes any
government or political system. What it opposes are violations of the specific
human rights it has undertaken to defend.
Nelson Mandela once commented, "human rights have become the focal point
for international relations." Though the extent of this could be debated,
it is certain that human rights have taken center stage in the growing economic
and cultural relationship between China and the western world.
The incidents at Tiananmen Square in 1989 opened the rest of the world's eyes
to the human rights situation in China. Amnesty has been particularly critical
of China's extensive use of capital punishment, the numbers of political
prisoners and prisoners of conscience, and the many reports of torture in jails.
The plight of the people practicing Falun Gong in China has been of
particular concern to human rights interests. Though official statistics in
China are kept secret, the Falun Dafa Information Center reports the deaths of
246 Falun Gong members while in detention. Tens of thousands of practitioners
are believed to remain in detention. Many have been assigned without trial to
''re-education through labor'' or are detained in psychiatric hospitals.
Furthermore, reports of torture, rape and mistreatment of practitioners are all
too common.
Yet there is hope, and there is something that we in North America can do.
The recent release of Concordia student Ying Zhu and McGill Professor Zhang a
few months back demonstrate the power of an organized, international movement
for human rights concerns. The mobilization of those calling for the release of
these two Canadian Falun Gong practitioners from the Chinese government was
quick, vast, and impressive. It is expected that their efforts had a great deal
to do with Ying Zhu and Professor Zhang's release. In these examples we can find
great hope and inspiration to strengthen the peaceful call for human rights.
June 26, 2001
Darren Altmayer
Amnesty International University of Waterloo Campus Group
Posting date: 7/8/2001
|