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Falun Gong Practitioners Conduct SOS Hunger Strike in Toronto Appeal for release of 130 practitioners on 3rd week of hunger strike protesting illegal extended imprisonment in Masanjia Labour Camp
Media Advisory For immediate release: August 20, 2001
TORONTO, August 20, 2001 -- Four Falun Gong practitioners started a 48-hour
hunger strike in front of the Toronto Chinese Consulate to appeal for the
immediate release of 130 practitioners who are suffering at the notorious
Masanjia Labor Camp in China.
This appeal is to support the courage and peaceful perseverance for
"Truthfulness-Compassion-Tolerance" that practitioners in China
continue to show amidst severe persecution, and to awaken people's compassion
around the world.
Falun Gong practitioners in Washington, D.C., New York, London, Berlin and
elsewhere are conducting hunger strikes and holding candlelight vigils outside
local Chinese embassies and consulates to demand that China's communist
authorities immediately and unconditionally release the 130 practitioners.
The Masanjia Labor Camp is widely regarded as the most brutal of the
detention centers where many Falun Gong practitioners have been imprisoned and
tortured to give up their beliefs. Last October, 18 female practitioners were
reportedly beaten, stripped naked and thrown into the cells of male convicts to
be gang raped. They haven't been heard from since.
The wish to hold the practitioners longer than their original terms reflects
the Chinese government's greatest fear: that the "unreformed"
practitioners might reveal to the outside world the horrific, inhuman conditions
of the Masanjia camp. Such disclosure would further rupture the image of the
camp Chinese authorities have tried to create through a staged media show
tour.
Media Interview Available:
Chinese Consulate, 240 St. George St. (Bloor), downtown Toronto
Contact: 416-939-6789 or 416-995-0919 Julie Zhu, Tia Zhang and Menghua Zhang
Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a self-improvement practice for the
mind and body. It was introduced to the public in 1992 by Mr. Li Hongzhi. Since
then, millions of individuals around the world have taken up the peaceful,
meditative practice. Due to its popularity, the Chinese government banned the
practice in 1999.
Posting date: 8/21/2001
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