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FOX News: Falun Gong Hunger Strikers Protest Chinese Oppression By Kelley O. Beaucar August 20, 2001 WASHINGTON - In the nation's capital Monday,
practitioners of Falun Gong did what they would be
jailed for doing in the Chinese capital of Beijing:
They protested the communist government. Ten practitioners from five U.S. states protested the
imprisonment of 130 Falun Gong members in Masanjia, a
deadly re-education and labor camp in China, according
to the protesters. They say 265 practitioners of the movement whose
stated mission is to achieve truth, compassion and
tolerance through meditation and physical fitness have been killed, and an estimated 20,000 imprisoned
in brutal Chinese labor camps since Falun Gong was
banned by the communist government in 1999. The protestors are in their fourth day of a hunger
strike and spoke outside the Chinese embassy,
surrounded by supporters. "During my hunger strike, I want to tell the world:
stop the Chinese government from persecuting and
torturing its own citizens and the peaceful Falun Gong
practitioners," announced Chaohui Lu, a refugee from
China, who did two months in a labor camp in 2000 for
his dedication to Falun Gong. [...] But Lu says the Chinese government smears and
intimidates Falun Gong members and their families and
threatens their lives. "The Chinese government wants to suppress all voices
that tell the truth about its brutality and killing,
and will deny any accusations of its wrongdoings," he
said. Falun Gong is defined as a "cultivation method" of the
School of Buddha by its creator Li Hongzhi, who lives
in the U.S. Through slow-motion exercise, much like
yoga, practitioners aspire to moral and healthy
living. [...] Practitioner Lisa Tan, who was able to escape her own
persecution after she married an American and became a
citizen during a stay here as an international
student, says the communist government is paranoid and
afraid that Falun Gong is eroding its influence over
the Chinese people. She said a survey conducted by the Beijing government
in 1999 revealed that between 70 and 100 million
Chinese practice Falun Gong, though official numbers
are difficult to assess. "We've been urging the U.S. government and whole
internationally community to support us, Tan said. "We
have to stop this brutal oppression. The Chinese
government thinks they are getting away with it." The State Department reported this year that China's
human rights record is deteriorating and has publicly
rebuked its treatment of Falun Gong members, as well
as minority Christians. "The United States is deeply disturbed by reports that
China has further intensified its harsh repression of
the Falun Gong," Richard Boucher, State Department
spokesman, said last month. "We call on China to
respect freedom of thought, conscience and religion,
to allow all persons to practice their religions
freely." There has been no indication yet from the State
Department that any official changes in China policy
are in the works in response to the repression of
Falun Gong. http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,32552,00.html Posting date: 8/21/2001
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