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Dayton Daily News: Falun Gong followers decry China's stance Assume lotus position at Federal Building to draw attention By Cathy Mong Dayton Daily News Sunday, September 2, 2001 DAYTON--Practitioners of a traditional Chinese form of
meditation and exercise hardly appear to be enemies of
the state. Yet hundreds of Chinese have died and thousands have
been tortured since 1999 because of their adherence to
Falun Gong, which teaches truthfulness, compassion and
forbearance. About a dozen practitioners from Ohio and northern
Kentucky sat in the lotus position in front of the
Federal Building downtown Saturday to draw attention
to human rights abuses and to call for the release of
130 followers on a hunger strike at the Masanjia labor
camp in China. Some of the followers are taking part in the 360-mile
SOS Walk for Justice through Ohio that started
Wednesday in Cincinnati and will end Sept. 17 in
Cleveland. Rick Carne, an aide to U.S. Rep. Tony Hall, D-Dayton,
said Hall was "very worried and very concerned" about
China's continued monitoring of Falun Gong
practitioners. Carne urged citizens to contact their
representatives to support House Resolution 188, which
calls for the Chinese government to cease persecution
of the 70 million practitioners in that country. There
are an estimated 100 million followers worldwide. The resolution says the persecution violates China's
constitution, as well as the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights. Carne told listeners to contact President Bush, who
will travel to China in October to meet with China's
President Jiang Zemin. Dr. Sunny Lu, a psychiatrist and associate professor
of psychiatry at the University of Cincinnati, said
the Chinese government has 610 offices throughout
China used to monitor the activities of practitioners.
Followers who exercise publicly are often detained,
taken to mental hospitals, given heavy doses of drugs,
tortured and brainwashed, Lu said. The form of meditation and exercise was introduced
publicly in 1992 and quickly became popular. At least 270 followers have died since July 20, 1999,
when the government intervened, she said. Deaths
almost always are attributed to suicide, she said, and
practitioners labeled mentally ill. "It's typical of Chinese persecution of minority
groups who do not agree with the communist government
and total mind control," Carne said. "There is no
reason to fear Falun Gong. It is a gentle, gentle way
of living." He said Hall is against open trading with China, and
said there is no way to know what products bought by
U.S. consumers are made in Chinese prison camps by
political prisoners. Among those meditating and exercising Saturday was
Jesse Xie, 10, a fifth-grader from Fort Thomas, Ky. "It's really peaceful. It improves your health and
tells you to be a good person," said Jesse, who has
been practicing Falun Gong two hours a day for four
years. "It helps me stay calm and not get angry." For more information, see www.sos-earthwalk.net.
http://www.activedayton.com/partners/ddn/epaper/editions/today/metro_6.html Posting date: 9/3/2001
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