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Jiang Zemin's Political Tentacles Reach San Diego
On Wednesday, August 29, 2001, a public event was publicized in the paper.
People were invited to join the Ambassador from China, Yang Jiechi, to celebrate
China's hosting of the 2008 Olympics. Seven practitioners went to the restaurant
with the intention of giving the Ambassador a letter asking him to remind his
government about the murderous crackdown on Falun Gong. The letter was entitled:
"Stop the violence against peaceful Falun Gong practitioners! Stop
spreading hatred against Falun Gong! Stop destroying the lives of good
people!" One practitioner also brought Chrysanthemums, the traditional
flower of mourning, for the Ambassador. After the practitioners were seated at the restaurant and had already been
set up with service and tea, a man wearing a red star [some type of insignia
to represent he was from Mainland China and held authority], whom we
believed to be security, approached us practitioners aggressively demanding to
know if we were with Falun Gong. Since we felt this interrogation was an
unwarranted violation of our privacy, we had nothing to tell him. This hostile
individual started taking our pictures. One of the practitioners took his photo
too, went up to him and asked him who he was and why he was taking our pictures.
He admitted he was a reporter for the China Daily News. The practitioner
asked for his business card, which he gave her. Clearly, he was Daming Li,
indeed only a staff reporter for the China Daily News. It was puzzling
that he felt it was his duty to masquerade as security staff for the Ambassador. Soon, the owner, instigated by the reporter appeared at our table looking
flustered. He stammered and made up an alibi that he needed the table and chairs
where we were seated, claimed this was a private event and asked us to leave.
Not wanting to create a commotion or compromise our intention of delivering the
letter to the Ambassador we left the restaurant and went out to the parking lot
to wait. Soon a Sergeant from the San Diego Police Department approached and
told us that the owner had indicated to him that the event was a private party
and that we had to leave the premises. He advised us that if we did not, we
could be arrested. He told us we could go to the sidewalk and if we walked
around there, we could display our placards. We had no placards or signs just
the letter and flowers. The Sergeant could see we meant no harm and offered to
go tell the Ambassador or an assistant that we wanted to deliver a letter to
him. While we were discussing the matter with the police, the Ambassador
arrived. Many people prominent in the Chinese community were present. Acting as
if they had to "protect" the Ambassador, they formed a wall of people
four or five feet deep so the Ambassador would not see us. We never got to
deliver our letter or the flowers and so we left shortly thereafter. Evidently, the reporter and the restaurant owner do not know that the
California law applies to our situation in the form of the Unruh Civil Rights
Act. Section 51 of the California Civil Code guarantees equal rights in business
establishments. The law states, "All persons within the jurisdiction of
this state are free and equal, and no matter what their sex, race, color,
religion, ancestry, or national origin are entitled to the full and equal
accommodations, advantages, facilities, privileges, or services in all business
establishments of every kind whatsoever." People cannot be barred
arbitrarily from a public accommodation. The next day articles started appearing in several Chinese papers about us.
The slant of the articles was that we were intent on causing serious trouble and
so threatening that the Chinese community had to "form a human chain"
to protect the Ambassador and other really laughable and untruthful allegations.
The photo the China Daily News printed, supposedly to prove the point of
how threatening we were, showed three of us in the parking lot relaxed and
smiling. The article in the xx Party paper, however, said we were Falun Gong
"fighters," never smiled and that we were anything but truthful,
benevolent or tolerant. The reporter even went so far as to say we
"threatened" him. He also alleged we were intent on serving the
Ambassador with a lawsuit. Of course we know the Ambassador has diplomatic
immunity and never considered any such action. We did consider initiating a
lawsuit against the reporter or his paper or against the restaurant owner for
slander, for defamation and for discrimination under the Unruh Act! These lying
articles printed in the Chinese language papers about the Ambassador's visit,
however, are but a drop in the bucket compared to the torrents of lies pouring
out each day to conceal the death toll from torture (now well over 270 Falun
Gong practitioners have died in police custody), the inhuman persecution of
thousands upon thousands of practitioners and the complete deprivation of human
rights of Falun Gong, Tibetan monks, Christians and other spiritually-minded
people under the atheistic regime of Jiang Zemin. Posting date: 9/6/2001
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