AFP: With Appeal for Data, Falun Gong Promises to Deploy U.S. Justice Against China
NEW YORK, Sep 6, 2001 -- (Agence France Presse) The
Falun Gong spiritual movement on Wednesday promised to
mobilize the full force of U.S. justice to hunt down
Chinese officials it accuses of torturing and
murdering its members. Falun Gong, which is banned in China, issued an appeal
for intelligence on Chinese officials and members of
the security forces implicated in repression and
pledged to launch prosecutions in US courts. The group has already slapped U.S. civil lawsuits on
several top Chinese officials during visits to the
United States under legislation that extends U.S.
jurisdiction over foreign cases of torture. "Falun Gong practitioners are going to prosecute
mainland Chinese officials who have participated in
the campaign of violence and hatred against Falun
Gong," the group said in a statement. It called on Falun Gong adherents in China and
elsewhere to provide detailed information of abuses
allegedly carried out by state officials as part of
the hardline drive against the group launched by the
Chinese government in 1999. It said it was looking for evidence of crimes
including "arbitrary arrest and detention, murder and
gratuitous killing, torture, cruel, inhumane and
degrading treatment, rape, the pillaging and
ransacking of practitioners' homes, forced
brainwashing, and filing of false charges." Hoping to hit offending officials in the pocket, the
group asked for information on investments, real
estate, bank accounts and equities held by Chinese
officials abroad. Falun Gong is targeting U.S. officials under the
Torture Victims Protection Act and the Alien Tort
Claims Act. The legislation gives U.S. courts jurisdiction over
acts of torture committed outside the country but a
suit can only proceed if defendants are served with
legal papers while in the United States. To that end the groups asked for information about
travel plans of top Chinese officials. Last month, the group served papers on Zhou Yongkang,
[party's name omitted] Party General Secretary of Sichuan province
while he was on a visit to Chicago. In July, activists lodged a 50 million-dollar suit
against Zhao Zhifei, Public Security Chief of China's
Hubei province during a visit to New York and a
similar lawsuit was filed against former premier Li
Peng by survivors of the 1989 Tiananmen massacre. http://www.europeaninternet.com/china/news.php3?id=637579§ion=default
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