Falun Gong Statement at the DC Press Conference to Free Dr. Chunyan Teng
September 7, 2001
Falun Gong is here today to call for the release of Dr. Chunyan Teng, a
38-year-old permanent resident of the United States, who is now held captive in
a Beijing jail, where she reportedly suffers from torture and severe
maltreatment. Before her detention, she was a successful doctor of Chinese
Medicine, acupuncturist, and teacher in New York. Most importantly, Dr. Teng is
a practitioner of Falun Gong.
First and foremost, we call for the U.S. government to take action to secure
Dr. Teng's release and return. We are pleased that the U.S. House of
Representatives has expressed its concern about Dr. Teng in House Resolution
160, and that U.S. senators, such as Senators Brownback, Durbin, Clinton, and
Schumer have expressed their concern. And now, we fully expect President Bush to
use all possible means to ensure Dr. Teng's freedom, including the leverage
afforded by his visit to China next month. We hope that just as other Chinese
scholars were released in conjunction with Secretary of State Powell's visit to
China, Dr. Teng will be released through President Bush's visit. We also call on
the American people to join in this cause, to help us rescue a fellow American
in need. And finally, of course, we continue to call on China's authorities to
release Dr. Teng.
The detention of Dr. Chunyan Teng never should have happened. Like many
others who practice Falun Gong, Dr. Teng was disturbed by the persecution of
Falun Gong in China. Compelled by her conscience, she courageously decided to
travel to China to do something about the injustice. In early 2000 she arrived
in China. There, she went to great lengths and put herself at great risk to
document how China's authorities are illegally detaining and abusing Falun Gong
practitioners in mental hospitals and elsewhere. Later, she passed some of her
evidence on to western journalists, including a reporter from Agence France
Press. Dr. Teng left China for a short while, and then returned to the Mainland
in May of that same year.
On May 11, 2000, upon entering China, Dr. Teng was immediately arrested by
Chinese police at the Beijing International Airport. She was accused of
supposedly providing state secrets to foreigners, that is, for her work
documenting the psychiatric abuses. Dr. Teng was then placed in Beijing's
Banbuqiao Detention Center, according to the Hong Kong Center for Human Rights
and Democracy. The United States government contacted the Chinese Embassy in the
U.S. to learn of Dr. Teng's whereabouts. However, the Embassy denied that
authorities in China had ever arrested her.
On December 12, 2000, Dr. Teng was put through a secret, mock trial that
barred all family members from attending, and promptly sentenced to three years
in prison. The charge was "prying into and illegally providing state
information to foreigners."
In recent months our worst fears have been confirmed as reports come in of
Dr. Teng being tortured and abused in custody. She has also been interrogated
over fifty times, and illegally fined 30,000 Yuan by guards, as a so-called
"service charge." And family, we are told, are not allowed to visit;
in China authorities often do this to hide a prisoner's wounds and bruises
resultant from torture. We can only imagine the pressure and pain Dr. Teng must
be enduring. She is now subjected to the very same abuses she sought to document
and to end.
We have every reason to worry, and worry deeply. We know that Dr. Teng is
tortured and abused, just as we know that China's regime has vowed to
"eradicate" Falun Gong by the year's end, and that each week we learn
of more and more murders by police as a result. China's authorities have not
listened to criticism, but instead only pumped lies around the world, using
terms like "suicide" and "heart attack" to cover their evil
deeds. We will not wait for Dr. Teng to become victim number 277, to die another
cruel, cold, lonely death. What we need to do is to rescue Dr. Teng -- to rescue
this brave woman, now!
Americans all across this country of ours are taking action to rescue Dr.
Teng. From New York to California, they have held demonstrations, press
conferences, signature drives, letter-writing campaigns, walks, marches, and
even hunger strikes. And her students, colleagues, and patients have formed a
coalition on her behalf. The American people have shown their concern.
We call on President Bush to listen, to listen to his own people, when he
visits China next month. We call on our president to do all in his power to free
Chunyan Teng and bring her home.
Thank you.
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