Cyberpresse (A French media from La Presse, Montreal, Canada): Montréal Falun Gong [practitioners] have had enough of being harassed and are suing a Chinese newspaper
Silvia Galipeau
La Presse, February 9, 2002
A Falun Gong poster (center) in Place
d'Armes, the Montréal metro station closest to Chinatown
Tired of watching themselves be insulted, abused, in a word,
tarnished, Montreal [practitioners] of Falun Gong have filed a defamation
lawsuit for nearly 15 million dollars against a Chinese journal of the
metropolis, La Presse chinoise
The suit was filed in December and will be heard on May 9th. The
petitioners, numbering 126, are claiming $100,000 each for damages. Three
temporary injunctions have already been granted.
The first, in December, prohibited the newspaper from publishing words [that
are] "unreasonable against Falun Gong practitioners," Michael Bergman,
the lawyer for the complainants explained yesterday. The second, the 7th
of January, renewed the ban. One month later, that is, this past Thursday, the
court took charge again to specify, among other things, restrictions prohibiting
the newspaper from making use of terms such as "evil",
"hate", "deviant", "perverted practices" or
"enemies of the State", in reference to Falun Gong adherents.
Falun Gong, or Falun Dafa, combines [Master Li's teaching], physical
exercises and meditation. 100 million members strong on the planet, according to
its own estimates, the movement has been banned in China since 1999. Since then,
its adherents have been unceasingly persecuted, hundreds having lost their lives
in custody, they say. Thousands of others have been sent, without trial, to
"re-education through forced labor" camps. China is regularly
condemned by various organisations such as Human Rights Watch and the United
Nations for its non-respect of human rights.
Nonetheless, the defence counts on contesting the lawsuit. "The comments
were reasonable under the circumstances", the lawyer for the newspaper,
Aram Oulousian, said yesterday. It was not possible to talk to the publisher,
Crescent Chau, absent until Monday.
In other respects, to struggle against this defamation and the more general
misunderstanding of this movement, a Falun Gong adherent has launched an
information publicity campaign in the metro. Fifteen posters are put up in
different stations, inviting the curious to visit the movement's web site.
"I would like to share the beauty and the goodness of Falun Gong with
the Quebec people", explained the instigator of the campaign, Cheng. She
said she paid for the posters from her own pocket, at a price of $4,000. It was
not possible to verify this information, as Metro Media Plus, responsible for
the placement of media in the metro, judges it confidential.
Be that as it may, Mrs. Cheng does not make a cent from the campaign. Zhuan
Falun, the bible of the movement, written by its founder Master Li Hongzhi,
prohibits anyone teaching or sharing the practice with someone from obtaining
any kind of financial benefit. "Our goal is to do good", the young
lady summed up.
Translated from an online version (French) from
http://www.cyberpresse.ca/reseau/actualites/0202/act_102020064890.html
Chinese version available at
http://www.minghui.ca/mh/articles/2002/2/14/24937.html
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