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Chicago Tribune: China's Battle Leaps Borders Consulates lean on U.S. groups to shun Falun Gong By Rudolph Bush and Rick Hepp February 22, 2002 Its fingerprints may not have been on the ouster of
the Falun Gong from Chicago's Chinese New Year parade,
but the Chinese government has moved to keep the
spiritual movement out of events elsewhere in Illinois
and the rest of the nation, stoking a debate over its
influence outside its borders to suppress the
movement. Last year, the Chinese consulate in Chicago persuaded
Decatur's mayor to withdraw a proclamation
commemorating the movement. In Flushing, N.Y., this
year, Falun Gong members were barred from the Chinese
New Year parade after Chinese government officials
urged parade organizers to keep them out.
Falun Gong members accused Utah's governor of bowing
to Chinese embassy demands and reneging on a decision
to declare Jan. 8 "Falun Gong Day" in that state. [...] ...movement members say their exclusion
from everything from ceremonial government resolutions
to parades is part of a concerted effort by Beijing to
stop Falun Gong from spreading its message worldwide. "I see that the problem is the Chinese mainland
government," said Leo Huang, one of the few members of
the parade's organizing group to practice and support
Falun Gong. "They are trying to stop [Falun Gong]
worldwide and it seems to me they are coming into the
Chinese community [in America]." [...] Outside China, Beijing has waged a public relations
war against the movement, using its consulates to
write letters to local governments and business
associations with Falun Gong activities on their
agendas. Dressed in gold robes and massed at the staging
grounds at Wentworth Avenue and 24th Street, the 80
Falun Gong members were turned away from Chinatown's
annual New Year's parade shortly before it began. [...] Backers of the movement say the consulate has worked
to sway Chinatown residents against the Falun Gong,
and most likely exerted influence on the association's
decision. "To stop support for Falun Gong is the No.1 priority
of the Chinese government," Huang said. [...] Beijing has tried to engender that sentiment across
the U.S. Earlier this month in Flushing, N.Y., a
spokesman for the Chinese consulate in New York had a
letter published in a local Chinese newspaper that
urged the parade's organizing committee to "think
seriously" about its decision to allow Falun Gong to
participate. [...]
Tribune staff reporter Alex Rodriguez http://chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-0202220038feb22.story Posting date: 2/23/2002
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