Irish Times: Imprisoned Falun Gong student freed in China
From Miriam Donohoe, in Beijing
The Trinity College postgraduate student held in a camp in China for
the
last two years for "re-education through labour" because of his
membership in the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement was released
yesterday. Mr Zhao Ming was met by family members when he left the Tuan He Farm
Labour Camp in Daxing County, north of Beijing, early yesterday
morning. He spent last night with relatives in the city. Sources close to Mr Zhao said he was very weak and could hardly lift
anything but that his mental state was strong. No application was made by Mr Zhao to the Irish Embassy in Beijing up
to
late last night for a visa to return to Ireland, and it is not known
what his immediate plans are. A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman in Beijing confirmed to The
Irish
Times that his "treatment" was complete and he had finished his
"re-education". She said the Chinese government would not be putting any obstacles in
the way of Mr Zhao leaving the country if he so wished. He was free to go through the procedures, she added. Thousands of Falun Gong members are being held in re-education camps in
China, and there are reports of tortures and even deaths of detainees. Mr Zhao's release came after a high-profile campaign in Ireland by the
Falun Gong movement and Trinity College students. His detention was raised by the Taoiseach, Mr Ahern, with the Chinese
Premier, Mr Zhu Rongji, during his visit to Ireland last September. The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr Cowen, also raised the matter with
his Chinese counterpart during a visit to Beijing last month. During
the
meeting Mr Cowen was given assurances about Mr Zhao's release. A spokesman for the Minister last night welcomed news of the release.
He
said the Irish Embassy in Beijing was ready to process any visa
application made by Mr Zhao to return to Ireland. Mr Zhao was arrested after travelling home to Beijing during the
Trinity
College Christmas holiday in December 1999. He was placed under house arrest and had his passport taken, preventing
him from returning to Ireland to resume his studies. He broke house arrest to attend a rally in Tiananmen Square and then
went into hiding. He was not heard of until May 2000, when it was reported he had been
detained without trial in the Tuan He Farm Labour Camp for his
involvement in the Falun Gong movement. Falun Gong claims it has received reports from fellow detainees that Mr
Zhao was tortured in the labour camp. It was claimed that on one
occasion he was beaten by more than 10 people on the ankles and knees
with wooden sticks and was unable to speak properly for two weeks
afterwards. Falun Gong was outlawed in July 1999 after 10,000 members marched on
the
Chinese leaders' compound, Zhongnanhai, demanding official recognition.
The Chinese government says Falun Gong is an [Jiang's regime's slandeous words] and has been
waging a massive propaganda war against the movement in the last year. Joe Humphreys writes: Irish campaigners against the imprisonment of Mr
Zhao have welcomed the news of his release. Mr Jim Dowling, spokesman for Friends of Zhao Ming, a campaign group
set
up two years ago after the arrest of the Trinity College student, said:
"We are all delighted, although we won't be able to rest easy until we
see Ming himself back in Ireland." Mr Dowling, a Trinity lecturer who studied with Mr Zhao, described his
release as "the end of a long road. We'll be having a big party to mark
his return". The campaign group comprised mainly members of the TCD Students' Union
(SU), Graduate Students' Union (GSU) and Amnesty International, along
with Falun Gong practitioners in Ireland. It organised several public rallies and letter-writing campaigns
whereby
more than 2,000 appeals were sent to the Minister for Foreign Affairs
and Chinese officials in Dublin, Beijing and at the farm labour camp
where Mr Zhao was detained. "It belies the myth that students are a cynical, jaded bunch who are
uninterested," said Mr Dowling. "This shows that if something resonates
with the student body they get involved."
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