DJ: Freed Swiss Falun Gong Followers Resume Hong Kong Protest
March 14, 2002 HONG KONG (AP)--Four Swiss Falun Gong followers resumed a protest outside
China's liaison office Friday, but 12 Hong Kong practitioners remain in custody
- refusing bail after being arrested in a scuffle with police. The Swiss, who were freed late Thursday, moved their demonstration several
steps away from the front door of the Chinese government office, to exactly the
spot police told them earlier they could use for their protest. Swiss protester Erich Bachmann said police had threatened to deport the
foreign Falun Gong followers if they didn't cooperate, a charge disputed by
Police Superintendent Michael Chiu. The Swiss are vowing to refuse food for three days in protest of China's
crackdown on Falun Gong but disputed suggestions they sought to provoke the
arrests to gain publicity. They were arrested after police repeatedly warned
them to move following complaints from the Chinese liaison office. "It is 100 percent sure we did nothing illegal," said Bachmann, who
comes from the northern Swiss village of Kreuzlingen. The Swiss said they had
earlier been denied entry to mainland China [...] Falun Gong spokeswoman Sharon Xu said the Hong Kong practitioners - arrested
when they formed a circle to try to shield the Swiss from police - were refusing
bail because they saw it as an admission of wrongdoing. "They want to be released unconditionally," Xu said. Chiu said he wasn't sure what the police could do while the Falun Gong
followers won't accept bail. "We have no option but to keep them here," Chiu said. "We're
obtaining legal advice as to what to do next." Police arrested the Falun Gong followers for obstruction but no charges have
been filed yet. The meditation [group] remains legal in Hong Kong, where followers carry out
frequent protests against Beijing's often-brutal [persecution] on the group. Thursday's incident marked only the second time Falun Gong followers were
arrested here - both in demonstrations directly in front of the Chinese
government office. Both Falun Gong and the police claimed to have sustained minor injuries, but
Falun Gong rejected a charge from police that one officer was bitten on the
arms. "They didn't bite," Xu said. "That's totally untrue."
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