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The Standard: Chinese abused us, says Falun Gong protester --Brock University student Christine Loftus recounts her arrest in Beijing, says she'd go back again Kalvin Reid After spending more than a day in the custody of Chinese officials, Christine Loftus said she
would do it all again in the hope of reaching more Chinese people with the messages of Falun Gong. "I've read a lot of the experiences in China, but I didn't realize how many people it
actually affected and how severe it was until I was there and I saw the faces of all those
people," Loftus said in a telephone interview from her parent's Barrie home Saturday. Loftus, a 22-year-old Brock University student, and her boyfriend Jason Pomerleau, 24, from
Boston, were detained by Chinese police Thursday at a Beijing marketplace while distributing
information about the Falun Gong, or Falun Dafa, movement. They were released from custody and arrived in Vancouver Friday. Loftus arrived in China last Tuesday, but didn't meet up with Pomerleau until the following day.
After a day of organization, Loftus and Pomerleau hit the streets of Beijing with leaflets and
CD-ROMs preaching the benefits of Falun Gong. "I wasn't sure how it would go, but people just crowded around," Loftus said.
"Everyone wanted a leaflet. A person I talked to said they knew the government was lying to
them." Falun Gong supporters claim the Chinese Communist government is persecuting their Chinese
brethren. Many have been arrested over the past few years, and there are stories of torture and
executions. Wrapping up their business in the Beijing marketplace, Loftus and Pomerleau were preparing to
move to another location when authorities intervened. They were grabbed while walking to the bus
stop. "About 15 security guards and police officers grabbed us and pulled us behind a
building," Loftus said. As she was being carted away, she shouted out, in Chinese, "Falun Dafa is good." The
crowd, she said, was shocked. Loftus said the police took them to a back room in an underground parking lot. "From that point on, we went from police station to police station," she said.
"They interrogated us a number of times. They would not let us call home to our families to let
them know what's going on. They would not let us contact either of our embassies." She said they were not given food for 20 hours. She said they tried to break her thumb, stepped
on her, got her by the back of the head, shook her and threw her into a cell. They'd ask questions
and ridicule the answers. "I was never actually physically beaten, but I was definitely abused," Loftus said.
"We just did not know what was going to happen to us. They would never tell us anything. I
can't imagine what happens to the Chinese practitioners." The Falun Gong movement [...] is intended to cultivate truthfulness, compassion and forbearance
among its followers. Loftus and Pomerleau were held for 25 hours. Back home, her family began to worry when she didn't
check in at pre-arranged times. "She had always been good at checking in," said her twin brother, Jason. "We're
very happy to have her home." Christine had planned on staying in China until today. Instead, she is expected to be back at
Brock attending classes. But she said she didn't know she was coming home Friday until about a half hour before they left
for the airport. "They escorted me the whole way," she said, "completely treated me like a
criminal. A police officer escorted me right to my seat on the airplane." Loftus said she felt relieved to be home, but she had mixed feelings. "I was happy to be home and safe again, but I was very disappointed," she said. "I
went there hoping to reach more people than we did. "I hoped that I would be able to do more before I was detained. I felt like I was just
starting." But she said she has no regrets about making the trek around the world. "The people I did talk to, it had a good effect on them." Posting date: 4/3/2002
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