Female Practitioner Li Shuyuan from Huludao City, Liaoning Province, is Murdered
(Clearwisdom.net) Li Shuyuan was a 51 year-old woman from Dahuangdi Village, Taijitun Town,
Lianshan District of Huludao City, Liaoning Province. On the night of July 6, 2002, sources report
that she was murdered by a group of malicious thugs lurking in Jinlizi Village. On October 17, 1999, Li Shuyuan went to peacefully appeal for Falun Gong in Beijing. She was
detained by Huludao City Police Department for a month. During the detention, a guard named Yuan
beat her up with a baton and a wolf's-tooth-stick because she performed the Falun Dafa exercises.
She was bruised all over and her lower back was too painful to move herself around. Afterwards, Li
Shuyuan went to appeal in Beijing again. Policemen from Taijitun Town Police Station climbed the
walls and broke into her home. They ransacked her home and extorted 1000 Yuan [200 Yuan is
average monthly income in rural areas of China] from her. On July 7, 2000, policemen from Taijitun Town Police Station kidnapped her and took her to a
brainwashing class. She was detained 28 days there. In the hot summer, she and twelve other male and
female practitioners were packed together in a 15-square-meter room [about 160 square feet].
It was stuffy and damp. They were forced to sit and sleep on the cement floor day and night, as
there was no bed or blankets. Their own families had to send them meals everyday. Many practitioners
were beaten up or exposed under the scorching sun for over a dozen days. In the Spring Festival of 2001, in fear of Li Shuyuan's going to appeal in Beijing, the town
authority ordered Li Dehua and Yu Detian to go to Li Shuyuan's home every morning and night to watch
her. This continued for a week. On June 11, 2001, Li Shuyuan was reported to police by a thug when she was distributing
truth-clarifying flyers. Policemen from Huangtukan Township Police Station beat her up and then
forcibly took her to Nanpiao District Police Department. As she would not tell where the flyers were
from, division chief Shi and team chief Wang brutally beat her from 2:00 p.m. until 11:00 p.m. Her
face was swollen and deformed. Her mouth was broken and bleeding. She felt excruciating pain in her
chest when breathing. Her leg was beaten black and blue. Yellow secretions ran down from the bruised
part of her leg for over a week. It was still painful even one month after the beating. Afterwards,
she was transferred to Nanpiao District Detention Center and then to Huludao City Detention Center.
On August 27, 2001, she was released. On September 20, 2001, two policemen from Huangtukan Township Police Station tricked Li Shuyuan
into coming to Nanpiao District Police Department and then notified her that she had been sentenced
to three years of forced labor in the Masanjia Forced Labor Camp. As Li Shuyuan wanted to appeal,
she was temporally detained in Nanpiao District Detention Center. On the sixth night, Li was sent in
a comma to Nanpiao District Hospital. Afterwards, her family brought her home. After she was back
home, the Nanpiao District policemen went to her home to arrest her several times so she was forced
to leave home and live in exile. On the night of July 6, 2002, Li Shuyuan and two fellow practitioners went to distribute
truth-clarifying flyers in Jinlizi Village. She did not return. On the next day, her lifeless body
was found in Jinlizi Village. She had been forced to the ground with her hands behind her back. Her
face was covered with dirt. There was evidence of her being held there, kicking and struggling for
her life. Some truth-clarifying materials were found under her body. Bruising and other clues in the
surrounding area also confirmed that there had been a struggle, and that she had been forcibly held
down. Her head was swollen and had a bump on it, and there were other wounds on her body. According
to the autopsy by legal medical experts, she died of asphyxiation. People hearing of her death all said that she had been murdered by a group of thugs staking out
the village looking for practitioners to arrest.
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.ca/mh/articles/2002/7/15/33326.html
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