New Zealand Herald: Auckland Airport bows to China's ire
By AINSLEY THOMSON
17.07.2002 Auckland Airport has bowed to pressure from the Chinese Government and removed a display
promoting a spiritual movement banned in China. The display promoting the Falun Gong, outlawed in China in 1999, was removed last week after the
Chinese Embassy complained. In April, Falun Gong New Zealand practitioners signed a 12-month contract with advertising agency
Look Outdoor to display a sign showing a woman meditating and the words, "The world needs
truth, compassion and forbearance", at the airport. But Look Outdoor received complaints from the Chinese Embassy, which wanted the sign removed. The embassy said it was offensive to Chinese travelers because Falun Gong was banned in China. Aimee McKay, a media consultant for Look Outdoor, said she explained to the embassy that
advertising the movement was not illegal in New Zealand and that the agency had a contract with
Falun Gong. But the agency received instructions from Auckland Airport to remove the sign. The airport's commercial general manager, Murray Barclay, said the decision to remove the sign
was made after complaints were received from the embassy. "The decision was made on the balance of everything," he said. A spokesman for the embassy said the consulate-general in Auckland made the complaints because
Chinese residents and tourists were offended by the message, which was deceptive and misleading. [...] Shelley Shao, one of around 100 Falun Gong [practitioners] in New Zealand, said she was shocked
that China had so much influence in New Zealand. "It breaks the law because we have a contract; it also breaks human rights." She said Falun Gong was a meditation system, similar to yoga or tai chi - which were allowed in
China. It was founded on high moral values, and China had made a mistake in [persecuting] it. Ms Shao said it had not been decided if the movement would take legal action over the removal of
the sign. Look Outdoor had offered to refund its money, but she would prefer the sign to be reinstalled. The Falun Gong movement was formed in 1992 by Li Hongzhi and has [practitioners] in more than 40
countries. Organizers say that since China [suppressed] Falun Gong, more than 50,000 [practitioners] have
been jailed, sent to labor camps or put in mental institutions and many have been tortured, some to
death. The Chinese Government accuses Falun Gong - which stunned China's leadership with a mass protest
outside its central Beijing compound in April 1999 - of wanting to overthrow it. Falun Gong denies that it has any political aims. The Chinese Government has acknowledged several deaths in custody, but said they were as a result
of suicide or illness.
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