Australia's Minister for Foreign Affairs Alexander Downer: China's Maltreatment of Falun Gong Practitioners - Including Relatives of Australian Citizens - Contravenes the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention Against Torture
(Clearwisdom.net)
Dear [...],
Thank you for your letter of 13 November 2002 concerning
representations you have received from Mr Bill Weigerink and his wife, Ms Esther
Wang, who are concerned about family members detained in China for practicing
Falun Gong.
The Government is concerned about the situation of these
detained family members and will seek information on their welfare from the
Chinese Government, through the Australian Embassy in Beijing. To facilitate
this, I would encourage Mr Weigerink and Ms Wang to provide further information
to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, either by letter or by
contacting Ms Elly Lawson on 02 6261 1137.
Ms Wang and her husband have written to me before about the
detention of Ms Wang's mother, Mrs Li Jielin. This matter is of concern to the
Government. My department made representations on Mrs Li's behalf on general
human rights grounds at the last two rounds of the bilateral Human Rights
Dialogue, most recently held in Canberra on 14 August 2002. The Chinese have
told us that Mrs Li was arrested in July 2000 [...] and
sentenced to three years in Yongchuan prison, Sichuan. I have asked my
department to make further representations on Mrs Li's behalf.
On the broader question of Falun Gong, the Government takes
no position on the doctrine or practices of Falun Gong (also known as Falun Dafa).
But the Government considers that China's ban on Falun Gong breaches fundamental
rights of assembly and free expression. The Government also believes that
China's maltreatment of Falun Gong practitioners - including relatives of
Australian citizens - contravenes the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR), which China has signed, but not yet ratified, and
the Convention Against Torture. Australia has repeatedly urged China to
ratify the ICCPR as soon as possible, and with a minimum of reservations.
The Australian Government has raised its concerns to the
Chinese authorities on many occasions and at the highest levels, including
during the last round of the Human-Rights Dialogue. Though China's response did
not suggest an easing of its stance on Falun Gong, the Chinese did say they were
studying their laws to see how they would need to be revised to conform to ICCPR
obligations: this is an important step towards ratifying the ICCPR. The Chinese
also advised that they were currently reviewing their Criminal Procedure Law
with a view to introducing stricter provisions to prevent the admission of
evidence obtained through torture.
Australia's policy on human rights in China reflects the
Government's judgment that non-confrontational dialogue and well-directed
technical assistance are more likely to achieve lasting improvements in China's
respect for human rights than the alternative approaches.
Yours sincerely
Alexander Downer
11 Dec 2002
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