BBC Monitoring: China "Silent" on Whereabouts of Taiwan Falun Gong Member
23 October, 2003
[BBC] Chinese authorities kept silent on the whereabouts of missing Taiwanese
Falun Gong practitioner Lin Hsiao-kai yesterday, ignoring multi-channel
extrication demands.
"I have been calling Shanghai's national security bureau, but they keep
telling me to call back without offering confirmation or elaboration," said
Lin's wife Chen Shu-ya, who believed the bureau arrested and detained her
husband for practising Falun Gong.
Lin, who entered China to visit friends on 29 September, failed to make his
return trip by 8 October. After waiting a week, his wife officially sought help
from the Strait Exchange Foundation on 16 October. Reacting to Chen's request,
the SEF sent an official letter to its Beijing counterpart the Association for
Relations Across the Taiwan Strait Tuesday, demanding that Chinese authorities
ensure Lin's safety.
Furthermore, the SEF also sought help from Taiwanese businessmen in Shanghai.
Yeh Huei-te, chairman of the Shanghai-based Taiwanese Chamber of Commerce,
who received a request for assistance from the SEF Tuesday, said that he had
officially submitted a document asking for the Shanghai Taiwan affairs' office
to search for Lin.
Yeh said that he has learned from Chinese government records that Lin entered
China on 29 September, but there is no record of departure from China.
The Taiwan affairs' office, however, has yet to provide any confirmation or
explanations as to Lin's location, according to Yeh.
Despite the Taiwan Falun Dafa Institute insisting that Lin had never been an
active practitioner, Yeh said in an interview from Shanghai that Lin could not
have been arrested, if he kept a low profile and refrained from publicly
advocating the Falun Gong practices in China.
Rumours persist that Lin carried some Falun Gong literature with him to China
and which could constitute reason for his arrest.
Chen Ching-hsi, director of its Taiwan institute, emphasized that FLG is not
a secretive organization and all of their materials are available on web sites,
and carrying those materials should not have been an issue.
Lin's wife, another FLG practitioner, echoed Chang's remark and condemned
China's illegal action towards FLG practitioners.
"China's performance is simply illegal, no matter how you look at the
issue from any perspective," Chen said, explaining that FLG members have
carried FLG materials to some 60 nations around the world without any trouble.
China's former President Jiang Zemin launched a campaign to crack down on the
Falun Gong by using China's special "610 Office" since July 1999.
According to its official web site faluninfo.net, some 800 FLG practitioners
have been tortured to death, while more than 500 have been illegally sentenced
to jail in China.
In a bid to make China's former president pay damages to the organization,
practitioners have filed lawsuits against him around the world, which include
Illinois in the United States and Madrid in Spain.
Source: Taiwan News web site, Taipei, in English 23 Oct 03
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