World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong Publishes Report on Products Practitioners Are Forced to Manufacture in Labor Camps (Photos)
Chinese version at:
http://www.upholdjustice.org/NEWS/about_6/2003-11/1068183097.html
Beijing
Mickey Toys Co., Ltd, Nestle, and Beijing Xin'an Female Labor Camp
Lanzhou
Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd
Appendix 1:
Jennifer Zeng's description of Nestle toy rabbits
Investigative Report on Forced Labor Products Made by Falun
Gong Practitioners in China's Labor Camps (Part I)
World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun
Gong (WOIPFG), established on 23rd January 2003, is committed to
systemically investigating the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in China
by Jiang Zemin and the 610 Office system under his command and the
forced labor camps, detention centers, prisons, etc. This report focuses on the
evidence of forced labor products made by unlawfully detained Falun Gong
practitioners in China's labor camps. The evidence includes a case in the
Lanzhou No. 1 Detention Center in which a 57 year old Falun Gong
practitioner, Wan Guifu, was forced to crack the shells of large watermelon
seeds with his teeth and peel the husk off with his fingers to produce one of
the products distributed by Lanzhou Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd. Because
Wan could not fulfill the highly labor-intensive task, the captain of the 4th
Crew Li Jun encouraged the prisoners in Cell No.9 to torture Wan, which resulted
in his death.
The forced labor system not only violates the basic human
rights of the detainees, but also encourages the prison and labor camp systems
to persecute the detainees because of the huge profit in products made by forced
labor. In addition, it shakes the stability of international labor and trade
market when these cheap products are dumped on the international market. Many
consumers buy the products, misled by the cheap price, as they are totally
unaware of the truth. Yet the Chinese government has a preferential policy in
place for corporations in the forced labor camps and prison systems to encourage
and attract foreign investment. The [2001] No.56 document from the State
Administration of Taxation under China's Ministry of Finance clearly
indicates that if the property and product rights of a company are solely owned
by a prison or forced labor camp system, the company is exempt from corporate
income tax and a land acquisition levy. Advertisements from economic
developing areas in some provinces and cities in China promote cheap labor in
areas where there are prisons and labor camps as a way to attract foreign
investment.
Evidence shows that companies like Beijing Mickey Toys Co.
Ltd, Lanzhou Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd., Jinan Tianyi Printing Co. Ltd., and
Qiqiha'er Siyou Chemical Industry Co. Ltd., worked together with labor camps
and detention centers in Beijing, Lanzhou, Jinan and Qiqiha'er, and forced
detained Falun Gong practitioners to make products without any payment during
their detention period. Australian and Swiss journalists exposed the case of
Beijing Mickey Toys Co. Ltd. approaching Beijing Xin'an Labor Camp to
force detained Falun Gong practitioners to produce toy rabbits for Nestle
Lanzhou Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd., in cooperation with
Lanzhou Dashaping Detention Center and Lanzhou No.1 Detention
Center, forced almost 10,000 detainees (including Falun Gong practitioners
unlawfully detained after July 1999) to produce "Handpicked Melon Seeds". The
process includes cracking the shells of the seeds from a particular kind of
large melon seeds with their teeth, and peeling the husk off by hand to get the
kernels. This process damaged many people's teeth and hands, in some cases the
entire fingernail was peeled off. The detainees were forced to work more then
ten hours a day, but received no payment for their work. In the past few years,
Lanzhou Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd. has become the largest producer of
roasted seeds and nuts in China, with its sales reaching 460 million yuan.
Their main product, Zhenglin Hand-picked Melon Seeds, are exported to places
such as the United States, Canada, Australia, Southeast Asia, Taiwan, etc. The
No. 1 Female Labor Camp in Shandong became the base for Jinan Tianyi
Printing Co. Ltd., Detainees in the labor camp stick labels for products
like "Beijing Jiangyaling" and "Shuanghe" (two of the trade names).
Due to the tight blockade on such information in China and
the deliberate obstruction of this type of investigation, the death and injury
cases of Falun Gong practitioners caused by forced labor during their detention
period reported in this documents are simply a tip of the iceberg.
Currently, WOIPFG is investigating and verifying more cases.
China's forced labor camp system was established in 1957.
According to the document "Proposed Methods on Re-education-through-Labor",
published by the Ministry of Public Security in 1982, education through
labor is used to handle "contradictions among the people", and it is an
"administrative measure to carry out enforced education and reform" [1]. There
is no need to go through any due process to carry out
re-education-through--labor, and detainees are subjected to this punishment. The
re-education-through-labor system has become a very effective tool in the past
fifty years for the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) totalitarian regime to
violate its own constitutions and place itself above all laws in oppressing
Chinese people and dissidents. Presently, "China has a vast forced labor camp
system and perhaps the most secretive and widely feared penal system in the
world."[2]
There are two direct purposes behind China's system of
"re-education-through-labor", firstly to create a reliable and cheap labor force
through forced labor, and secondly to brainwash prisoners. This is the so-called
"reform one's mind through labor". This not only violates the basic human rights
of the detainees, but also encourages the prison and labor camp systems to
persecute the detainees because of the huge profit in products made through
forced labor. In addition, it shakes the stability of international labor and
trade markets when these cheap products are dumped on the international market.
Many consumers buy the products, totally unaware of the reasons behind the cheap
price.
What is indisputable is the illegality of China's forced
labor camp system. It violates numerous conventions and international laws of
which China is a signatory, including the United Nations Charter, Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, and other conventions against torture and cruel and
inhumane penalties. At the same time, the forced labor camp system also violates
China's own constitution. One of China's own legal scholars considers that, "The
forced labor education policy has four problems. The first is the legality of
the system itself. Forced labor camp system, like the detention and repatriation
system, has not been authorized by the law. It has been clearly stated in the "On
Legislation" that: Penalties and forcible measures that restrict personal
freedom can only be prescribed through legislation by the National People's
Congress and its Standing Committee. However, what currently supports the forced
labor system is only the "Proposed Methods on Re-education-through-labor"
published by the Ministry of Public Security. The National People's
Congress has never prescribed law in this aspect...." [3]
In addition, China is a member of the International Labor
Organization (ILO). The torture, unlawful detention, detention and forced
labor for political and religious reasons, etc. in the forced labor camps all
violate ILO's regulation about "Work condition and worker's rights". [4]
Because of the strong resistance from western democratic
countries against "forced labor products", in 1991 China's State Council
re-emphasized the ban on the export of "forced labor products" and stipulated
that no prison is allowed to cooperate or establish joint ventures with foreign
investment. [5] In reality, however, the Chinese government has granted numerous
preferential policies to enterprises under labor camps and prisons, to encourage
and attract foreign investment and export. In the document [2001] No.56 from the
State Bureau of Taxation under China's Ministry of Finance, it is
clearly stated that if the property rights of a company are solely owned by a
prison or forced labor camp system, the company is exempt from corporate income
tax and the land inquisition levy. [6] In advertisement from economic
development zones in some provinces and cities, they even use the cheap (or
free) labor as an advantage to attract foreign investment. In the advertisement
from Southern Hunan Prison of Hunan Province, it is specifically pointed out
that "Xinsheng Coal Mine of Hunan Province, also known as Southern
Hunan Prison of Hunan Province, located in Huangshi, Laiyang of Hunan
Province. ... offers cheap, abundant labor forces, ...(cheaper labors are
available if prison inmates are used), relatively low operating costs. ... Our
business is a special enterprise, enjoys an amicable relationship with the local
government and relevant offices, and is a recipient of various preferential
policies granted by the government. We provide a flexible, harmonious investment
environment. ... Xinsheng Coal Mine warmly welcomes both domestic and
overseas investment." It has also been reported that the Shiliping Labor Camp,
where Falun Gong practitioners were detained, was mentioned in the advertisement
for Huzheng industry zone, where the labor camp is located: The industry zone is
situated south of the railway station in Huzheng. With convenient transport, and
Shiliping Labor Camp and Prison nearby, the industry zone is an industry
development area in the overall development plan of Huzheng.
Since China's former president Jiang Zemin launched the
persecution of Falun Gong in 1999, according to incomplete statistics, more than
180 forced labor camps in China have directly participated in the persecution
through illegal forced labor of over 100,000 Falun Gong practitioners. Up to
October 8, 2003, 219 of the 793 death cases of Falun Gong practitioners resulted
from torture in labor camps, accounting for 28% of the total death toll.
Sixty-nine labor camps directly caused the deaths of Falun Gong practitioners,
including elderly people in their 60s and an 8 month-old infant. Even disabled
practitioners were not spared. [8]
Reports received by WOIPFG show that in addition to forced
brainwashing and torture, China's labor camps also force a large number of Falun
Gong practitioners to work as slave labors. Because of the terrible working
conditions and highly labor-intensive work, Falun Gong practitioners have all
suffered various degrees of damage, both mentally and physically. Some have
become disabled or even died.
Evidence shows that Lanzhou Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd.,
Jinan Tianyi Printing Co. Ltd., and Qiqiha'er Siyou Chemical Industry Co. Ltd.
directly cooperated with labor camps and detention centers to force Falun
Gong practitioners to manufacture forced labor products without any payment
during their detention. Practitioners are forced to work more than 10 hours a
day, sometimes even continuously overnight. Those that cannot fulfill their
tasks are beaten, some even tortured to death. Products of these companies are
available in major cities in China, while products of Lanzhou Zhenglin
Nongken Food Ltd. are exported to more than 30 countries and regions,
including the United States, Canada, Australia, France, Germany, New Zealand,
Southeast Asia, etc.
This initial report by WOIPFG only begins to expose the
illegal prison labors in the labor camps and how they are used in the
persecution of Falun Gong practitioners. Due to the tight blockade on such
information in China and the deliberate obstruction of this type of
investigation, the death and injury cases of Falun Gong practitioners caused by
forced labor during their detention period reported in this document are only a
tip of the iceberg. Currently, WOIPFG is investigating and verifying more
cases.
Beijing Mickey Toys Co. Ltd. was established in 1987. It
is a joint venture specializing in design, manufacture, sales and export of soft
toys. With annual production over 200,000 dozens (200,000 x 12 items), its
products are exported to many countries, including the United States. Canada,
Australia, Denmark, Brazil, Hungary, Japan, etc. It also has a certain market
share in Southeast Asia. [9]
PICTURE 1: Photo of
Beijing Mickey Toys Co., Ltd sign board on its front gate.
Beijing Xin'an Female Labor Camp, (formerly a unit of
Tiantanghe Labor Camp of Beijing, later upgraded to an independent labor
camp), is located in Nanyuan, Daxing Country, Beijing. This labor camp was
originally a male labor camp. Because there were too many detained female Falun
Gong practitioners, the original female labor camp became overcrowded, thus they
swapped the female and male labor camps. Before the persecution of Falun Gong,
there were around 100-200 people in the female labor camp. After the
persecution, the size of this labor camp expanded rapidly from holding over 100
detainees in July 2000 to nearly 1000 in April 2001. Many Falun Gong
practitioners became disabled or even died as a result of torture during their
detention in this labor camp. Xin'an Labor Camp does handwork for several
companies for their export products. Beijing Mickey Toys Co., Ltd is one such
company. In February 2001, nearly 1000 illegally detained Falun Gong
practitioners were forced to make toys with no pay. This forced labor produced
100,000 toy rabbits for Beijing Mickey Toys Co., Ltd subcontracted by
Nestl.
Jennifer Zeng is a Falun Gong practitioner currently living
in Australia. She was detained in Xin'an Labor Camp and was one of the
practitioners forced to make Nestle toy rabbits. She described her experience as
follows. "In the labor camp, we were forced to do all kinds of heavy labor work,
including planting grass and trees, clearing garbage, digging cellars for
storing vegetables in winter, knitting sweaters, knitting cushions, making toys,
producing disposable syringes, wrapping sanitized chopsticks and so on. Most of
the products were for export. In particular, the sweaters we knitted were large
sizes only suitable for foreigners who are big in build. In February 2001, we
received an order for 100,000 toy rabbits. According to the police, the toys
were being made for Nestle to be used in their promotions. The rabbits were
about 30 cm. long, brown in color, with a long neck, wearing a large bright red
collar made from fleecy material, with two black whiskers on each side of the
face, about 5-6 cm long. Some of the rabbits wore cowboy vests, some wore
dustcoats, and some had one eye patched up like a pirate. There were English
letters on their chests, with their fists clenched, thumbs up. There were three
toes on their feet, canary yellow in color. Their tails were white in color and
very short."
The picture below is a photo of the toy rabbits manufactured
for Nestle taken from Mickey Toys Co. Ltd. It's clear that they
are the same as Jennifer described.
PICTURE 2: Toy rabbits
produced by Mickey Co., LTD for Nestle Photograph taken after Jennifer made her
statement.
"Usually the toy rabbits for processing were delivered to the
labor camp by a middle aged woman riding a tricycle. It would go through over 30
processing lines to make a rabbit like this, and it would take over 10 hours to
make one. But the processing fee for each rabbit was only 30 cents (equivalent
to Au$0.06, US$0.04). The processing fees were paid to the labor camp. We didn't
get anything. Usually we began work after getting up at 5 o'clock in the
morning, and worked until 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning the next day. Sometimes
we had to work overtime, otherwise we could not finish the job. At the busiest
time, I did not dare to wash my hands after going to the toilet, in order to
save a few minutes. At night, sometimes I was so exhausted that I could not even
count clearly from 1 to 9. Yet I still had to force my eyes open to knit
sweaters. The pattern of the sweater was quite complicated; sometimes we finally
finished the knitting after much effort only to discover the next morning it had
been knitted completely wrongly. So, we had to unpick the stitches and redo it.
Long hours of highly intensive workload and severe lack of sleep made me feel,
for a very long period of time, that the only thing I needed in my life was
sleep." [10]
The Sydney Morning Herald and Geneva Le Temps, both reported on
this case. On December 28, 2001, the Sydney Morning Herald published an
article by Kelly Burke: "Cute toy rabbits belie ordeal of Chinese labor camps".
Nestlereleased a statement to the Herald, confirming that the company
placed an order with an established Beijing-based toy manufacturer, Beijing
Mickey Toys Co. Ltd. for 110,000 plush rabbits for a Nesquik promotion early
that year. [11]
Frederic Koller, a journalist from Geneva Le Temps
stationed in Beijing, went to Daxing in Beijing to search for evidence, but
Mickey Toys Co. Ltd. refused to grant an interview or to provide
their company's address. According to his own investigation with survivors from
the labor camp and residents living in the industrial area of Daxing city,
Frederic Koller wrote a report that was published in the Saturday economy
section of Geneva Le Temps on April 13, 2002. The article pointed out, as
Nestle admitted, that the Mickey Toys's factory is located in
Daxing, Beijing (the same as Tiantanghe Labor Camp). [12] One year later,
after Mickey Toys orders were reduced by 60%, Mickey Toys voluntarily
invited Frederic Koller to their factory for an interview, hoping the journalist
would write an article to restore their reputation. After the interview and
investigation, the journalist did not write anything to "restore" their
reputation.
Lanzhou Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd
Lanzhou Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd, established in 1988 in
Gansu by Taiwanese businessman Lin Ken, is one of the earliest Taiwan-financed
enterprises in Gansu. From 1992, the company embarked on a joint venture with
Lanzhou Dashaping Detention Center and Lanzhou No.1 Detention Centre
(also known as Xiguoyuan Detention Centre). Some 10,000 detainees
(including dozens of illegally detained Falun Gong practitioners) were forced to
use their hands to peel the shells off melon seeds, and were engaged in
intensive physical labor work. Those detainees were forced to crack the seeds of
a large variety of melon between their teeth, and then peel the husk off with
their bare hands to remove the kernels. In winter, they had to do this work
outside in the freezing cold. Many of them suffered frostbite and the skin on
their hands split, with pus and blood from the wounds oozing onto the melon
seeds. In the summer, the cracking and extracting of kernels from shells
continued unabated. Many had their teeth cracked and damaged from cracking melon
seeds, and even lost their fingernails in the process of extracting the kernels
from their shells. The detainees were forced to squat on their heels to do the
work from early morning till evening for more than ten hours continuously, with
no pay.
Photo shows a packet
of Zhenglin Hand-picked Melon Seeds, sold in a Chinese grocery store in Sydney,
Australia. The front side of the packet shows the price of Aus$4.80. The reverse
side shows details of the Australian importer.
In order for Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd and
Xiguoyuan Detention Centre to make a huge profit, the detainees were given
high quotas for their work. The detention center staff tortured the detainees at
will. Furthermore, there was corruption and economic crimes. In 1998, a division
chief of Dashaping Detention Center committed suicide with a gun when he
was found embezzling money of melon seed process fees.
In April 2001, 57 year-old Falun Gong practitioner Wan Guifu
was illegally sent to Lanzhou No. 1 Detention Center. Wan Guifu was
forced to crack melon seeds with his teeth and extract the kernels with his
fingers. His lips were badly swollen and the fingernails of both his hands fell
off. His fingers were bleeding and oozing pus. Because he was unable to finish
his quota, Wan Guifu was tortured by inmates of Cell No. 9, after secret
instructions from the captain of the 4th crew of Lanzhou No. 1
Detention Center. Wan suffered severe injury to his abdomen. On December 29,
2001, he was sent to the Lanzhou Dashaping Labor Camp Hospital but died
three days later. The doctors extracted a lot of fluid from Wan Guifu's
abdominal cavity, a direct result of the severe torture. [13] According to
confirmation by people (names omitted) who were detained at Lanzhou Dashaping
Detention Center for a long period, the death rate of detainees at the
center was very high, but because of the blockade of information, details of the
death cases are usually not reported. These unpaid manual labor provided huge profits for
Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd. In 1999, the annual sales reached 460 million
yuan. [14] In just a few years, Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd became the
biggest production base in China in roasted seeds and nuts. Its main product
line, "Zhenglin handpicked melon seeds" (shelled by detainees), is sold in more
than 30 countries including the United States, Canada, Australia, France, New
Zealand, and Southeast Asian countries. At present, Zhenglin Nongken Food Ltd
has subsidiary companies overseas in the United States, Canada, Singapore, and
Malaysia. In Australia, they have an import business liaison person. [15]
Shandong No. 1 Female Labor Camp
collaborated with Jinan Tianyi Printing Co., Ltd.
to use forced labor by Falun Gong practitioners
Shandong No.1 Female Labor Camp, located at 20
Jiangshuiquan Road, Jinan City, is commonly known as Jinan Female Labor Camp.
The current head of the camp is Jiang Lihang. Originally there were only about
200 detainees. Since October 2000, however, the number of detainees increased
sharply to more than 700 people. More than 95% of them were Falun Dafa
practitioners who had been illegally kidnapped and detained there. In order to
increase profit from foreign investment so that the labor camp staff could get
more bonuses, the labor camp signed business deals with Jinan Tianyi Printing
Co., Ltd. and several other companies, and turned the labor camp into
handwork workshops for these enterprises. The labor camp forced the detainees to
do excessive amounts of labor work. As a result, detainees (including elderly
ladies over 60 years old) had to work 13 to 14 hours a day and sometimes even
overnight without pay. Due to working overtime for long periods of time, a lot
of detainees had difficulty standing, and it was very common for someone to
faint in the workshop. Those who refused to work would be put into a "confined
solitary compartment" which was totally dark. The practitioners confined there
were not allowed to go to sleep, to wash their faces or brush their teeth. They
were also not allowed to come out of the compartment to go to toilet and were
forced to stand continuously for more than 20 days until they became
unconscious. These people would then have such swollen feet so that they could
not wear shoes and could not walk.
In the first half of 2002 alone, the labor camp had a profit
of 570 thousand yuan [Chinese currency, the monthly salary for an average
Chinese urban worker is about 500 yuan (renminbi)] from the processing
work. In two years, the labor camp built a multi-storied office building, a
reception building and a huge boiler building.
Jinan Tianyi Printing Co., Ltd. is a joint venture
printing company between Shandong International Trust and Investment
Corporation and investment from Hong Kong. The company is located at 16
Honglou South Road, Licheng District, Jinan of Shandong Province. Its current
General Manager is Xu Bo. The company mainly prints packaging boxes for medical
goods and food. It also prints some other paper packaging materials, deluxe
picture albums and posters. Jinan Tianyi Printing Co., Ltd. has several
business partners, the main ones including Shijiazhuang Pharmaceutical Group and
Beijing Double-Crane Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. In 2002, the annual turnover
reached 80 million yuan (renminbi), with a net profit of 6.66 million
yuan (renminbi). [18] Jinan Tianyi Printing Co., Ltd. established
business links with Jinan Female Labor Camp, using unpaid labor to
produce trademark stickers for the company. The trademarks include "Beijing
Jiangyaling" and "Double Crane". In the workshops, where the colored
patterns are printed, the smell of chemical paints causes severe irritation to
the eyes and the respiratory system of the practitioners doing the forced labor.
In order to lower production costs and increase profits, Jinan Tianyi
Printing Co., Ltd. and the labor camp not only provided no protection for
the workers, but also forced Falun Gong practitioners to work overtime and
beyond their physical limit. Practitioners had to get up at 5:30 am and could
not go to bed until 11:00 pm, working at least 15 hours a day, every day. In
some cases, in order to finish the work sent in by these enterprises, the labor
camp would force the practitioners to work through the night. [19] For those
practitioners who could not finish their workload, they would have their terms
in the labor camp extended. Some practitioners could not physically bear the
long period of overtime, it became common for practitioners to faint in the
workshops.
Qiqiha'er Shuanghe Labor Camp
collaborated with Qiqiha'er Siyou Chemical Co. Ltd in Heilongjiang
Province to use forced labor by Falun Gong practitioners
Qiqiha'er Shuanghe Female Labor Camp is an illegal
processing site that has no government approved certificate for producing
agricultural chemicals. It is involved solely in packaging agricultural
chemicals for Qiqiha'er Siyou Chemical Co., Ltd. There are no facilities
or workshops for producing agricultural chemicals in the labor camp, but Falun
Gong practitioners were forced to pack very toxic pesticide powders with no
protective clothing at all, which caused serious damage to the practitioners.
Many practitioners had bleeding noses, others felt sick, vomited, had severe
coughs (there was blood in their phlegm), suffered from abnormal bleeding and
still others nearly went blind because the labor camp was filled with choking
toxic pesticide dust. The victims were forced to continue their work even when
they showed symptoms of being poisoned. On the packages, it is clearly stated
that in producing the pesticides there must be necessary protective facilities
and workers must take showers after work. However, there are no showers in the
chemical factory. In the hot summer, when the chemical dust and sweat mixed
together, it would irritate the skin and the sweat dried out, and resulted in
tinea-type skin ulcers. The victims felt itchy and painful. If the policemen
were angry, they would forbid practitioners to wash, so these practitioners had
to go to bed with chemical dust all over their bodies.
Falun Gong practitioners Zhang Guiqin, Qi Baiqin, Lin Xiumei
and Jiang Yuehong refused to work to protest the persecution, but they were
tortured for doing so. They were forced to 'sit on iron chairs', a form of
torture where their hands were handcuffed from behind their back, their feet
were put into two square holes and they were sandwiched between the back of the
iron chair and an iron slab in front of their chest. They were tortured until
their feet were swollen, their skin torn and flesh gaping or they lost
consciousness. Afterwards, six Falun Gong practitioners, headed by Gao Shanshan,
jointly urged the authorities to stop the persecution. The labour camp confined
Gao Shanshan into a solitary compartment at once and illegally extended her term
in the labor camp for an additional two months to make this 20-year old
practitioner suffer from psychological persecution. [21]
The team leader of the prison guards at the Shuanghe
Female Labor Camp Zhang Zhijie and guard Chen Jianhua illegally extended
most practitioners' terms of detention for another year so that they could
maintain a high employment and high bonuses. The policemen were facing layoffs,
and the more people they released the more likely they would be laid off.
In 1999 alone, the illegally detained Falun Gong
practitioners earned a net profit of 180 thousand yuan (renminbi) for the
labor camp. The policemen at Shuanghe Labor camp received several
thousand yuan each as bonuses and the camp bought new cars. [20]
Because it was illegal to produce agricultural chemicals,
when the authorities came to inspect the camp, production would stop
immediately. Falun Gong practitioners were also forced to pack sanitized
chopsticks in their dormitories where they did not have even basic disinfected
facilities, not to mention proper workshops.
Shuanghe Labor Camp has also resorted to deception to
cheat farmers. Every year during the pesticides seasons, the agricultural
chemical factory would repack piles of expired or returned pesticide, change the
expiration date and put them back on the market again. Falun Gong practitioners
raised the issue with the four directors of the labour camp and the factory
manager a number of times, saying that they should not cheat the farmers.
However, Shuanghe Labor Camp ordered the four directors Zhang Zhijie,
Guoli, Liu Shurong and Wang Mei to rebuke and punish these Falun Gong
practitioners in return. [22]
[1] "Proposed Methods on Re-education-through-Labor",
Ministry of Public Security, January 21st, 1985.
[2] "LAOGAI Handbook", Wu Hongda, Laogai Research
Foundation.
[3] "Calls for reform challenges 'Laogai', which should
be considered in the constitution revision", by Wang Bin, intern reporter,
Nanjing Weekend, July 16th, 2003 at www.sina.com
[4] "International Labor Standard", International Labor
Organization
[5] "State Council's Reply on the Re-statement to Forbid
the Export of Products from Labor Camps", China's State Council, October 5th,
1991.
[6] Notice from the State Bureau of Taxation under
China's Ministry of Financeon the continual exemption of land use tax and
adjustment tax of fixed investment for enterprises of prisons and labor
camps, March 13th, 1998.
[7] An investigation report on China's prisons and labor
camps seeking trade and investments, World Organization to Investigate the
Persecution of Falun Gong, 2003
[8] Announcement of the Formation of the Committee to
Investigate the Crimes of Persecution of Falun Gong Practitioners in China's
Labour Camps, World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun
Gong, 2003.
[9] A brief introduction of Beijing Mickey Toys Co.,
Ltd. 23 July 2003
[10] A testimony in 2003 by Falun Gong practitioner
Jennifer Zheng regarding forced labor at Xin'an Female Labor Camp.
[11] "Cute toy rabbits belie ordeal of Chinese labor
camps", Sydney Morning Herald, by Kelly Burke, December 28th,
2001. (http://old.smh.com.au/news/0112/28/national/national19.html)
[12] "Toys made in China" (Geneva Le Temps), by
Frederic Koller, 13th April 2002 (Saturday, Economics edition)
[13] A record on the persecution of Falun Gong
practitioner Wan Guifu.
[14] A brief introduction of Lanzhou Zhenglin Food Ltd
and its profit
[15] Overseas sales and marketing of Lanzhou Zhenglin
Food Ltd
[18] A brief introduction of Jinan Tianyi Printing Co.
Ltd..
[19] Testimony on the collaboration between Jinan
Tianyi Printing Co. Ltd. and Jinan Female Labor Camp
[20] Qiqiha'er Shuanghe Female Labor Camp forces
Falun Gong practitioners to produce chemicals.
[21] The persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in
Qiqiha'er Siyou Chemical Industry Co. Ltd. and Qiqiha'er Shuanghe
labour camp.
[22] The fraudulent conduct of Qiqiha'er Siyou
Chemical Industry Co. Ltd.
Appendix 1: Description of Nestle toy rabbits by
Jennifer Zeng.
Appendix 2: Testimony of Falun Gong practitioners who
were detained and forced to produce agricultural chemicals at Qiqiha'er
Shuanghe Labor Camp
Appendix 3: Testimony of Falun Gong practitioner Lin
Shenli, "I have been forced to make rubber sports balls in a labor camp"
Appendix 4: Testimony of Falun Gong practitioner Sam Lu
on the export of products produced in forced labor camps
Appendix 1: Jennifer Zeng's description of Nestletoy
rabbits
These rabbit toys are roughly 30-cm-long, brown in color,
with a long neck, and wearing a large bright red collar made of fleece material
around its neck. Both the body and collar are stuffed with man-made cotton wool.
On the head is a small flower, with five petals, the same color as the body. The
diameter of the flower is approximately 4cm. There are two black whiskers about
5-6 cm long on each side of its face. The upper whisker is slightly longer than
the lower one by about 1 cm (or perhaps it is the other way round, I'm not too
sure. But for sure one is 1 cm longer than the other one; it's likely that the
upper one is the longer one). There are two white teeth in their mouths, a small
part of their bright red tongue sticks out of their mouths, the mouths make it
look like the rabbit is smiling. Their eyebrows are black in color. Some of the
rabbits wear cowboy vests, some wear dust coats, and some have one eye covered
with a patch like pirates. There are English letters on their chests, and their
fists are clenched, right hand thumb up. There are three toes on their feet,
canary yellow in color. Their tails are white in color and very short.
The process of making the toy rabbits
Usually a middle-aged woman rides a tricycle carrying the
rabbits to be processed to the labor camp. The steps we did included: flip over
the rabbit which had already been stitched from inside, stuff the man-made
cotton wool into the back, neck, ears, the 5-petal small flower on the head, and
collar. Thread a soft steel wire into the ears, stitch together the back and
collar, sew on the whiskers, use thread to stitch the mouth so as to make the
gaping mouth close a little bit. Sew the eyes to make it more firm, glue on the
eyebrows, use thread to shape the fingers and toes on the hands and feet. (The
hands and feet of the half-made product are in one piece; we used threads to
pull back parts of the hand and foot tightly, so the dent looks like a finger
groove.), Stitch on the tail, stick alphabets on the chests, etc. The tools used
to stick the eyebrows and the alphabets on the chests look like a hot air gun.
Except for the processes of sticking the eyebrows and the alphabets and
stitching on the tails, I did all the other steps. The ears, 5-petal small
flower and collar were separate from the body when they came to us. We stuffed
man-made cotton wool into them. After filling the ears, we flipped them over and
threaded a soft steel wire (or aluminum wire) into them. The process is as
illustrated by the diagram.
Illustration Diagram
If you can get hold of a rabbit, you can take apart the ear,
flip it over to check where there is a small hole for stuffing man-made cotton
wool. The 5-petal small flower also has a small hole for stuffing man-made
cotton wool into the center of the flower.
The rabbit's collar is a circular loop, the diameter is about
4-5 cm. After stuffing in man-made cotton wool, it is directly sewn onto the
rabbit from the outside with red thread. The sewing method is as illustrated in
the diagram.
Illustration Diagram
This is the first time I learnt this method of sewing in the
labor camp. The thread is pulled after sewing and the two sides will appear very
even. You cannot see any traces of the stitching. This method is also used to
sew the rabbit's body from the back (if you can get hold of a rabbit and
carefully pull it open, you can also see if a certain section of its collar and
the section slightly above its back is sewn together using this method). Before
sewing it up, it is first stuffed with man-made cotton wool. There is a wire in
the body of the rabbit (slightly thicker than that in its ears, the wire seems
to be two-ply, all the way through to the back of its head).
The whiskers are made using black nylon strings 1 mm thick.
This kind of nylon string is about 50 cm long before being cut up for making the
whiskers. It is threaded through a needle which is stuck into one side of the
rabbit's cheeks through underneath its nose and out from the other cheek,
leaving a 5-6cm long nylon string at the beginning spot where the needle was
pricked into, thus forming the rabbit's whiskers. Then the nylon string is
knotted so that it does not move and it is threaded back to the other cheek and
cut off. The string is cut off so that it is around 1 cm shorter than the one
above. After making the whiskers on one side, the two whiskers on the other
cheek are completed using the same method. When the nylon string in the needle
is used up, another is threaded in and the process is continued.
(Minghui.net) The Qiqiha'er North Siyou Chemical
Plant (now Qiqiha'er Siyou Chemical Industry Co. Ltd), a
private-owned enterprise, is situated a few kilometres away from the Shuanghe
Labor Camp. Since November 1999 until now, many practitioners from Qiqiha'er
City were illegally detained at the Shuanghe Labor Camp. The agricultural
chemical plant has become a base for persecuting Dafa practitioners. At the same
time, the Shuanghe Labor Camp took advantage of this opportunity to severely
persecute Dafa practitioners. Practitioners were forced to walk all the way
there through bare fields and over dikes and dams. During the summer, whenever
it rained, they had to jog in the mud, and were subjected to the constant
harassment from policemen and criminals. In the freezing winter, they had to
make their way through knee-deep snow.
The polluted air in this chemical plant is so bad that even
from a distance; you could smell a strong, rancid odor. Manufacturing work
itself is dirty, painful tiring, and toxic. In production, heavy smoke full of
chemical dust floated around the entire production unit, and settled all over a
person's clothes, eyebrows, and eyelashes. Even wearing a few protective masks,
practitioners were choked from the chemical exposure, with nasal passages and
eyes becoming swollen. In addition, the Agricultural chemical plant is very
toxic to people's health. Some practitioners incurred red eyes and faces,
chapped hands, as well as major skin irritations all over their bodies. Some of
the female practitioners stopped menstruating for a few months or even the
entire year. There are no hazardous material suits provided and masks are only
assigned to practitioners once. Gloves have never been assigned. It is clearly
stipulated that all who handle or are in proximity to toxic substances, must
take showers at the end of every day. However, practitioners were not permitted
to take showers! Even though it was requested many times, nothing has been
resolved. Practitioners were forced to work over the normal hours every day with
no breaks permitted.
Every time when peak season came, the Agricultural chemical
plant and the Shuanghe Labor Camp conducted a so-called "doing overtime
spurt" in order to make sudden, huge profits. All of this, of course, was at the
expense of practitioners' lives and safety. The truth is, this "overtime" is
nothing more than forced slave labor using practitioners. The practitioners were
overloaded with work day and night, made to wake up at four o'clock in the
morning, and were also denied time to wash their faces or brush their teeth
after eating a morning meal (consisting of thin vegetable soup and some buns).
After this morning routine, they were ordered to the Siyou Chemical Industry
Co. Ltd. During lunch, they only had a half an hour to eat and use the
lavatory. After this, they were sent back to work immediately. At 11 p.m. they
finished work and then had dinner. Upon returning to the dormitory, they were
dirty, exhausted and hungry. Yet, the cruel policemen on duty often wouldn't let
them wash up, so they had to go to sleep with chemical dust all over their
bodies and faces. With the combined heat, over-exhaustion and sweat (combined
with chemical dust), practitioners' skin became very itchy and painful. When the
sweat evaporated from their skin, a "ringworm" shaped rash appeared.
During the peak season for agricultural chemicals, the
Agricultural chemical plant repackages poor-quality agricultural chemicals in an
effort to create inventory in the plant. They also change the expiration dates
and sell them again on the market, cheating whoever buys them. Some chemical
products were in such bad condition they started to grow mould, yet they were
pressed into carton boxes and sold. Truckloads of expired agriculture chemicals
were shipped to this plant from its subsidiaries. Dafa practitioners had taken
up this issue with four directors in the Shuanghe Labor Camp and the
Agricultural Chemical plant head, in a solemn manner that they shouldn't cheat
and harm farmers by practicing fraud. However, the Shuanghe Labor Camp
and Siyou Chemical Industry Co. Ltd didn't listen at all; they asked
people in charge of teams (Zhang Zhijie, Guo Li, Liu Shurong, Wang Mei) to curse
at and force Dafa practitioners to continue packaging these products. Even until
now, the Shuanghe Labor Camp and Siyou Agricultural chemical plant are
still doing these kinds of unethical things.
The Shuanghe Labor Camp made sudden windfall profits
by taking advantage of Dafa practitioners' and using them for their own greedy
gain. Everyone in the labor camp was given thousands of yuan [Chinese dollar,
the average monthly income of urban area is about 500 yuan] as bonuses. With the
money, the authorities bought new cars and received better benefits. However,
what they have gained are immoral assets by selling out their ethics.
My name is Lin Shenli and my nationality is Chinese. I was
born in Shanghai on November 16, 1954. I am currently residing in Toronto,
Canada.
I started to practice Falun Gong in 1996. On July 21, 1999,
under Jiang Zemin's insane persecution of Falun Gong, I was kidnapped by the
police, who locked me up in a police station for two months. This was just so
that I could be brainwashed into giving up Falun Gong. On December 24 the same
year, I went to Beijing to appeal for Falun Gong. I was again arrested and sent
back to Shanghai Pingliang Police Station. I was locked up for 48 hours, and
then I was detained for a further 15 days because I had refused to give up my
belief in "Truthfulness, Compassion and Tolerance". On January 24, 2000, because
I called on the government to have a peaceful dialogue with Falun Gong
practitioners, I was sentenced to one and a half years in a labor camp. I was
sent to The No. 3 Labor Camp and was assigned to the 1st Section of
the 2nd Division. The address is PO Box 1/902, Shichahe, Dafeng,
Jiangsu.
In the labor camp, every morning I was forced to get up to
start work around 6:00 am. I was not allowed to stop until 9:00 pm. The work was
manual labor, making rubber sports balls. It involved using iron needles to
punch holes and then using threads to stitch through the holes and the two
threads had to be pulled and tightened at the end of the process. After long
periods of the same repeated tasks, my hands got mutilated by the threads and
started to bleed. The threads were waxed and prisoners informed me that wax is
poisonous. That explained why both of my hands were swollen and infected. Due to
long hours of intensive labor work, a large area of my chest and buttocks began
to bleed and ulcerate. Especially, in the ulcerated buttock area, blood seeped
onto my underwear and tracksuit pants. Every day my clothes were like they had
been soaked in blood and water. As the blood dried up on my underwear and then
became wet again, several times a day, the underwear would eventually get stuck
onto my skin. This made walking very difficult, including taking off my
underwear when going to the toilet. Every time when I had to force it off, a
layer of my skin would be peeled off as well. At night, I couldn't sleep
properly because I couldn't lie down. Coupled with the long hours of hard
intensive labor work, I was exhausted. If I did fall asleep at night, it was
restless as, if I accidentally touched the sore parts of my body, I would be
woken up by the most excruciating pain. Even though I was in this condition, I
was not allowed to rest. I was still forced to work intensively. Through forced
labor, the cost of the production of goods in China was kept very low. It didn't
matter whether we were Falun Gong practitioners or criminals, we didn't get paid
for our work. A variety of rubber sports balls were made, including Adidas and
some Japanese brands. Some were made for souvenirs and exported, as I was
informed by prisoners while they were teaching me how to make the balls. They
were not only exploiting prisoners to earn foreign exchange currency, but they
also wanted me to give up my belief in "Truthfulness, Compassion and Tolerance".
When I refused, they extended my term for a further six months. Hence I was
detained in labor camp for a total of two years.
Lin Shenli
November 4, 2003
Sam Lu's Personal Experience: Why Are China's Products so
Cheap?
I used to be a graduate student in Georgia State University
in 1996. I'd like to share my personal experience to let people know why some
products from China are so cheap.
Before I returned to the USA in February 2001, I worked as a
tax auditor in China for 9 years. On June 7, 2000, I was arrested in China only
because I handed in a letter at the State Appeal Bureau in Beijing to express my
opinion about Falun Gong, which is a traditional exercise based on
"Truthfulness--Compassion--Forbearance", and is being persecuted in China. I was
put in a jail in Guangdong Province for almost two months.
Here I will not mention how the Chinese government persecuted
family church members, Tibetan Monks and Falun Gong practitioners .I only want
to let you know how some products from China are made and why they are so cheap.
In prison, I was forced to work on export products such as
toys and shopping bags without pay .I still remember one of the shopping bags
was printed with "National Gallery of Art (# #)"
The cell was only about 300 sq. feet in size, with 20
prisoners and one toilet inside. They slept and worked in the cell.
Sometimes we were forced to work until 2:00 am to keep up
with the schedule. They only provided two meals a day (only once a week you have
meat in your food). In other words, being hungry, you still need to work more
than 15 hours per day.
The police used a wire whip to beat you if you did not do a
good job or you could not keep up with the schedule.
During this desperate time in prison, I was always wondering
who gave them the business and who helped them to abuse us.
Now the same kind of tragedy is happening to my wife. She was
sentenced to forced labor camp for three years without any trial and without a
lawyer only because she handed out flyers in the street to clarify to the Truth
about Falun Gong. She has already been detained for more than 34 months.
In my wife's letter to my parents, she mentioned that she was
forced to do embroidery work for export. The hard work, malnutrition and torture
made my wife almost lose her eyesight.
In that female labor camp alone where my wife is detained
now, about 3000 female Falun Gong practitioners have been detained there and
forced to work for export business.
According to human rights organizations, there are more than
100,000 Falun Gong practitioners detained in China's Forced Labor Camps .How
many people other than Falun Gong practitioners are detained in forced labor
camps and prisons and are forced to work without pay for China's export
business? Who knows?
Sam Lu
250 VILLANOVA DR. ATLANTA,GA 30336
TEL:404-629-6262 (O) 678-595-7229 (C)
Samlu69@hotmail.com
( OCT.16,2003)
Chinese version available at
http://www.upholdjustice.org/NEWS/about_6/2003-11/1068183097.html
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