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China Times: Falun Gong in Hong Kong
(Clearwisdom.net) On March 2, an editorial in the China Times stated that
more and more people were starting to practice Falun Gong in Taiwan. Although
not everyone believes in the practice, people could hardly dislike it, let alone
hate it, since Falun Gong advocates "Truthfulness, Compassion, and Forbearance"
and does not compete for material things. Falun Gong practitioners usually seem
to be kind and treat others warmly. However, as kind as Falun Gong practitioners are, when crossing the border
into Hong Kong, they were brutally driven back by the Hong Kong police.
Obviously, Hong Kong and Mainland China have already become "one country, one
system." Hong Kong is dancing to Beijing's tune and has demonized Falun Gong. We really could not find anything "evil" in Falun Gong. Yet the Hong Kong
government looks at it like a poisonous snake or a beast of prey, possibly
because the government has evil in its heart and therefore sees evil everywhere! The Hong Kong government probably fears that after the Falun Gong
practitioners from Taiwan enter Hong Kong, they will join with the practitioners
in Hong Kong to demonstrate and protest... However, is there any law in Hong
Kong that prohibits people from demonstrating or protesting? Additionally, from
what we know about Falun Gong practitioners from Taiwan, they may just want to
share experiences with the practitioners in Hong Kong and don't necessarily want
to participate in protesting or demonstrating. Even the practitioners who attend the meeting will participate in a
demonstration. What open society would treat a demonstration or a protest like a
rebellion? If the practitioners from Taiwan violate any laws in Hong Kong,
couldn't the government punish them according to the law? Actually, the Hong Kong government knows in its heart whether Falun Gong
practitioners will "gather and make trouble." It is not Falun Gong "making
trouble" that the Hong Kong government is afraid of, but Zhongnanhai [location
of the central Chinese government] "causing trouble." Obstructed by its
international position, the Hong Kong government dares not arrest Falun Gong
practitioners solely on the basis of their beliefs. However, pressed by Beijing,
it could not acknowledge Falun Gong as a righteous belief either. Therefore, the
Hong Kong practitioners could demonstrate, yet the Taiwan practitioners were
denied entry at the border. Under British rule, Hong Kong had no democracy but freedom. After being
returned to China, even Hong Kong's freedom seems to be in danger. |