International Herald Tribune : China vs. Falun Gong: After four years of repression, it's time to let go
By John Li BETHLEHEM, Pennsylvania -- Four years ago, on the night of July 20, 1999, a campaign was started
across China to round up citizens practicing Falun Gong, a spiritual movement just rising in the
West. From the rust belts of Manchuria to the boomtowns bordering Hong Kong, tens of thousands were
jailed in the darkness of that night. Four years later, the campaign continues, now with a confirmed death toll of 748, all of whom
died in police custody. Falun Gong has become an embarrassment for China, marring the global
infatuation with its booming markets and cheap labor has been a stigma growing larger and larger.
The persecution serves as a reminder that the hulking monster behind the Great Leap Forward, the
Cultural Revolution and the Tiananmen massacre is still very much alive. No one would have predicted the stunning resilience and tenacity of the movement four years ago,
when it was targeted by China's then-leader, [Jiang] Zemin, as the biggest threat from within. No
dissent movement had managed more than four days of resistance before. The pro-democracy movement in
1989, when a million people gathered openly, was crushed within a day and remains marginalized to
this day. As China's top leader, Jiang demonstrated an unusual penchant for showmanship and flamboyance on
the world stage, and it is widely suspected that the popularity of Falun Gong touched a raw nerve.
This came to a head when thousands of Falun Gong practitioners gathered peacefully in downtown
Beijing on April 25, 1999 to seek official recognition. Initially, the Chinese government had been mild and conciliatory toward the Falun Gong. In fact,
Falun Gong was promoted overseas by Chinese embassies and consulates. A friend of mine once told me
that his first experience with a Falun Gong conference, in March 1998, included lodging at a branch
of the Xinhua News Agency in Queens under the aegis of the Chinese consulate in New York. Then, on Jiang's whim, everyone - including then-premier Zhu Rongji - had to do an about-face.
Jiang's ego and obsession created a vendetta that not even his fellow Politburo members could stop. The campaign bore the marks of earlier political upheavals: media attacks; book burnings; show
trials; monitoring by grassroots Communist committees; supra-governmental outfits-the so-called
"610 offices" - that answered to nobody but Jiang himself, and, above all, ceaseless
conspiracies and deceits to turn the Chinese people against Falun Gong. Against the backdrop of China's robust economic growth and unprecedented opening to the outside,
the campaign against Falun Gong appears out of sync. But it is real and lethal. A Wall Street
Journal article by Ian Johnson, who won the 2001 Pulitzer Prize, documented the demise of Zixiu
Chen, a 58-year-old Falun Gong practitioner from Weifang, Shandong Province. She died mangled and
bruised within three days of her detention in the local "610" office. In October 2001, Yuxi Sun, the spokesman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, announced that China
had found anthrax in a letter sent by Falun Gong practitioners abroad. Sun retracted the outlandish
claim several days later as a "technical error," and was promptly sent off to Afghanistan. Falun Gong efforts at peaceful dissent at public venues have waned following the Tiananmen
self-immolation. Instead, safer and more effective approaches have been employed to let the Chinese
public know the truth about Falun Gong. Most notable among them have been repeated attempts to tap
into TV signals and efforts at mass distribution of informational flyers and CD's. At the same time,
a number of public appeals by practitioners from outside China at Tiananmen help perpetuate the
public image of the movement. The persecution of Falun Gong has caused China to carry huge political costs without any
conceivable benefits. Four years into the Chinese campaign to wipe out the Falun Gong, the movement
has stood its ground, thanks to extraordinary sacrifices and endurance of its followers. In these
same four years, we have seen the departure of Jiang; the warning alarm of the SARS epidemic, which
demanded more accountability and transparency from the Chinese leadership, and the overwhelming
power of people's yearning for freedom as exemplified in the 500,000-strong demonstration on July
1st in Hong Kong. The time has come for the Chinese leadership to come to terms with the Falun Gong. All the
movement asks is to be left alone. The cost of reversing Jiang's verdict, now that he is fading from
China's political landscape, is minimal. The new leadership need only stop doing what it should not
be doing. http://www.iht.com/cgi-bin/generic.cgi?template=articleprint.tmplh&Articl eId=103562
Tuesday, July 22, 2003
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