Montreal Gazette: Falun Gong Followers Jam Court For Trial's End
By Mike King
February 24, 2004 More than 250 practitioners of Falun Gong and their supporters jammed into a
Montreal courtroom yesterday to hear the start of closing arguments in what one
lawyer described as "a historic case." "This is a pivotal court case that could set a standard," lawyer Michael Bergman
said after a full day of summations before Quebec Superior Court Justice
Jeannine Rousseau. Bergman is representing 256 plaintiffs suing a local Chinese-language newspaper
for $100,000 each, claiming in the civil case that they were defamed by hate
literature against the traditional spiritual discipline. He told Rousseau that opinion pieces and advertisements published in Les Presses
Chinoises between November 2001 and February 2002 were aimed at denouncing Falun
Gong in "graphic and horrific terms." While the articles depicted the practice as "an evil, demonic cult insidious to
the Chinese nation," Bergman countered by presenting "the alternate reality and
core values of Falun Gong: truthfulness, compassion and forbearance." Twelve of the plaintiffs testified in November they were detained in Chinese
labour camps and tortured for participating in the movement, outlawed by the
Chinese government in 1999. The vast majority of the plaintiffs are Chinese with Canadian citizenship or
close Canadian ties. Western-born practitioners are also taking part in the
suit. Falun Gong followers handed out leaflets outside the Place d'Armes metro station
near the courthouse yesterday morning encouraging people to hear the final
summations in the civil suit launched two years ago. Bergman's arguments are expected to end today. They are to be followed tomorrow
by those of Julius Grey, lawyer for Les Presses Chinoises.
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