National Post (Canada): Falun Gong persecution spreads to Canada
John Turley-Ewart
National Post
Saturday, March 20, 2004
[...] Since Falun Gong was outlawed in 1999 by Jiang Zemin, the former Chinese
president, China has waged against its practitioners a determined campaign that
the U.S. Congress says is "carried out by government officials and police at all
levels, and has permeated every segment of [Chinese] society." Falun Gong is
targeted not only in China, it is also the subject of a propaganda campaign in
Canada, one that the Canadian Security Intelligence Service warned Ottawa about
years ago. It is waged by China's diplomatic and consular officials, who rely on
help from some quarters of the Canadian Chinese media, which serve roughly one
million ethnically Chinese Canadians.
A week had hardly passed after Sept. 11, 2001, when Canada's Chinese-language
Sing Tao Daily, owned in part by TorStar, which publishes the Toronto Star,
printed an inflammatory article entitled "Radical Religions Advocate Destroying
the World," which parroted Beijing's equating of Falun Gong with the Branch
Davidians, the American group that David Koresh indoctrinated in Waco, Tex.,
until his clash with police in February, 1993, led to the death of 86 people, 17
of whom were children. Les Presses Chinoises in Quebec published a series of
articles between November, 2001, and February, 2002, saying Falun Gong was "an
evil" cult and an "enemy to the state" and continued to print such articles
after a Quebec court ordered the paper to stop.
In August, 2002, the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council found that a
Vancouver-based, Chinese-language television station, Talentvision, had violated
four articles of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters' Code of Ethics as
well as journalistic ethics by rebroadcasting anti-Falun Gong propaganda
produced by Beijing's state-controlled media.
In a more recent example of this campaign, Pan Xinchun, China's consul in
Toronto, was found by an Ontario court to have libeled Joel Chipkar, a Canadian
Falun Gong practitioner, in a letter to the Toronto Star. Pan's letter said
Chipkar was the member of a "sinister cult" seeking to "instigate hate."
Keith Landy, president of the Canadian Jewish Congress, believes if "Jew"
were substituted for Falun Gong in the letter Pan wrote to the Star "you would
have an uproar in the community."
That the hypersensitive, politically correct to a fault Toronto Star
published Pan's letter indicates how little is understood about the Chinese
government's aggressive campaign against Canadians who practice Falun Gong and
our government's indifference to China's hate-mongering in Canada.
[...] (1)
Ownby (who is not a member of Falun Gong) [David Ownby is a professor of
Chinese history at the University of Montreal and the author of a forthcoming
book on Falun Gong] believes that while some of their beliefs are eccentric,
the group does not exhibit any of the classic tendencies of what, for a lack of
a better word, are often described as "cults." Li urges his followers to remain
in the world, not to isolate themselves. He and his followers do not believe in
any utopia. Adherents of Falun Gong are not asked to give money to Li, and he
does not intervene in their personal lives. In fact, Ownby thinks the moral
grounding of Li's teachings is likely to make Falun Gong practitioners "more
responsible citizens."
That is not what the Chinese government wants Canadians to think about their
fellow citizens who practice Falun Gong or about the thousands now in labor
camps in China and others who have died in the custody of Chinese police after
being arrested for practicing Falun Gong.
Mei Ping, China's ambassador to Canada, made that plain a few years ago when
we met. Mei came to the National Post to extol the virtues of Communist China
and the evils of Falun Gong, leaving behind a book that purported to show how
Falun Gong had driven people to suicide, murder and madness, a claim without
foundation and one that no other government has ever made about its own citizens
who have taken up Li's teachings.
China's diplomats also spend much of their time trying to persuade Canadian
politicians to discriminate against Falun Gong under the threat that failing to
do so could jeopardize Canada-China trade relations.
Writing in March, 2003, to Jim Peterson, a Liberal MP and now a member of
Paul Martin's Cabinet, Chu Guangyou, China's charge d'affaires in Canada, warned
that China has "advised the Canadian government of the sensitivity of the issue
[of Falun Gong] in the overall bilateral relations. I hope you and your
government will understand our position and be vigilant against any attempt of
Falun Gong to jeopardize our bilateral relations." With the letter came the now
standard package of anti-Falun Gong propaganda.
Such pressure reaches beyond federal government officials. Countless similar
letters have been sent to provincial politicians as well as city councilors and
mayors across Canada.
Toronto city council has experienced this first-hand. Councilor Michael
Walker recently introduced a motion to have a Falun Gong day and a resolution
calling on China to stop persecuting Falun Gong, but other councilors have not
been so strong-willed in the face of Chinese threats that if the motion is
passed it "will have a very negative effect on our future beneficial exchanges
and cooperation." Citing foreign trade, councilor Giorgio Mammoliti held up the
motion and appears to want it buried in the process.
But in August, 2001, Andy Wells, Mayor of St. John's, Nfld., responded to a
letter from Ambassador Mei attacking Falun Gong saying: "Your persecution of
this innocent group exemplifies your government's moral and ethical bankruptcy."
Within Canada's Chinese community, the Falun Gong is often shunned and those
who do business with the Chinese government are warned off employing Canadians
who practice Falun Gong.
An Ontario Human Rights Commission case has arisen from this conflict. Andie
Shih was a member of the board of the Chamber of Chinese Herbal Medicine of
Canada, starting in 1988. According to Shih's statements filed with the
commission, a colleague on the board asked him two years ago not to attend a
dinner that was welcoming a Chinese delegation because of his association with
Falun Gong. When Shih refused, he was pressured to withdraw from the board. He
alleges that he was eventually removed because of his Falun Gong practice.
In another complaint to the Ontario Human Rights Commission, Cathy Liu says
she has suffered similarly at the hands of her former employer, Bond
International College. Liu alleges that her peaceful protests in front of the
Chinese Consulate in Toronto, which she did on her own time, were not acceptable
to the school because the consulate was an important client. Liu's case went to
mediation; the school offered her money and an apology on the condition that it
be kept confidential. She refused.
Ottawa has shown little resolve to stop the attempt by China to spread hate
in Canada. Pan, who slandered a Canadian in the Toronto Star, is now pressuring
the Canadian government to overturn the libel judgment. But why is Pan still in
Canada, and why are China's other diplomats and consular officials still allowed
to spread propaganda against Canadians? In February, 2003, Irwin Cotler was
chairman of Canada's Human Rights Commission and described the persecution of
Falun Gong in China as "the criminalization of innocence that finds expression
in the intimidation, harassment, arrest, detention, coercive interrogation,
torture, beatings and imprisonment for doing nothing more than espousing ancient
Chinese values."
Today, Cotler is the Minister of Justice and Falun Gong is being persecuted
in his own backyard.
Source:
http://www.canada.com/search/story.html?id=c195d888-af7c-441b-b735-1c14067582a3
Notes From Clearwisdom:
We commend the author for helping to expose the worldwide persecution of
practitioners and supporters of Falun Gong. This article details how pervasive
persecution has reached Canada.
We chose not to reprint a section of the article that we did not feel was
appropriate for this website. Here, we would like to clarify a few aspects
mentioned in those passages:
Falun Gong's founder, Mr. Li Hongzhi, enduring great hardships, traveled throughout China
lecturing about Falun Dafa from 1992 through 1994. Through word of mouth, the
practice quickly spread to tens of millions throughout China. Beginning in 1996,
he traveled the world to spread the Falun Dafa. It was also in that year he
first came to the United States. By the time Jiang Zemin launched the brutal
persecution of Falun Dafa in July 1999, Mr. Li was a permanent resident of
the U.S.
Worldwide, all Falun Dafa activities and instruction are free of charge.
Teacher Li's lectures, books and exercise instructions are available for free
download at: www.falundafa.org
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