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Human Rights Are Not Negotiable
(Clearwisdom.net, April 19, 2004) Due to the pressure from the Chinese
Consulate in Toronto, the Toronto city council recently rejected a motion to
declare May 13 Falun Dafa Day. According to a report in the Toronto Star,
Councilor Michael Walker said after the vote: "In this case, human rights was
susceptible to lobbying by the government of China, which said we might hurt our
economic activities with the country of China. I don't think human rights are
negotiable."
The report also stated "International human rights groups have condemned the
government of China for its clampdown --including imprisonment and torture -- on
Falun Dafa, also known as Falun Gong."
It was also reported that acting council chair Deputy Mayor Sandra Bussin
ruled it was proper for the council to address this type of proclamation motion,
even though some councilors insisted that it was beyond the council's
jurisdiction.
In the end, the Star stated, "A brief confrontation ensued in the council
chamber between Falun Dafa supporters and National Congress of Chinese-Canadians
members." However, this incident deserves our closer attention. Recently, China
had used a similar strategy--commercial interest--to successfully pass a
"No-Action" motion in the UN on China's poor human rights record. When we
criticize some governments for being so shortsighted and casting a blind eye on
China's human rights atrocities, perhaps this kind of thing is just taking place
in our backyard.
Since the Jiang regime launched the persecution of Falun Gong in July 1999,
it has used China's embassies and consulates around the world to export its
defamations and lies to all nations. On February 9, 2004, the Ottawa Citizen
reported an unfair treatment that Falun Gong had received. In the article
entitled, "Falun Gong Spurned", the Citizen said: "There were Christian and
Buddhist groups at The Great Light of the Chinese New Year festival, yet Falun
Gong practitioners were spurned. The Chinese government's ban on Falun Gong
continues to have a serious impact on Canadians who take our democratic rights
for granted. The Canadian government does not perceive Falun Gong as a political
threat, yet we tolerate the Chinese government's interference in Canada."
The Ottawa Citizen also pointed out that the organizers of the event,
Canada Zhong Guo Ren Association and Canada Western-China International
Development Association, had smeared multi-culturalism in Canada, and all
politicians who support this event should hold them accountable and demand that
the dignity of Canadian law be restored.
According reports from Clearwisdom.net, similar interference cases have
occurred in many countries. At the beginning of this year, for example, Paris
city authorities organized a Chinese New Year parade for Chinese residents on
Avenue des Champs Elysees and invited the Beijing government to assist in
holding the celebrations. It was a public and Chinese-culture-related activity.
However, an inharmonious atmosphere arose from the applications of various
groups participating in the parade. Falun Gong is a group that is legally
registered in France and had the right to participate. However, the Falun Gong's
application was illegally interfered with by the Chinese Embassy. For slandering
Falun Gong practitioners in a Canadian newspaper, the Chinese deputy consul
general in Toronto, Pan Xinchun, was found guilty of libel by an Ontario
Superior Court of Justice on February 3, 2004.
Through Chinese embassies and consulates around the world as well those
pro-communist groups under their control, the Jiang group has exported their
persecution of Falun Gong to all overseas Chinese communities. Their illegal
conduct in foreign countries that have interfered their own citizens' civil
rights should also be stopped. |