Sweden: Seminar on "Human Rights in China" Attracts the Attention of an Ancient University (Photos)
(Clearwisdom.net) On May 11, 2004, a seminar entitled "Human Rights in China"
was held in Uppsala University. Invited by the Department of Peace and Conflict
Research, Pax et Bellum, and the Uppsala Association of International Affairs,
Mr. Clive Ansley from Canada, Erping Zhang and Harry Wu from the US, and Jane
Dai from Australia came to Uppsala University, one of the most renowned
universities in Scandinavia, to give lectures on the Chinese legal system, the
laogai (slave labor camp) system, the media, and the peace project for children
in China. Mr. Clive Ansley is a Canadian attorney with great experience of the Chinese
legal system. Mr. Harry Wu is a leader of the Chinese Information Center and the
Laogai Research Foundation in the US. Mr. Erping Zhang is the president of
Association of Asia Research, and Ms. Jane Dai is a victim of the persecution of
Falun Gong in China and an Ambassador of Peace. Uppsala University was founded in 1477 and is the oldest university in the
Nordic countries. The Department of Peace and Conflict Research was established
in 1971 to conduct peace research and offer courses in peace and conflict
studies. The Uppsala Association of International Affairs strives to create
debate around international issues. Most of the participants of the seminar were students who study international
relations, particularly issues pertaining to peace and conflict. They listened
to Clive, Erping, Harry, and Jane with great interest. The speech by Jane Dai moved many of the participants to tears. Her husband
was killed at the age of thirty-four in China because of his belief in Falun
Gong, when their daughter was only eight months old. Jane Dai has traveled to
nearly forty countries to detail the cruel facts of the persecution in China,
and to promote peace in the world. She is now named the "Ambassador of Peace" by
Petals of Peace, a non-political and non-religious association that strives to
promote peace in the world and a bright future for children. The seminar received very positive responses from the participants. Although
it should have ended at 6:30 p.m., the participants didn't want to leave. So the
seminar was extended for another hour. During and after the seminar, many
students expressed their desire to help in different ways to improve the human
rights situation in China.
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http://www.yuanming.net/articles/200405/31442.html
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