Pretoria News (South Africa): Chinese group in drive-by shooting [Excerpt]
By Baldwin Ndaba, Moshoeshoe Monare, Peter Fabricius, Cindy Zeilhofer and Sapa
June 30, 2004 A member of China's banned Falun Gong movement has been shot in a Johannesburg
drive-by attack. The group claims the Chinese government is responsible. Nine Australia-based members of the group, which has claimed it is the subject
of persecution and human rights abuses in China, entered the country on Monday
on a trip coinciding with the official visit to South Africa by Chinese
vice-president Zeng Qinghong and Commerce Minister Bo Xilai. Their purpose was to protest outside SA-China Binational Commission meetings and
to launch a lawsuit alleging human rights abuses and torture against the Chinese
government, in terms of international human rights law - a routine Falun Gong
tactic around the world. Ironically, after the two countries signed several agreements yesterday, Zeng
thanked South Africa for recently blocking a United Nations debate into China's
human rights record. Five of the Falun Gong protesters became lost while travelling to Pretoria on
Monday, ending up on the N1 South towards Bloemfontein. Near Nasrec their car came under automatic gunfire from another car and driver
David Liang sustained gunshot wounds to his feet. Falun Gong spokesman Leon Wang said: "One gunshot penetrated his left foot and
exited on the other side while another smashed his right heel." Speaking from his bed in Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital yesterday, Liang said:
"Our attackers just accosted us and in the process started to fire several
shots. I was surprised when I saw these people driving at high speed like us." "When I slowed down, they would also slow down," said Liang. "We did not see them, but we think that the vice-president and the minister have
hired people to kill us." "After shooting at us, they did not rob us and simply sped away. We are sure the
Chinese government is involved," said Liang. The Falun Gong further claimed in a statement that Zeng, Bo "and other high
officials have given orders in China that have resulted in torture and death.
During the nearly five years of persecution against Falun Gong, harassment,
interference with basic rights, death threats, beatings, break-ins, and now an
assault with guns have targeted practitioners of Falun Gong outside China, on
foreign soil". [...] (1) National police commissioner Jackie Selebi's spokesman, Senior Superintendent
Selby Bokaba, said police were probing charges of attempted murder and malicious
damage to property. But Bokaba said it would be premature to speculate on the real cause of the
incident. A handful of Falun Gong protesters picketed yesterday outside the commission
meeting at the presidential guesthouse in Pretoria, where South Africa and China
signed seven agreements involving education, business and agriculture. [...] (2)
Notes:
http://www.pretorianews.co.za/index.php?fSectionId=270&fArticleId=2132612
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