German Newspaper Reports on Practitioner's Two Year Ordeal in a Chinese Forced Labor Camp
(Clearwisdom.net) This article was originally published in German, in the newspaper
Weser-Kurier on December the 9th 2004. China is one of the countries that top the list of nations that human rights
organization Amnesty International denounces year after year. Amnesty
International is fully aware that not a single day passes without China
violating human rights. Xiong Wei is an adherent of the spiritual movement Falun Gong. Between 1992
and 2000, she studied at and was employed by the Technical University of Berlin
and Guderus AG in Beijing. She told the Weser-Kurier that she was arrested in January of 2002
when distributing flyers about Falun Gong. She fell into the clutches of China's
security forces. Undercover police arrested her without charging her with any
crime or disturbance. The thirty-four year old was sent to a re-education camp. Xiong remembers vividly that she and fifteen other women were packed into a
fifteen square meter room. Therefore, she was unable to do any physical
exercises. Encounters with the "Re-education staff" were the worst. They beat,
abused and cursed her. She was forced to listen to the indoctrination while
squatting for long periods. She told us that she had to endure this without
being charged with anything and without due legal process. She was ordered to
sign a document, promising to renounce this spiritual practice. She did not
relent and wrote, "Falun Gong is good." We asked her why this movement was persecuted. She responded, "We
believe in Truthfulness, Compassion and Tolerance, but the Communist Party wants
to control everything." She gained her release in January of 2004. She was allowed to emigrate from
China to Germany in September of 2004. The German Government and international
organizations were instrumental in gaining her release. She was on the list of
people the German Government was concerned about and that Chancellor Schroeder
handed to the Chinese regime during his 2002 state visit. So far, no improvements in human rights are apparent in China according to
recent Amnesty International comments on the German-China Human Rights Dialogue. Source: http://clearharmony.net/articles/200501/24109.html
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