Cases of Karmic Retribution: Ex-Director of the "610 Office" in Cangxi County Dies in a Traffic Accident
(Clearwisdom.net) [Editors' Note: In both Western and Chinese culture, the principle of
karmic retribution, that is, being held ultimately accountable for one's own
actions, is widely accepted. The fundamental teaching of Falun Gong is the
characteristic of the universe, "Truthfulness-Compassion-Forbearance."
The universe will reward actions that are in harmony with this principle, while
actions such as beating, torturing and murdering people will incur karmic
retribution. Stated another way, good deeds will be rewarded with good, while
evildoings will meet due retribution. Articles such as this one are meant as a
compassionate reminder of this principle to those who would commit
wrongdoing. While many of those who persecute Falun Gong are merely
"following orders," the universal law requires that they, too, be held
responsible for their actions, and that only by reversing their course of
wrongdoing may they escape retribution.] Ex-Director of the 610 Office in Cangxi County Dies in a Traffic
Accident Xu Yunzong, the ex-director of the 610 Office and the Party Secretary of the
Politics and Law Committee in Cangxi County, Sichuan Province, who directed and
organized the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in that region, recently
received karmic retribution. Accompanied by a prostitute, he drove a luxury car
owned by the Traffic Police Station and hit a crane belonging to the Phosphor
Electric Power Co. and died on the spot. He was only in his thirties. A Party secretary in Sichuan who persecuted Falun Gong meets with karmic
retribution Zhou Dejin, the Party secretary of the second village, Slate Town, Jianyang
County, Sichuan Province, actively participated in the persecution of
practitioners ever since Jiang's regime outlawed Falun Gong. He frequently
targeted Liu Suyuan, a Falun Gong practitioner in his village, and restricted
her freedom. He even forced Ms. Liu's daughter-in-law to have an abortion. In
2004, Zhou Dejin died unexpectedly.
Chinese version available at
http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2005/4/2/98707.html
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