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The Epoch Times: Jailed in Singapore For Handing Out Flyers (Photo) Pair on hunger strike to appeal conviction By Jan Jekielek & Max Dobson
The Epoch Times May 01, 2005 NEW YORK - A Singapore judge threw the book at two women for handing out
fliers and VCD's exposing Communist China's persecution of Falun Gong. Ms. Ng Chye Huay and Ms. Cheng Lu Jin were arrested in May 2004 on multiple
charges, including "assembly without a permit" and "possession
and distribution of VCD's without a certificate." After nearly a year of procedures, the court delivered its verdict last
Wednesday. The women were ordered to pay fines of 20,000 and 24,000 Singapore
Dollars (US $12,216 and $14,660), respectively. Insisting on their innocence,
both refused to pay and have launched an appeal. They are currently in jail, and
both are hunger striking to object to the decision. The Falun Gong peaceful meditation practice is legal in Singapore and
everywhere else in the world, save for the People's Republic of China where it
was banned in 1999. Singapore authorities arrested Ng and Cheng for distributing
information revealing evidence of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) brutality,
the same materials that are regularly handed out in dozens of other countries
without incident. Singapore is notorious for its strict social control and for handing down
harsh punishments for seemingly minor offences, such as chewing gum or spitting.
Nonetheless, its constitution contains "guarantees of freedom of religion,
freedom of speech and freedom of assembly," points out Dr. Terri Marsh,
American human rights lawyer. Ng and Cheng's defense counsel asserts that the accused were simply
exercising these rights, as guaranteed in the Singapore constitution, and so
should not be restricted, especially when they are expressed openly and
peacefully. Falun Gong supporters have gathered at Singaporean embassies and consulates
around the world to appeal what's widely seen as an unjust decision. Elaise Poh,
a Singapore resident visiting New York, was shocked at the verdict and
immediately went to the consulate in Manhattan to voice her opinion. "The
laws don't exist to punish people for doing something good. The courts have
better things to do than treat [Falun Gong] practitioners as criminals,"
said Poh. Officials at the consulate were unavailable for comment. Marsh, also lead counsel in several U.S. lawsuits naming top CCP officials
for genocidal crimes, made a written statement to Singapore authorities.
"The office of the prosecutor has compromised its responsibility by
treating these women's attempt to expose the truth about the persecution of
Falun Gong in China as a criminal act, thereby failing to cognize that the
crimes that require redress are those perpetrated by the CCP in China," she
asserts. Marsh believes the court ruling may have been influenced by Chinese
authorities in order to obscure the issue of who the real criminals are, namely,
the CCP. Source http://english.epochtimes.com/news/5-5-1/28337.html
Posting date: 5/3/2005
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