The Australian: Dragon's claws
June 11, 2005 CHEN Yonglin, the runaway
Chinese diplomat, is a deeply frightened man. He tells me he believes he and
his wife, Jin Ping, and their impossibly cute six-year-old daughter, Fang Rong,
are targets for kidnap by Chinese agents. "I'm afraid of such a force
[Chinese agents]," Chen says. "They can do anything against me.
Chinese dissidents in Australia are in danger, that's very possible. I fear for
my life. My life was threatened." This may seem far-fetched but
kidnapping has been a recurring motif in Chen's life. Way back in 1971, when
Chen was just three years old, during the height of the mass insanity of
China's Cultural Revolution, Chen's father was kidnapped by Red Guards, held
under a stairway and beaten to death over a period of weeks. When Chen tried to defect to
Australia on May 26, one of the pieces of information he brought with him was
the allegation that Chinese agents had kidnapped a Chinese student, Lan Ming,
in Australia in 2000 and taken him back to China to force the student's father,
a former vice-mayor of Xiamen, to return to China to face embezzlement charges.
It all seems so florid and
weird, but kidnapping offspring to coerce parents, especially defectors, has a
long history in Soviet and Chinese espionage. On at least one occasion an
Australian citizen was kidnapped by Chinese agents. An Australian businessman,
James Peng, was taken from his Macau hotel late at night in October 1993,
forcibly removed across the border to China (Macau did not revert to Chinese
sovereignty until 1999) and kept in prison on commercial charges for six years,
though he was ultimately vindicated in Hong Kong's courts. What is most remarkable about
Chen's case, perhaps, is that now, more than two weeks after his flight from
the Chinese consulate in Sydney, no one from any official Australian agency has
interviewed him about his allegations. Chen also alleges that he knows of 1000
Chinese agents and informers working in Australia. It isn't necessary to give
these allegations credence to want them investigated. This week I had the chance to
interview Chen at length. We sit in a conference room with his wife and child
and a large man [...] from the Falun Gong movement. A friend produces cappuccinos
for everyone, but Chen, in his impeccable suit and scholarly specs, is too
nervous and agitated to touch his until the end of our interview. [...] Chen tells me of his first trip
to the Sydney office of the Department of Immigration and Multicultural and
Indigenous Affairs on May 26: "I asked to see the [immigration] state
director. I told them I was from the Chinese consulate and the matter was
extremely important, unusual and sensitive. I showed them my passport and
diplomatic identification. I specifically asked them not to call the Chinese
consulate. They called the consulate without telling me and then transferred
the call to my mobile phone." Chen naturally fled. With that
one colossal mistake the immigration department probably robbed the Government
of any chance of handling the matter quietly. There is a feeling across the
Government that immigration's ham-fistedness has narrowed the Government's
options and contributed to the Government looking foolish. Chen says that in
his four years at the Sydney consulate his primary job was to monitor the Falun
Gong spiritual movement, as well as pro-democracy activists and supporters of
Taiwan, Tibetan independence and independence for east Turkistan. Reliable sources independent of
Chen tell Inquirer that China's intelligence priorities in Australia are:
competing with Taiwan for influence among the ethnic Chinese community;
monitoring and harassing movements such as Falun Gong, which Beijing regards as
hostile; and stealing military secrets and high technology. (See accompanying
story.) A great deal of day-to-day effort goes into monitoring Chinese
nationals visiting Australia on business, as tourists or to study. Traditionally, China's vast
intelligence effort was not organised primarily through its embassies and consulates
but through companies and individuals. However, in recent years much more
Chinese espionage has been organised from its embassies and consulates, and
that's where the most serious action is believed to take place. Monitoring the local Chinese
community can be serious if it leads to harassment or persecution of relatives
back home. Reliable sources tell Inquirer that Chinese agents have not only
tried to disrupt Falun Gong activities but, through the use of agents
provocateurs, also have tried to turn them violent. Such activities are called
improper foreign influence. On at least two separate occasions, the Department
of Foreign Affairs and Trade has complained to, or reprimanded, Chinese
diplomats for Chinese government activities among the Australian Chinese
community. Once was in 1999 and once was last week. Chen's broad story of
monitoring and harassing Falun Gong and other activist groups in Australia was
buttressed this week by the testimony of another defector, Hao Fengjun. Hao has been interviewed on ABC
TV saying that he worked for a Chinese government security agency called 610,
which received voluminous reports on Australian Chinese. He too has not been
interviewed by ASIO or the Australian Federal Police. Chen says that he did not personally
run any of the claimed 1000 agents and informers in Australia but that he knows
of their existence because of access he had to files in the computers of the
large Chinese diplomatic establishment. He will not be specific about
the origin and extent of his knowledge of the alleged kidnapping he has
described, except to say that he found out about it while working at the
consulate and that he was told of it by "a reliable source". Chen tells me he came to hate
his work: "I was instructed by my superiors to monitor Falun Gong and
pro-democracy movements and to get information from the community and friends
who contact me, from all sources. I read their publications and went to their
assemblies. "But actually I support
democracy and I talked to them and found they were friendly to me. I have to
report back to China on them and I feel guilty because this information can be
used against them and their families." Chen says he has knowledge that
some families of democracy activists have suffered in China. Again, it is
impossible to dismiss his accusations out of hand. A US State Department human
rights report, published in February, claims that 250,000 to 310,000 prisoners
are held in Chinese re-education and labour camps. The report says: "The
Government continued to commit numerous and serious abuses. Authorities were
quick to suppress religious, political and social groups [opposed to the
Government]." While emphasising that many
categories of people are persecuted in China, the State Department further comments:
"The Government continued its crackdown against the Falun Gong spiritual
movement and tens of thousands of practitioners remained incarcerated in
prisons, extra-judicial re-education through labour camps and psychiatric
facilities. Several hundred Falun Gong adherents reportedly have died in
detention due to torture, abuse and neglect since ... 1999." That context gives Chen's job of
reporting on people in Australia a dark moral dimension. Chen was required to
put people's names on a black list. This may mean they are prevented from
travelling to China to see relatives. Chinese nationals on the list could have
their passports confiscated when they come to get them renewed, an action that
threatens their ability to function normally in Australia. Chen often argued
with his superiors about the practice of confiscating passports. "Before I came to Australia
I knew nothing of Falun Gong," he says. "I found that they are
innocent people who need help, not persecution. Every day my superior would say
to me, 'Here is Falun Gong' or 'Here is the pro-democracy movement, find ways
to tackle them'. They force me to do this. "I'm like a machine or like
a dog that anyone can call. So my spirit has been tortured and twisted. I feel
my conscience has been eroded so when I cannot stand it any more I walk
out." Even before walking out, Chen
believed he would be persecuted if he returned to China: "You see I have
helped Falun Gong practitioners and they [the Chinese Government] will know
about this." Now, after attempting to defect,
he believes his treatment in China would be very severe if he were forced to
return. He rejects utterly Fu's assurances of lenient treatment: "If I
return to China I would certainly be seriously persecuted." Even in Australia, if granted a
protection visa, Chen will never feel entirely safe: "My life was
threatened; we could suffer the same fate as the kidnapping case I have
described." Chen says his "conscience
against the Communist Party" can be traced back to his childhood and the
death of his father: "My mother worked very hard to raise the children and
encouraged me to work hard so that one day I can support the family. "To enter university is one
way I can do this, to get the iron rice bowl. I studied very hard and at the
same time worked at home with my mother to raise goats and fish, to go to the
fields for firewood. We experienced a lot of hardships." Then came 1989 and the Tiananmen
massacre: "I joined the democracy parades and I witnessed the massacre.
Three of my school friends were injured, one seriously with a bullet near his
heart. I was very shocked. But in 1989 I thought the communist Government would
collapse within 10 years." This was a common belief at the
time, so Chen took his opportunity to join the elite foreign ministry. His
first overseas posting was Fiji, from 1994 to 1998, the main issue being
China's diplomatic competition with Taiwan. Chen is explicit in his
politics: "Of course the Chinese people want freedom and democracy."
For all his determination, and the profound responsibilities he shoulders for
his wife and daughter, when you spend some time with Chen you're struck by how
young he is, and a kind of innocence about him, even after all this. Is he a lone eccentric, a
romantic who has embarked on a great folly? Or is he, perhaps, China's future?
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net