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Diplomat's Refusal to Participate in Chinese Communist Party's Suppression of Falun Gong Becomes Focal Point of Global Media (Photo)
(Clearwisdom.net) Mr. Chen Yonglin, a diplomat from the Chinese Consulate
in Sydney, who was in charge of monitoring and persecuting Falun Gong, has refused
to continue serving the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in its suppression of
Falun Gong, and has decided to break away from the CCP. Mr. Chen's defection shocked
Australia and the entire international community, and has become a focal point of
global media. Mr. Chen Yonglin forsakes the darkness for light and refuses
serving the CCP's suppression On June 4, 2005, the Australian reported on the defection of Mr. Chen
Yonglin, a diplomat from the Chinese Consulate in Sydney. The report stated that
Mr. Chen contacted the Weekend Australian and claimed he was responsible
for monitoring political dissidents, including members of Falun Gong, during the
past four years, in his post at the Consulate. Mr. Chen said he had been
"going easy" on dissidents, and he had been charged with monitoring
and not reporting them, in protest of Beijing's policies. He said that he was
seeking to defect because he could no longer support his country's persecution
of dissidents. Mr. Chen expressed that he is not a Falun Gong practitioner but
empathized with the group, whose practitioners in China, he said, had been
"persecuted massively." According to a report from the Los Angeles Times on June 5, Chen
Yonglin, 37, the consul for political affairs at the consulate in Sydney, said
he walked out of the mission a week ago because he could no longer support
China's repression of democracy and religious groups. Chen said Beijing
considered him a threat "because I had offered to help some democracy
activists and Falun Gong practitioners in some way." The Sydney Morning Herald reported on June 5 that Mr. Chen Yonglin,
37, consul for political affairs at the Chinese consulate in Sydney, had fled
the consulate a week ago and gone into hiding, fearing he would be persecuted
for his pro-democracy views. Mr. Chen said, "My job at the consulate was to monitor and persecute the
democracy CNN reported on June 6 that diplomat Chen Yonglin said his work in Australia
included monitoring the Falun Gong practitioners and supporters of Tibet, Taiwan
and Uighur separatists from western China. He stated that he feels very unsafe,
and people have no political freedom and no human rights in China. The report stated that China has 40 registered diplomats in Australia. The
Australian government sources believe that Chinese agents in Australia now
outnumber Russian agents. Spies use diplomatic cover and also pose as business
people and professionals. According to a Reuters report on June 5, Chen Yonglin, who first
appeared in public on Saturday at a rally in Sydney marking the anniversary of
the 1989 crushing of Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests, said that the
Chinese government considered him a threat because he had offered help to some
democracy activists and Falun Gong practitioners. Chen said, "If I am sent
back to China I will be persecuted." Therefore, he was in hiding with his
wife and daughter. According to Australian Broadcasting Corporation's (ABC) report on June 6,
Chen Yonglin told reporters, "I feel guilty. In the beginning, I followed
very strictly the government policy of persecuting Falun Gong people here."
The report stated that in a letter to immigration officials, Chen Yonglin
outlined his surveillance activities, and expressed remorse over what he'd done
to members of Falun Gong, the spiritual movement outlawed by the Chinese
government. According to a report from the Herald Sun on June 6, senior Chinese
diplomat in Sydney, Chen Yonglin, alleged that China had 1000 spies in Australia
keeping tabs on democracy The report quoted Falun Gong spokesperson Ms. Katerina Vereshaka, who said
numerous attempts had been made to hack into Falun Gong databases and email
networks. A prominent Sydney member also recently had a dead cat left on her
doorstep with a threat stating that she and her family could be next. The report said that more than 2000 practitioners have died in police custody
in China. Posting date: 6/9/2005
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