Persecution Methods Used in Some Prisons and Forced Labor Camps in Shandong Province
By Lianzi
(Clearwisdom.net) The persecution of Falun Gong practitioners is worse in
Shandong Province than in almost any other province in China. I have personally
witnessed and experienced the brutal persecution of practitioners at detention
centers, prisons and forced labor camps in Shandong Province. The following are
brief descriptions of the persecution methods I know of and experienced. Methods Used to Extort Money from Practitioners and Their Families Since July 20, 1999, the officials in Shandong Province have been frantically
arresting Falun Gong practitioners, especially on and near sensitive
dates. For example, more than several hundred police officers were
dispatched at once time in a small city of Jining to arrest practitioners. With
an order from the local Political and Judiciary Committee, the police from the
610 Office, city public security bureau, district police
departments, surrounding township police departments, various sub-bureaus and
police stations were all involved. They set up traps, used surveillance, or
simply went to practitioners' workplaces or homes to arrest them. With every
arrest, the police officers involved received both recognition and financial
rewards. First, it was announced that an officer would get a bonus of 1,000 yuan
for every practitioner he or she arrested. Second, once the practitioner is arrested, the police have an excuse to
search the victim's home. The purpose of the search is financial gain.
Sometimes, several police officers search a home without a warrant. They take
money as well as anything with monetary value. Usually they close the door so no
one can see what they are doing. Items they normally confiscate include radios,
cell phones, stereos, computers, etc. They also take the bankbooks of every
member of the family. Third, the police can also fine the practitioner's employee. Each time a
practitioner is arrested, the fine is usually 10,000 yuan. When the practitioner
returns to work, the workplace deducts the fine from his or her salary. Some
practitioners cannot pay back the workplace even after returning to work for two
years. Some practitioners are fired or laid off after their workplace is fined.
If a practitioner's workplace has good revenue, the police intentionally arrest
the practitioner many times to get more money. Finally, the police notify the practitioner's family to bring money for that
practitioner's release. According to each family's financial situation, the
police demand from 5,000 up to 20,000 yuan. They do not issue any receipts, and
the money is privately divided among the police. Although the director of the
police department knows this is going on, he quietly approves of it so that more
practitioners can be arrested. The police lie to illegally send practitioners to
labor camps. They intentionally don't tell the family members so that they will
be worried. The Political and Security Unit of the Middle District of Jining
City has received many awards for its sinister and vicious persecution of Falun
Gong. Slave Labor at the Labor Camps 1. Concealment of Actual Working Conditions The average workday in the labor camps is around 10 hours a day. Inmates,
however, often work until midnight, so one may work as long as 15 to 16 hours a
day. The prison guards fear being exposed, so they force inmates to work in the
basements instead of the workshops above ground. Working hours are long, the
lights are dim, and the air quality is terrible. The products made in prisons
and labor camps are not taxed. No outsider is allowed to investigate the real
situation. Whenever there are visitors, the police conceal the illegal
workstations and set up large, open workshops above ground. This way, visitors
don't see the real working conditions. 2. Poor Work Environment The work environments in the labor camps are horrible. The labor camps do not
care about the safety or health of practitioners. When I was detained at Jinan
Women's Forced Labor Camp, I saw one building house 800 inmates even though it
only had the capacity to house 200. It was a five-story building with a total
living space less than 500 square meters. There were over a dozen detainees to
each 10-square-meter room. When all the bunk beds were taken, some had to sleep
on the floor under the beds. Usually, newly arrived practitioners had to sleep
under the bed. The filthy air made it difficult to breathe. During the day, we
worked in the basement under the police offices. There is no ventilation system
in the basement, and it is packed with cardboard boxes and all types of pencils.
The total area is less than 300 square meters. With hundreds of detainees
working in the basement, there is not enough space for everyone and no one can
move around. No one is allowed to talk. Everyone is allowed to use the restroom
only twice a day, once in the morning and once in the afternoon. Even then,
people still need to take a number and wait to use the restroom. If someone had
to use the restroom again, someone else would miss her turn. Consequently,
practitioners did not dare to drink a lot of water even with their meals and no
matter how hot the weather was. 3. Working with Toxic Materials without Any Protection The products made in prisons usually take a lot of time and effort to make.
For example, at Jinan Women's Forced Labor Camp, inmates package pencils and
apply gold powder to decorative vases. At Jining Detention Center, female
detainees work on handmade flowers and male inmates make military products such
as rubber washers. Some of the flowers made there are so small that they cannot
be seen clearly with the naked eye, and some of the reflective pieces put on the
flowers are bright enough to cause injury to the eyes. Because there is not
enough lighting or air circulation in the workshop, eyesight damage can occur.
Most of the products made in prisons, such as the pencils packaged at Jinan
Women's Forced Labor Camp with international labels, are sold overseas. Also, many of the materials we work with are health hazards. For example, the
prison guards care only about their own profit and don't provide any work
uniforms or gloves for inmates working with pencil lead. Everyone is given only
an apron to wear. The guards claimed that wearing gloves slowed down the work,
so everyone used bare hands to touch the pencil lead everyday. Workers
frequently passed out from lead poisoning. Only then would the guards take the
person outside to get fresh air. The gold powder we applied to vases is
poisonous as well. One time, several hundred inmates all passed out. The prison
guards thought they were pretending and dragged several inmates outside to beat
them. Only when no one responded to their beatings did they stop. The prison
doctor verified that it was indeed a case of poisoning. The guards finally had
to give everyone injections. Working in such an environment, many practitioners
are being slowly poisoned. They have symptoms of chest fullness, lung and
respiratory infection, low-grade fever, dizziness and poor vision. Some
practitioners have difficulty urinating or having a bowl movement. 4. The Pay in the Labor Camps Practitioners who are "officially" sentenced to forced labor camps
receive 60 yuan a month for their work, but they are only given money tickets
that can be used at the stores inside the labor camps. The prices of materials
sold at these stores are usually several times higher than stores outside the
labor camps. Practitioners who are sent to the forced labor camp for several
months of brainwashing do not receive any money tickets. As long as they refuse
to be "transformed" and sign a repentance statement, their
families do not even know where they are. They are not allowed to send letters,
use the telephone or have visitors. Some practitioners do not even have money to
buy undergarments, because the police confiscated all their money. For several
months in the labor camp, they do not have an extra change of clothes. They
usually end up wearing clothes that no one wants. Of course, there is no
personal hygiene. I later found out all the prisons and forced labor camps in
China operate the same way. The Psychological and Physical Persecution of Falun Gong Practitioners At Jinan Women's Forced Labor Camp, practitioners are put into five brigades,
each with around 10 prison guards. Under special circumstances, the organization
is different. One time, all the practitioners went on a hunger strike. Within
half an hour, two hundred fully armed solders arrived. They lined up in the
hallways, courtyards and dormitories. The prison guards take shifts; however,
they are all present during the evening shift. That is when they force
practitioners to watch videos that slander Falun Gong and listen to their
propaganda. By doing so, they try to control practitioners' minds. A 72-year-old professor from a university in Jinan City was shocked with
electric batons because she refused to renounce Falun Gong. I saw that her body
was covered with burn marks. For over six months, she had a high fever. She was
hung to the heating pipe so that only her toes touched the ground. Her legs and
feet were black and purple. Still, the guards kicked her feet and asked her if
that hurt and if she would still practice Falun Gong. Some practitioners were dragged to the restroom and splashed with urine.
Another practitioner's buttocks festered and rotted from being beaten with a
whip made of wires. After that, she still had to sit down for over ten hours a
day to work. As a result, she could not sleep on her back. She had a fever of
104 F. Finally, the police notified her family and claimed that she got sick
because she practiced Falun Gong. The family sent 8,000 yuan for her medical
treatment. According to the practitioner, the doctor extracted two large jars of
puss from her buttocks. She was told that she would not have survived if the
treatment had been delayed any longer. Male prison guards also beat practitioners. They usually beat them in a
separate room to cover up their acts. Only when practitioners are brought back
can people find out what had happened. When we were working, the prison guards were afraid of being poisoned and
only came to the basement once in a while to exam the products. Some inmates
were appointed by the police to take turns monitoring practitioners. As an
incentive for being strict with practitioners, they can get their sentences
reduced. In addition, practitioners can be transferred between different labor camps.
For example, when a practitioner refuses to be transformed or to write guarantee
statements after being persecuted with every torture method, the prison guards
would transfer the practitioner to a different labor camp to be persecuted all
over again. They sent practitioners from Jinan Women's Forced Labor Camp to
Wangcun Women's Forced Labor Camp, and vice versa. I have been imprisoned in labor camps and detention centers many times. I was
physically and mentally humiliated and viciously beaten. I spent three Chinese
New Years in detention centers. I was not able to have a family dinner with my
husband and child. My elderly parents and my child have suffered tremendously.
In China, many families are being persecuted. The entire country is under the
red terror. One of my fellow practitioner's children became an orphan at less
than two years old. Many practitioners cannot go back to their homes because of
the persecution. July 4, 2005
Chinese version available at
http://www.minghui.ca/mh/articles/2005/7/5/105471.html
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