Middle East Times in Egypt Exposes the Crime of Chinese Criminal Against Humanity, Liu Qi, During His Visit to Israel
Amelia Thomas
Middle East Times MEETING: Israeli PM Ehud Olmert (L) shakes hands with Chinese communist party
politburo member and Beijing Olympics organising committee representative Liu Qi
during their meeting in Jerusalem November 22. (REUTERS) TEL AVIV, Israel -- On Monday, 61 years to the day when the first of
the Nuremburg trials commenced to bring Nazi leaders to justice for crimes
against humanity, a high-profile criminal against humanity, this time convicted
in a US district court, entered Israel - and at the Israeli government's
invitation. Liu Qi, former mayor of Beijing, member of the Chinese Communist Party's
politburo, and chairman of the organizing committee of the 2008 Beijing Olympic
Games, arrived in Israel on a four-day delegation visit, to meet with
dignitaries including Ron Huldai, mayor of Tel Aviv, and Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert. Convicted of torture and crimes against humanity by a northern Californian
district court in December 2004, Liu Qi is said to have played a key role in the
persecution, torture, and unfair imprisonment of up to tens of thousands of
Chinese practitioners of the Falun Gong movement. According to documents obtained by a number of Falun Gong groups worldwide,
Liu Qi not only practiced, but openly boasted, a harsh policy of "zero
tolerance" against China's numerous Falun Gong practitioners during his
tenure as mayor of Beijing, a position he held until 2003. Now, however, members of the Israeli Falun Dafa Association are taking
advantage of Liu Qi's visit to Israel, by filing a criminal complaint in a bid
to once again bring him to international justice. During his sojourn in the state, they will thus be attempting to emulate the
actions of the US Center for Justice and Accountability, whose complaint under
the US Alien Tort Claims Act brought about the US court's original judgment
against Liu Qi. It is, however, questionable whether Israeli law will accommodate an attempt
of this kind. "This law," says Roy Bar Ilan, who is instrumental in the current
bid to indict Liu Qi, "was enacted, for example, against Adolf Eichmann,
the Nazi war criminal, who was tried in Israel. But this would be the first time
international charges of crimes against humanity are charged in Israel against a
non-Nazi." The complaint, he added, was submitted to Israeli police on the afternoon of
November 21, after which he expected Liu Qi to be presented with a subpoena.
"My belief, though," admitted Bar Ilan, "is that he's going to
flee. He has diplomatic immunity, so it would be impossible to keep him in the
country." The rise of Falun Gong in China, prompting the government to label the
movement a "heretical organization," began in the early 1990s, and,
though exact figures are hard to ascertain, adherents are thought to number in
the hundreds of thousands. A system of belief and meditation, Bar Ilan explains
that it is governed by what practitioners believe are the guiding principles of
the universe: truth, compassion, and tolerance. According to Amnesty International, the state-sanctioned Chinese newspaper
People's Daily, in its 2000 New Year editorial, marked the "serious
handling" of the "heretical organization Falun Gong" as one of
the government's major achievements of the year before. A testimony by Xiong Wei, Falun Gong practitioner and sister of an Israeli
citizen, interned in a forced labor camp for two years, recounts seeing a fellow
practitioner "hung up on a basketball frame," while police "used
an electric cattle prod to shock her for an hour-and-a-half." Such
testimonies are not rare, many detailing extensive abuse by police and labor
camp authorities. Several human rights organizations, however, along with a number of
international Falun Gong centers, assert that torture, administrative detention
without trial, and forced labor in camps are not the only crimes of which the
Chinese administration is guilty. It is alleged that as many as 44,000 illegal
organ transplants have been performed, using imprisoned Falun Gong as live
donors. "They are held alive," says Bar Ilan, "and used to find the
right match for people needing transplants. One Chinese hospital advertises that
it can find a match for you in less than a week. Then they take a Falun Gong and
they kill him or her for you, for body parts." In Israel, the arrival of Liu Qi is also being marked by Falun Gong devotees
- who learned of the intended visit just days before the delegation's arrival -
by a series of protests in Tel Aviv and outside the prime minister's residence
in Jerusalem. They hope that their highlighting of the case will first serve to
expose the Israeli government's decision to receive Liu Qi. "For starters," says Bar Ilan, "I feel pretty awful that the
prime minister and members of the Knesset are going to meet this man. All the
members of the Israeli Knesset are fully aware of his conviction, but we have
received no official word on the visit. Some local companies, though," he
adds, "once they found out about his crimes, canceled their meetings with
him." Second, Bar Ilan hopes that the attempt to bring Liu Qi to justice in Israel
will apply pressure on China's Communist Party, acting as a warning that crimes
against humanity will not be ignored by the international community. http://www.metimes.com/storyview.php?StoryID=20061122-071243-6371r
November 22, 2006
According to Amnesty International, 2006 saw a revival in the crackdown on the
Falun Gong; reports continue to surface of increasingly barbaric treatment, and
of imprisoned practitioners simply disappearing completely.
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