Australian Associated Press: Falun Gong lawyer says lawsuit affects everyone
January 30, 2006 Monday A lawsuit by spiritual group Falun Gong against the foreign minister over
protest restrictions outside the Chinese embassy would affect all Australians'
right to demonstrate, the group's lawyer says. Falun Gong had taken the legal action against Alexander Downer to stop him
issuing certificates which prevented practitioners using loud speakers or
displaying large banners outside the embassy. In a hearing at the ACT Supreme Court today, lawyers for Mr Downer
successfully applied for an adjournment because he was overseas and hard to
contact. Barrister for Falun Gong, Bernard Collaery, objected to the adjournment and
said Mr Downer had ample time to respond to affidavits. "There are very vital and important issues at stake here and this case
has been dragging on for six months," he said. Outside court he said the case did not just affect Falun Gong practitioners
but all Australians who wanted to demonstrate peacefully. "Many Australians see this as a purely China protest, it's not, this
matter relates to whether a foreign minister can reduce freedoms we previously
thought we had in this country," he said. "One of the freedoms we thought we had was to peacefully display banners
giving a message outside embassies." The matter has been adjourned to April 3.
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