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The Pitt News via U-Wire: Group demonstrates at U. Pittsburgh on abuse of Chinese government April 19, 2006 Qing Yang had a heart condition that kept his beat irregular. When he began
practicing Falun Gong, he no longer had to go to the hospital. His wife suffered from Leukemia, and after she started practicing it she
became a lot better as well. His son was also able to recover from a condition
that doctors said he would spend the rest of his life dealing with. His life-changing experiences might be one of the reasons that Yang spent an
hour outside the Frick Fine Arts building meditating as other Falun Gong
practitioners spoke and held signs to raise awareness of the plight of
practitioners in China Monday. They are members of the National Van Tour Campaign Committee, created by
people from Chicago and St. Louis who will drive to Washington D.C., to charge
President George W. Bush with talking to Chinese Prime Minister Hu Jintao about
the situation of Falun Gong in China. Charlie Qian, a volunteer with the National Van Tour Campaign, read a letter
that outlined acts that they say are happening in China right now. He said that thousands of practitioners are being killed and their organs
harvested by hospitals over the country for transplants. Qian said that the
bodies are cremated so that the government can destroy the evidence. According to a brochure handed out by volunteers, Falun Gong "is a
traditional Chinese self-cultivation practice that improves mental and physical
wellness through a series of easy-to-learn exercises, meditation and development
of one's heart/mind nature." "It is apparent that a massacre to destroy victims and witnesses is
happening," Qian said. Qian called the alleged acts of violence and economic hardship against
practitioners a genocide, and called on the international community for help. "Our solemn promise of 'Never Again' made 60 years ago in response to
the Nazi concentration camps still echoes in the civilized world, and yet
similar tragedies are happening again amidst our silence," Qian said. Qian accused the Chinese government of running concentration camps and
killing Chinese citizens who practice Falun Gong. "We urge you to help immediately end the atrocities of live organ
harvesting and large-scale massacre of innocent people inside Chinese Communist
Party's concentration camps --- and help end a persecution that has lasted for
nearly seven years," he said. The Country Report on Human Rights Practices released by the Bureau of
Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor inside the United States Department of State,
supports Qian. The 2005 report said that, among others, Falun Gong practitioners were
specifically targeted for torture. It also charged the Chinese government with
torturing practitioners and having them committed to psychiatric hospitals and
forcing them to take mind-altering drugs. "Since the crackdown on Falun Gong began in 1999, estimates of Falun
Gong adherents who have died in custody due to torture, abuse and neglect ranged
from several hundred to a few thousand," according to the report. Some of the stated goals of the Van Campaign are to force the Chinese
government to open up suspected camps and detention centers to random inspection
teams made up of international observers and Falun Gong practitioners, and to
disband those camps altogether. They also want the release of all imprisoned Falun Gong practitioners. Yang said through a translator that he first started practicing Falun Gong in
China in July 1999, and he began to notice police officers watching his house.
He said he even received calls from Communist party representatives asking him
to write a letter denouncing his belief in the practice. But when he moved to the United States around August 2000, he was grateful
for the compassion that people would show to him and fellow protesters at the
Chinese consulate in Chicago. He said that people would bring them blankets in
the winter and cool drinks in the summer to help. He also appreciates the atmosphere of open debate in this country, and that
things they could never do in China, like protest or complain formally to the
government, are both actions they can take here to raise awareness. He said that Falun Gong has taught him to be a good person, as well as to be
truthful to show compassion for others. His new state of health is also
something to be grateful for. "It's better than giving me a second life," Yang said. "It's
like learning something out of heaven." But his face dropped when he recalled friends and family members detained
years ago, people he hasn't heard from since. He said he couldn't even find out
what happened to them. "I feel like my heart is bleeding," Yang said through a translator.
Posting date: 4/25/2006
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