US Department of State: International Religious Freedom Report 2006: China [Excerpt]
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human
Rights, and Labor
The constitution provides for freedom of religious belief and the freedom not
to believe; however, the Government seeks to restrict religious practice to
government-sanctioned organizations and registered places of worship and to
control the growth and scope of activities of religious groups. The Government
tries to control and regulate religion to prevent the rise of groups that could
constitute sources of authority outside of the control of the Government and the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Nonetheless, membership in many faiths is growing
rapidly. During the period covered by this report, the Government's respect for
freedom of religion and freedom of conscience remained poor, especially for
religious groups and spiritual movements that are not registered with the
Government. Unregistered religious groups continued to experience varying
degrees of official interference and harassment. Members of some unregistered
religious groups were subjected to restrictions, including intimidation,
harassment, and detention. [...] Falun Gong practitioners continued to face arrest, detention, and
imprisonment, and there have been credible reports of deaths due to torture and
abuse. Practitioners who refuse to recant their beliefs are sometimes subjected
to harsh treatment in prisons, reeducation through labor camps, and
extra-judicial "legal education" centers, while some who recanted
returned from detention. Reports of abuse were difficult to confirm within the
country and the group engaged in almost no public activity within the country.
Overseas Falun Gong practitioners claimed this was a result of the harsh
government campaign, which began with the 1999 crackdown against the group.
There were continuing revelations about the extra-legal activities of the
Government's 610 office including torture and forced confessions, a
state security agency implicated in most alleged abuses of Falun Gong
practitioners. [...] Restrictions on Religious Freedom During the period covered by this report, government repression of the Falun
Gong spiritual movement continued. Membership in the Falun Gong [...] was
illegal. Distributing Falun Gong literature or encouraging others to join the
spiritual movement was punishable by criminal and administrative sanctions,
including reeducation. As in past years, foreigners who distributed Falun Gong
materials were expelled from the country, including an Australian expelled in
October 2005 after attempting to distribute the book Nine Commentaries on the
Communist Party. In January 2006 the Government released U.S. citizen
Charles Lee after three years of imprisonment for Falun Gong-related activities. [...] Abuses of Religious Freedom [...] There were credible reports of torture and deaths in custody of Falun Gong
practitioners in past years and overseas Falun Gong groups claimed that such
incidents continued. In December 2005 a Beijing attorney sent an open letter to President Hu
Jintao highlighting abuses of Falun Gong practitioners. The letter described the
electric shock torture of Zhang Zhikui, a Falun Gong practitioner arrested for
repeated petitioning in Beijing, and the October beating death in Changchun,
Jilin Province of Liu Boyang and his mother Wang Shouhui. The letter, and a
similar open letter sent by the attorney in 2004, referred to the extra-legal
activities of the 610 office, reportedly involved in many of the abuses of Falun
Gong. In 2005 the Government revoked the attorney's license to practice law, and
the attorney has claimed repeated government harassment, including an automobile
accident that he publicly described as an "assassination attempt."
Foreigners attempting to meet with the attorney have been detained and harassed. According to Falun Gong practitioners in the United States, since 1999 more
than 100,000 practitioners have been detained for engaging in Falun Gong
practices, admitting that they adhere to the teachings of Falun Gong, or
refusing to criticize the organization or its founder. The organization reported
that its members have been subject to excessive force, abuse, rape, detention,
and torture, and that some of its members, including children, have died in
custody. NGOs not affiliated with the Falun Gong documented nearly 500 cases of
Falun Gong members detained, prosecuted, or sentenced to reeducation during the
period covered by this report. Credible estimates suggested the actual number
was much higher. In November 2005 police at the Dongchengfang Police Station in
Tunzhou City, Hebei Province, reportedly raped two Falun Gong practitioners.
Reliable sources indicated that Zheng Ruihuan and Liu Yinglan were detained in
Shandong Province in July 2005 for practicing Falun Gong. In May 2006, Yuan Yuju
and Liang Jinhui, relatives of a Hong Kong journalist who works for a television
station supportive of Falun Gong, were sentenced to reeducation [...] relating
to their distribution of Falun Gong materials. Some foreign observers estimated
that at least half of the 250,000 officially recorded inmates in the country's
reeducation-through-labor camps were Falun Gong adherents. Falun Gong sources
overseas placed the number even higher. Hundreds of Falun Gong adherents were
also incarcerated in legal education centers, a form of administrative
detention, upon completion of their reeducation-through-labor sentences.
Government officials denied the existence of such "legal education"
centers. According to the Falun Gong, hundreds of its practitioners have been
confined to psychiatric institutions and forced to take medications or undergo
electric shock treatment against their will. Source http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2006/71338.htm
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