Tuanhe Forced Labor Camp Officials Accuse Practitioners of Being "Unpatriotic" and Use It as Excuse for Torture
(Clearwisdom.net) In 2001, China successfully landed the right to host
the 2008 Olympic Games. Chinese officials promised better human rights as a
condition for the bid, and then turned around to use it as a tool for justifying
its persecution and suppression. After the bid efforts began, Tuanhe Forced Labor Camp officials organized a
meeting to demand that Falun Gong practitioners talk about the significance of
the Olympics bid. However, the Falun Gong practitioners declared that they did
not support the regime's claims in making the bid. The labor camp authorities
then labeled the Falun Gong practitioners as being against the Party and against
China, and then proceeded to escalate the persecution. The officials stepped up their brainwashing efforts and increased the manual
labor quotas. They increased the workload for dirty jobs like cleaning raw wool
by removing manure, stones, bugs and other things from it. They also made
practitioners dig ditches for laying sewers and other physically demanding jobs.
In addition, they enforced a rigorous calisthenics program. Guard Liu Guoxi
forced this on practitioners, including Wei Rutang, Geng Honghai and others. He
said, "I must train you well so that you may experience first hand how hard
our national athletes might train to win glory for our motherland at the Olympic
Games. Then I will see whether you, ignoring the honor of our country, will
continue to oppose our bidding for the Olympics." Many sports fields and facilities were built in the labor camp. This included
the large drilling ground divided into seven or eight basketball courts, a small
drilling ground, tennis courts, horizontal bars & parallel bars,
weightlifting facilities, table tennis tables, a man-made rock climbing wall,
and grassy areas that could be used as a soccer field. The officials had people
paint the Olympic five-ring symbol and other slogans on the perimeter walls. Guard Liu chose the tennis court as the main drilling ground. The main
program he used was long-distance running, followed by push-ups and other
drills. Two or three prisoners were chosen to help monitor the practitioners as
they were put through the exhausting programs. They were first ordered to run
laps, and if it was not done quickly enough, they were forced to repeat the
laps. If they got too tired to finish, they would be dragged along by the
prisoners. If they fell to the ground from exhaustion, they were kicked and
beaten. After these exercises were done, the practitioners were immediately
sent, without rest, to perform their regularly assigned labor. As part of the
program, they were not permitted to sit down even during meals. The practitioners were drilled so hard that they wore out their shoes, but
since they were not allowed to be visited by relatives and had all packages sent
from the outside confiscated, they could not get replacement shoes. Their health
suffered so much that the "training" had to be stopped after one
month. The camp authorities also forced the general prison population to do daily
exercises in a "show of support" for the Olympics. We practitioners
did not see ourselves as prisoners and refused to participate. We were then
dragged along to run laps or stand in a fixed position for long periods of time.
Afterwards many practitioners, including Deng Huaiyin, Liu Jiankai, and Zhao Hui
and others were sent to the training team to be shocked with multiple electric
batons. Guard Yue Qingjin sent me there, and he shouted at me, "You are against
the bid for the Olympics. You don't love your country and resist reformation.
Even if we kill you, we'll claim that you committed suicide." Several
guards put me on a cotton quilt and tied my four limbs down with strips of
fabric. They yanked the stripes in four different directions, which caused
terrible pain. They shocked me with electric batons, shouted at me and ordered
me to give up my belief. When they saw that I was about to faint, they stopped
and forced-fed me with some water. The prison doctor came to take my blood
pressure and said that I was fine. They continued shocking me, and I lost
consciousness after another half an hour or so. The Tuanhe Forced Labor Camp is given special attention by high-level Chinese
officials. After each inspection visit by these high-level officials, the
persecution was intensified. Many Falun Gong practitioners have been sent here
over the years, and the camp has been a place for officials to curry favor and
win big promotions and pay raises. Deputy camp head Zhuang Xuhong and education
section deputy head Jiang Haiquan are two examples of those who have profited
greatly from the persecution. Labor camp doctors also take part in the persecution. They watch the torture
sessions and suggest when they should be stopped, just before the practitioner
is tortured to death. During the Falun Gong practitioner hunger strikes to
protest the persecution, these doctors are in charge of brutal force-feeding. A
prison doctor poked a tube into my nose and throat during my hunger strike and
made my nose bleed profusely and my throat swell up. This kept me from speaking
normally for a long time. After a long period of preparation, one day the labor camp welcomed a group
of domestic and foreign reporters to visit. That day, there were flowerpots and
fish tanks in the dormitories. Prisoners were engaged in various activities,
such as jumping rope, playing tug-of-war, and other games. When prisoners were
interviewed, they answered the questions as they had been trained. Some
prisoners impersonated Falun Gong practitioners. They said that they were
well-treated and supported the regime's story of improved human rights. The real
practitioners were hidden in storage rooms or workshops. Practitioner Xiang Wujun stayed in a "training team" for six months
for brainwashing, and Qing Wei was forced to work in the workshop. Qing Wei is a
painter. The labor camp officials ordered him to paint some Olympics-related
posters and pictures. They promised him money and better treatment, but he
refused. They then intensified the persecution against him and extended his
term. The practitioners who refused to give up Falun Gong had another six months
added to their terms. Qing Wei was only permitted brief sleep while being forced
to work daily in the workshop. Aside from eating and sleeping, he was forced to
spend all his time processing nails with a chemical adhesive. They were made for
nail guns, which were destined for export to Western countries. Qing Wei' s
hands were callused, his back was bent, and the chemical adhesive irritated his
skin. But these hardships were much less harsh compared to tortures in
the "training team." The day when the visiting reporters arrived, the quality of the food suddenly
became much better than usual. At the conclusion of the interviews, those
prisoners who had answered questions according to the previously agreed-to
answers were commended. Several days later, labor camp officials pronounced the
reception for the reporters to be a great success, saying that everyone in the
labor camp, including the Falun Gong practitioners, proclaimed their support for
China's bid for the Olympics. In July 2001, Beijing was awarded the Olympics, and the labor camp officials
were commended for their performance. After that, the labor camp still carried
out pretenses of improvements. They issued a press release saying, "The CCP
government really cares for prisoners and improves their lives at great
cost." But in fact, the Falun Gong practitioners' food quality is at the
lowest level. Daily meals are steamed buns and cabbage soup, consisting of water
with a few pieces of cabbage. In the "training team," the food
consisted of millet and cabbage soup. There were often cases of food poisoning
in the labor camp. In order to reduce pollution for the Beijing Olympics, the labor camp
converted their coal-fired heating system to the city's hot water heating system
by laying down a pipeline to bring in the hot water. As the regime intensified
the persecution, the number of inmates at the camp increased greatly. The
pipeline couldn't meet the demand and had to replaced. The inmates had to dig
trenches for installation of the hot water heating ductwork. The Falun Gong
practitioners had to do this heavy, backbreaking labor, even the old and the
weak. They stipulated a workload for every practitioner and punished anyone who
fell short of the quota. For instance, Wang Sili, a retired official in his
seventies, couldn't fulfill the workload. He was sent to the "training
team," where he was subjected to corporal punishment and brainwashing. The
trench-digging project lasted from summer to autumn. Falun Gong practitioners
worked from early morning into the night. They often fainted from the heat, and
were constantly at the verge of exhaustion. By the end of the project, everyone
was dark and gaunt-looking. For those who may think that awarding the Olympics to China will help the
human rights situation, they only need to look at how they were deceived by the
Tuanhe Forced Labor Camp. Only when China allows an independent investigation to
take place, will all of the facts be revealed.
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.org/mh/articles/2007/10/19/164801.html
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