The Persecution of Li Ruixia at Harbin Women's Forced Labor Camp for Drug Addicts
(Clearwisdom.net) On June 28, 2002, Ms. Li Ruixia and two other Falun
Gong practitioners went to Beijing and unfurled a banner in Tiananmen Square to
validate Falun Dafa and appeal for justice. They were then arrested and locked
up in Qianmen Police Station in Beijing. The Daqing Office brought them back and
handcuffed them to a bed for five days until people from the Zhaozhou Police
Department and Ms. Li's employer brought them home. On the way home, the police handcuffed the three practitioners together, and
then handcuffed them to the bunk bed on the train at night. The three were then put in jail, where they went on a hunger strike to
protest the illegal arrest. Policeman Wang Zhongjin verbally abused
the practitioners and brutally force-fed them. He used the jail cell key plate
to pry open their mouths and force-fed them with a powdered milk and salt water
mix. The practitioners were held in jail for two and a half months, and were
sentenced to two years of forced labor afterwards. They were sent to Harbin
Women's Forced Labor Camp for Drug Addicts. On the day of their arrival at the forced labor camp, the police and former
practitioners who had renounced Falun Gong took turns trying to
"transform" them. This went on past 10:00 p.m.. Because Li Ruixia did
not acquiesce, guard Zhang Chunjing tied her to the chair with a rope. They woke
her up at 5:00 a.m. each day and kept her up late into the night. They took
turns to attack her, and they would not give up until she complied and wrote the
three statements. Practitioners are deprived of all rights at the labor camp. They are treated
inhumanly and subjected to all kinds of tortures and abuse. The following is an
account of some of the persecution experienced by Ms. Li Ruixia and other
practitioners at Harbin Women's Forced Labor Camp. A. Daily torture and mistreatment 1. Solitary confinement Once, Li Ruixia was sent to solitary confinement and forced to sit on a metal
chair for six days after she was caught distributing Teacher's articles. Her
legs swelled up terribly as a result. The guards attempted to conceal their
crimes by not letting Ms. Li go back to the group until after her swollen legs
had gone down. During her solitary confinement, she was fed with only a bit of
porridge and half a bun every morning. There was no lunch. Dinner consisted of a
bit of rice, barely enough to keep her alive. They did not let her use the
restroom, and withheld water from her. In addition, they fined her 100 yuan. Once, Captain Li Quanmin and policeman Dong Shaoxing worked together to try
to coerce practitioners to insult Dafa and Teacher, and interrogated each of
them. Ms. Li did not cooperate and was dragged to the broadcasting room, where
she was immediately slapped hard a dozen times. She was then dragged to the cell
for solitary confinement for six days. Later, Li Ruixia was again put in solitary confinement several times. They
handcuffed her to a rail and forced her to stay in a squatting position for six
consecutive days and nights. She was not allowed to move. A convicted criminal
inmate watched her and beat her whenever she moved. The longest time that Ms. Li was in solitary confinement was nine days. The
guards handcuffed her hands behind her back and then to a heating pipe in the
classroom. They kept her in a position in which she could neither stand up
straight nor squat down. During the SARS epidemic, Ms. Li happened to be in solitary confinement. The
cell was sealed, with the toilet in the room. They did all the sanitizing
outside the cell, but did nothing inside. One needed permission to use the
toilet. Once when Ms. Li reported that she needed to use the toilet, Captain
Zhang Li told her to wait, and Ms. Li waited for a whole night and was still
refused the next morning. 2. Harassment and beatings Once in a brainwashing session, policeman Jiang Zhou had everyone sing along
with him. He said that Li Ruixia sang too softly, so he ordered her to sing
solo. He then said that she still did not sing well enough, so he had her sing
in the hallway. Later, Jiang took Ms. Li to the office and slapped her as soon
as they walked into the room. He beat her and then brought her back to the
classroom. Once, because Ms. Li did not comply with orders to write her
"homework", the guards forced her to squat and handcuffed her to the
bed rail in the cell. They withheld her dinner. Some practitioners felt sorry
for her and gave her some food. Policewoman Wang Haiying found out and summoned
everyone out of the cell and ordered them not to feed her. One night, while the practitioners were working, practitioner Wei Jun tried
to finish writing up an appeal paper that she had been working on during the
day, but was discovered by the team supervisor Zhang Li, who was in the
monitoring room. Zhang led a group of policemen toward her to seize the paper.
In desperation, Ms. Wei handed it to Li Ruixia, who was standing nearby. Ms. Li
stuffed the paper in her mouth. Zhang pushed Ms. Li over backwards, forcing her
back to arch 90 degrees over a box. He choked her with one hand while inserting
his fingers into her mouth, trying to grab the paper. The impasse lasted for a
few minutes, and he finally let go when Wei Jun signaled to Ms. Li to give up.
Zhang turned in the saliva and blood-stained paper to the captain, and
interrogated Wei Jun all evening until midnight. Once, supervisor Li Zujie ordered policewoman Wan Dan to cut open Ms. Li's
overcoat and her quilted underwear, under the pretext of looking for Teacher's
articles. During the search, Li Ruixia was ordered to remove her bra and
underpants, and even the tampon she was using was checked. This is a common form
of abuse and harassment of practitioners. B. Forced labor The labor camp forced practitioners to work extremely long hours. The worst
case was when they were ordered to work in the basement mending flax cloth. They
worked 14-15 hours a day for a month. Some practitioners were so tired that
their eyes would not stop watering. The ventilation in the basement was very
bad. In the hottest summer days, the practitioners felt suffocated and had
difficulty breathing, and they asked the guard to let them take a break. The
guard asked the supervisor but was refused. A while later, the guard himself
felt dizzy, nauseous, and short of breath, and complained that he could not hold
on anymore. Only then did the supervisor let them take a break. Aside from mending flax cloth, the practitioners also sorted leaves,
chopsticks, toothpicks, and had to make handicrafts. Sometimes they had to work
through the night. C. Terrible food For meals, the dishes were all thin soups, though on the blackboard, it
always listed a great menu. Often there were only one or two pieces of chicken
bones or the waste parts of the chicken in the soup. It smelled bad and some
practitioners could not eat it. In June, the foul smell of pickled cabbage in its urn could be detected a
long way away. The cabbage had maggots in it, but they still added it to the
soup to feed the practitioners. In July and August, all the dishes consisted of worm-infested vegetables that
the practitioners had planted. The soup had black insects and green worms
floating on top and some practitioners refused to eat it. Guard Ning Lixin took
offense to this, and every meal became a confrontation. A group of police
circled around each table and checked to see who was not eating the soup. At first, the buns were made of refined flour. Later they changed it to a
rough corn bread that had bugs in it. Some practitioner asked policewoman Liu
Zujie, "How come the quality of our meals has degraded so much?" Zhu
replied, "It is a regulation from the higher authorities. It will be like
this from now on." Later, practitioners resisted this form of persecution
by going on a hunger strike. The staff later restored the quality of the flour. Examples of persecution of Dafa practitioners at Harbin Forced Labor Camp are
too many to cite. The above are just a small number, the tip of the iceberg.
Chinese version available at
www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2007/11/16/166673.html
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