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Germany: Falun Dafa Practitioners Publicly Appeal for an Open Human Rights Dialogue between the EU and China (photos)
By Minghui/Clearwisdom reporter Wu Sijing
(Clearwisdom.net) The EU-China Bilateral Human Rights Dialogue was held
on May 15 and 16, 2007 in Berlin, Germany. It was the 12th annual human rights
dialogue since the first one held in 1996. The direction of the dialogues is an
important topic of discussion since many politicians and non-governmental
organizations have been appealing to hold open dialogues instead of the current
closed-door ones, suggesting that the human rights dialogue be canceled if open
dialogues cannot be held. Since the first day of the dialogue was a closed-door session, no media
appeared outside the German Foreign Ministry. Only Falun Gong's big banners hung
across the road reminding dialogue participants that a peaceful cultivation
group is still being cruelly persecuted by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and
that living Falun Gong practitioners' organs are still being harvested for
profit in China. The Falun Gong banners were clearly visible outside the hall
of the German Foreign Ministry A demonstration outside of the German Foreign Ministry shows
torture methods employed by CCP police in prisons and labor camps European Falun Dafa Association: "Hold a transparent and open
dialogue" Wu Wenxin, Vice President of the European Falun Dafa Association, said that
the activities held by Falun Gong practitioners were to urge the CCP to stop
persecuting Falun Gong practitioners in China and to request an open dialogue in
which the persecuted Falun Gong practitioners could be invited to make a
statement and provide evidence. Vice President of the EU: "China's human rights situation is
regressing"At a press conference held in Brussels on May 10, Vice
President of the European Parliament Edward McMillan-Scott mentioned that the
CCP's human rights situation is regressing. He said, for example, that two Falun
Gong practitioners Niu Jinping and Cao Dong were arrested right after they met
with him when he was on a fact-finding mission in Beijing last year. Cao Dong
was sentenced to five years in prison for meeting with Mr. McMillan-Scott. After
Mr. McMillan-Scott went back to Europe, he talked with human rights attorney Gao
Zhisheng via telephone. Afterwards, attorney Gao was also arrested and
sentenced. He was abused during his illegal detention and is now under house
arrest. Niu Jinping's wife, Zhang Lianying, is still detained. Undergoing brutal
persecution, she is now in the prison hospital and her life is in danger. Cao
Dong has been sentenced to four years. He was forced to do slave labor and
experienced cruel torture. Mr. Cao told Mr. Edward McMillan-Scott that the
prison guards and prisoners have special torture methods with which to abuse
Falun Gong practitioners. One of his best friends disappeared from the prison
one night. Afterwards, Cao Dong saw his body with a hole in it, where his organs
had been harvested. McMillan-Scott said, "The report of the two independent
Canadian investigators concerning the live organ harvesting is absolutely
reliable." Since the last 11 years of human rights dialogues have not helped China to
improve its human rights situation, Mr. McMillan-Scott proposes that the EU
publicly denounce the CCP instead of holding meaningless human rights dialogues. German human rights commissioner: "I will bring up the cases of Falun
Gong practitioners" Several days before the dialogue was held, in his letter to Ms. Lou Hongwei,
the wife of imprisoned Dafa practitioner Bu Dongwei, Human Rights Commissioner
for the German Foreign Ministry Mr. Gerberich wrote, "I am deeply concerned
about Bu Dongwei's situation. During the human rights dialogue I will propose
that the CCP release Bu immediately. We will not stop asking the CCP to respect
human rights." Bu Dongwei, 38 years old, is an office staff member of the Asia Foundation in
Beijing. He was arrested from his home on May 19, 2006, but his family didn't
receive a notice of his being sent to a labor camp from the Haidian Branch of
the Beijing Public Security Bureau until August. Mr. Bu was sentenced to two and
a half years in the labor camp under the false charge of "disturbing social
order." He has been illegally imprisoned in Tuanhe Labor Camp in Beijing
for nearly one year. In addition, nearly ten European Parliament members (MEPs) sent letters to
Mr. Bu's wife before the EU-China human rights dialogue to express their
support. They said, "We have come to know about the difficult situation of
Falun Gong practitioners in China. We will strongly condemn the Chinese
government's actions against human rights. The MEPs who are concerned with the
human rights condition in China are familiar with your husband's case. We will
use all possible opportunities to request his release." Before the human rights dialogue, Zhang Zhentong, a Falun Gong practitioner
from Leipzig, Germany, also received the German government's commitment to make
an effort to help his wife Wang Xiaoyan regain freedom. Wang Xiaoyan is now
"illegally imprisoned" in the notorious Masanjia Labor Camp in
Liaoning Province because she is a Falun Gong practitioner. Sources from the
labor camp said that Ms. Wang has undergone cruel punishments including the
"Hang Up," being force-fed with drugs that damage the central nervous
system, and mental tortures. The torture known as "Hang Up" involves
handcuffing a practitioner's hand to the ladder of an upper bunk bed and
handcuffing the other hand to the head of the lower bed. Thus, the victim's arms
are tightly stretched, with one in a high position and the other low, so that
the victim cannot stand up nor squat down. Then the two legs are tied up. The
torture itself is unbearable. Furthermore, during the brutal torture, the victim
is not allowed to eat or go to the restroom. Ms. Wang Xiaoyan was tortured this
way for a total of three days. A week after the human rights dialogue, German president Koehler will visit
China for three days. This will be the first time for Koehler to visit China
since he took the post of president in July 2004. It will be an opportunity for
the public to see the outcome of the closed-door EU-China Bilateral Human Rights
Dialogue. In a ceremony in which he received an honorary doctorate from Nanjing
University in September 2003, in front of 800 attendees, the late Johannes Rau,
former president of Germany, pointed out that the CCP government should give its
people more freedom. He said, "People have recognized that such a large
country as China cannot be ruled by an authoritative regime for a long
time." He quoted what Confucius told his disciple about politics: "If
a government is not trustworthy, its people cannot rely on it." Rau said,
"Any country or regime which wants to succeed and bring welfare to its
people needs the trust and support of its people." |