| [Minghui
04/26/2001] "Validate the Fa with reason, clarify the truth with wisdom, spread the Fa and offer people salvation with benevolence" (Rationality)
Reuters: China Detains Falun Gongers on Protest
Anniversary [04/25/01]
BEIJING, Apr 25, 2001 -- (Reuters) Members of Falun Gong staged
scattered protests on Beijing's Tiananmen Square on Wednesday, two years to the
day after the spiritual group stunned Chinese leaders by demonstrating on their
front doorstep.
[…]
Police detained about two dozen suspected Falun Gong members on the square
and bundled them into waiting police vans, witnesses said.
Plainclothes officers grabbed one young man as he tried to unfurl a yellow
banner, they said.
Security around Tiananmen was especially tight, with police checking
identification cards and questioning visitors to the plaza and at least 20
police vans on hand to whisk away the handful of protesters.
[…]
OVERSEAS BATTLE JUST BEGINNING
Once common Falun Gong protests on Tiananmen Square appear to have diminished
markedly since then.
But overseas, the battle with Falun Gong has only just begun.
When 10,000 followers surrounded the Chinese leadership compound on April 25,
1999, to protest against attacks on the group in state media, few outside China
had ever heard of the eclectic mix of meditation and breathing exercises.
Now, Falun Gong is seen by many around the world as a symbol of the struggle
against religious persecution in China.
Overseas followers have put Falun Gong -- also known as Falun Dafa -- at the top
of the human rights agenda and now threaten to de-rail Beijing's bid to host the
2008 Olympic Games.
A rag-tag group of U.S., Hong Kong and European practitioners run a slick public
relations machine, issuing regular updates on the government crackdown,
arranging protests and lobbying politicians around the world.
"None of us really had any idea about how to do grass-roots human rights
work like this until the crackdown made it necessary for us," said Scott
Chinn, a volunteer at the Falun Dafa Information Center in New York.
To mark Wednesday's anniversary, the center arranged a series of protests,
published a report on police abuse of women practitioners and issued a statement
saying Beijing banned the group because it feared social unrest.
In Hong Kong, where Falun Gong is legal, about 20 members demonstrated in the
city center to demand an end to what they called "unreasonable
persecution" by Beijing.
"When we started in 1999, people used to avoid us and some even scolded us
for causing trouble," said Hui Yee-han, a Falun Gong representative in Hong
Kong.
"Now people ask for more information and some offer their support,"
she said. "It's changing for the better."
Falun Gong says more than 190 followers have died in police custody since the
government ban. The government has acknowledged a handful of deaths it ascribes
to suicide or natural causes.
[…]
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