| [Minghui
04/27/2001] "Validate the Fa with reason, clarify the truth with wisdom, spread the Fa and offer people salvation with benevolence" (Rationality)
AP: Chinese diplomats lobby Illinois mayors
Thursday, April 26, 2001
DECATUR, Ill. (AP) -- A routine, seemingly harmless proclamation recognizing a
Chinese religious group has thrust Decatur Mayor Terry Howley, and several other
Illinois mayors, into the unlikely realm of foreign diplomacy.
Howley, along with mayors from Urbana, Galesburg, Bolingbrook, Chicago and
elsewhere, signed a proclamation this year honoring the meditation and spiritual
discipline promoted by members of the Falun Gong -- a religious group whose
struggles with the Chinese government have sparked international human rights
concerns.
Now the mayors have stumbled into a propaganda war between the Chinese
government and a spiritual movement China outlawed and labeled an [Chinese
government's slanderous term omitted], but which is spreading into other parts
of the world, including the United States.
Thousands of members of the outlawed [group] have been arrested in China and
human rights groups say at least 100 have died in police custody. Dozens more
were detained Wednesday on Tiananmen Square in Beijing, the second anniversary
of the group's first large demonstration.
Howley's brush with controversy began when three Falun Gong members, none of
whom live in Decatur, showed up at his office seeking a proclamation. The mayor,
who routinely obliges such requests, declared the week of Jan. 21 as Falun Dafa
Week. American mayors in cities large and small have adopted similar resolutions
in recent years.
Chinese diplomats in the United States resent the proclamations. In 1999, mayors
of Seattle, San Francisco and Baltimore rescinded such proclamations. Now
Illinois mayors are getting correspondence, phone calls and visits from Chinese
diplomats saying Falun Gong is [Chinese government's slanderous terms omitted].
[…]
Urbana Mayor Tod Satterthwaite said Shishun Shen, a spokesman for Consul Wei
in Chicago, visited him and asked him to rescind the city's proclamation. He
refused.
"The whole thing sounded like a propaganda pitch to me," Satterthwaite
said.
[…]
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