| [Minghui
04/29/2001] "Validate the Fa with reason, clarify the truth with wisdom, spread the Fa and offer people salvation with benevolence" (Rationality)
Wall Street Journal: Under A Sharply Intensified Campaign Of
Repression And Control, Practitioners Can't Even Practice At Home (excerpt)
[04/26/01]
By Charles Hutzler
According to Wall Street Journal (April 26, 2001), "In the past three
months, Beijing has stepped up pressure on local governments to account for all
known Falun Gong practitioners, jail the activists and get die-hard believers to
renounce their faith, according to a [party's name omitted] official,
practitioners and their family members. That is a shift from a past practice in
some areas of tacitly allowing adherents to continue practicing as long as they
did so in private."
"Now, you can't even practice at home," says a relative of Meng
Qinglin, a follower from northeastern China who was put in a labor camp in late
January at the start of the reinvigorated campaign.
The report said, "The fruit of the government's efforts was on display
Wednesday, the second anniversary of a massive demonstration in central Beijing
by Falun Gong practitioners that provoked the government to outlaw the group in
July 1999. Only about 30 people staged scattered, sporadic protests on Tiananmen
Square Wednesday before being swiftly detained, less than a third of the number
of practitioners who turned out at last year's anniversary. By contrast, in the
Chinese territory of Hong Kong, where Falun Gong remains legal but whose
government has raised concerns it might restrict the group, 200 followers
demonstrated against the mainland crackdown with a group display of slow-motion
meditation exercises.
Chinese leaders have tried to enforce their crackdown all along by relying on
extensive networks of [party's name omitted] members and police
surveillance that reaches down into every neighborhood, factory and village. Yet
China is no longer as easily controlled as it once was. Two decades of rapid
economic change have slackened Beijing's hold over the daily lives of its
citizens and allowed local officials to loosely apply central-government orders.
In some far-flung localities, officials quietly permitted Falun Gong believers
to practice their […] meditation exercises, as long as they did so in private
and didn't travel to the capital to protest, says the [party's name omitted]
official, who is involved in security work."
The report continued, "President Jiang Zemin conveyed the message to
influential provincial and big-city party members at a secretive work conference
in early February, says the official. At the same time, a special commission
overseeing the crackdown, known as the 6-10 Office for the date it was set up in
1999, issued detailed instructions. Among them, the official says, were new
orders on dealing with followers: Those who actively practice were to be sent to
prison or labor camps while those who didn't formally renounce their beliefs
were to be isolated by making their families or employers promise to keep watch
over them.
Interviews with Falun Gong followers or their family members in five provinces
bear out the official's account of a tightening grip on practitioners. In
Hunchun, a commercial hub near the North Korean border, hundreds of followers
used to practice in public spaces before the 1999 ban, and for months afterward
they continued to do so privately. Now they only dare hint at their
beliefs."
The report mentioned, "The estimates put at 10,000 the number of
Falun Gong followers now in prison or labor camps, and an additional 5,000 are
refusing to recant but are being kept under watch, says the party official. Not
counted are the tens of thousands of others briefly held over the course of the
campaign in detention centers or "transformation points" -- makeshift
holding centers where followers were harangued and sometimes beaten until they
renounced. "
The report concluded, " 'China has so many social problems,' the official
says, citing official corruption and widespread discontent among farmers and
laborers who missed out on the fruits of economic reforms. 'The design is to
keep these groups apart. If they link up and there's a major disaster, it will
be like throwing a spark on a pile of dry tinder.' "
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