February 13, 2001

Wall Street Journal: China's New Falun Dafa Policy Puts Country in Harsh Light

BEIJING -- China' efforts to press home its new advantage in its war with the banned spiritual group Falun Dafa is spilling into the international arena. The effort to crush Falun Dafa gained momentum last month when five purported adherents set themselves ablaze in downtown Beijing. The dramatic action, caught on videotape and broadcast widely throughout China, has been used to buttress the government' claims that the group, which is also known as Falun Gong, is a [Chinese government' slanderous word] that must be stamped out at all costs. The footage has energized the government' efforts against Falun Dafa, which it banned in 1999 after the group protested in front of the Communist Party' leadership headquarters. Except for a few die-hard activists, few Chinese had been much interested in the battle between the government, which has detained thousands of adherents without trial, and the group, which continues to mount regular protests in the Chinese capital. But in pressing its advantage, the government may be taking its case to an extreme, thus angering some foreign countries. "Understatement is not their strong point," says Richard Baum, a professor at the University of California, San Diego. "When they react, they overreact." Harsh Phase The new, harsher phase to the campaign has affected Canada, Europe, Hong Kong and threatens to complicate plans of the new Bush administration and even China' efforts to land the 2008 Olympics. The Bush administration, for example, has considered dropping Washington' annual efforts to censure China at a United Nations' human-rights forum in Geneva. Now, however, pressure is growing to continue the efforts. Amnesty International, for example, says in a report due to be released Monday that Falun Dafa members have been abused and killed in prison, part of a "growing scourge" of torture spreading across China. The influential human-rights group says the new Bush team must "state clearly and soon its intention to sponsor a resolution condemning China' dismal and deteriorating human-rights record." Such claims could influence members of the International Olympic Committee, who are due in Beijing next week for a four-day visit. Chinese officials running the bid have been at pains to show that there should be no connection between the bid and Falun Dafa. Other countries are being drawn into the fray as well. Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien, for example, is visiting Beijing this week for what was supposed to be mainly a trade mission. Now, however, he has pledged to make human rights a chief topic with his hosts after a Canadian citizen who practices Falun Dafa was incarcerated in China last year and allowed to leave only after he signed a confession that he later said was forced out of him under torture. In addition, Mr. Chretien' government has said it is investigating reports that Chinese diplomats in Toronto and other Canadian cities have harassed Falun Dafa adherents staging rallies in Canada. Europe has also felt the fallout. A Dutch delegation canceled a trip to Hong Kong this month after China said it shouldn' meet local Falun Dafa members. The demand outraged the Dutch, although in some ways China' stance reflects the way it treats foreigners' attitudes toward Taiwan. China insists that foreigners recognize its claim over the island or be denied normal relations. Hong Kong Concerns Another trend seems to be Beijing' willingness to compromise Hong Kong' autonomy, stirring Western countries' fears that the former British colony will lose its status as a "special administrative region" of China free from Beijing' direct control. Pro-Beijing officials have warned Hong Kong chapters of Falun Dafa to cut their ties with the mainland. On Sunday, Hong Kong Justice Secretary Elsie Leung said she has no plan to enact a law against the meditation group. Ms. Leung said she "hasn' received any instruction" from the government to establish any law to restrict the group. Her comments follow a statement by the city' chief executive, Tung Chee Hwa, who on Thursday called the group a "[Chinese government' slanderous word]" and said the Hong Kong government would monitor Falun Dafa' activities. "We' watching the situation in Hong Kong very closely," said a Western diplomat based in Beijing. "China seems to be saying that it has drawn the line with Falun Dafa and Hong Kong isn' exempt."

"World Daily" Editorial: Human Rights Are Not Political Gambling Chips, But a Goal to Modernization

[Minghui Net] World Daily editorial, February 8, 2001

In regard to the U.S. Air Force using China as an assumed model enemy for a military space combat rehearsal, Beijing' Foreign Affairs Office "deeply expressed its worries" and at the same time stated that it will boycott the U.S. in developing a nationwide missile defense system and it will make large efforts to gain allies to push for anti space-arms-race treaties. In reality, behind the noisy "Star Wars" defense/offense system and the debate of whether the U.S. will increase selling weapons to Taiwan, the real test facing the relationship between China and the U.S. is the challenge of the human rights issue. This is not just because Bush' government emphasizes the values of human rights; the bottom line is, if Beijing shortens the gap on human rights issues with the U.S., the U.S. will reduce its increasing suspicion of China, and the arms race crisis will ease accordingly. In actuality, the White House and the State Department have already started to discuss how to use effective means to push the Chinese Central Government' high-level officials to improve human rights. In the short run, the U.S. State Department will publish its annual human rights report at the end of this month. It will strongly criticize the current worsening condition of human rights in China, especially the suppression of religions. Naturally, this will affect Secretary of Sate Powell' decision on whether to continue criticizing Beijing in next month' United Nations human rights conference.

Washington Post: Amnesty International Says Torture on Rise in China

By Philip P. Pan Washington Post Foreign Service Monday, February 12, 2001 Amnesty International alleged in a report released today that the practice of torture is expanding in China, with growing numbers of officials inflicting physical pain on a wider range of victims through beatings, whippings, electric shocks, sexual abuse and other sometimes deadly means. The report cited witnesses' accounts, Amnesty International' own research and increasingly candid articles in government-controlled newspapers in describing the "widespread and systemic" use of torture against political dissidents, Tibetan nuns, migrant workers, criminal defendants and their lawyers, as well as people accused of violating China' one-child policy or failing to pay taxes. Without referring to Amnesty International or the new report directly, the Foreign Ministry issued a statement declaring that it has been the "consistent position" of the Chinese government to ban torture and that there is "no factual basis to think there is a ' and large-scale' practice of torture in China." Amnesty International said it had broached almost all of the cases noted in the report with Chinese officials but that its questions were met with silence or categorical denials. In recent years, there has been a growing public debate about the abuse of police power here. Hou Zongbin, a ranking member of China' parliament, acknowledged in December that the use of torture to extract confessions "is rather serious in certain places, causing terrible social consequences" and must be "conscientiously dealt with rather than tolerated." Amnesty International, which is based in London, often issues reports documenting allegations of torture in China, but its last comprehensive report was a decade ago. The new, 58-page report details more than 75 specific incidents of torture and provides less complete information about more than 600 other cases. The accounts include that of a farmer in central Hunan province who was allegedly tortured to death on May 15, 1998, by family planning officials searching for his wife, who was suspected of being pregnant without permission. The report said Zhou Jianxiong, 30, was hung upside down, whipped, beaten with wooden clubs, burned with cigarettes and branded with soldering irons before his genitals were ripped off. "The testimony that Amnesty receives is just the tip of the iceberg," said Curt Goering, the group' senior deputy executive director in the United States. Torture "is no doubt a daily occurrence in China. . . . It' an attempt to destroy and control . . . and intimidate and punish." Goering called on the Bush administration to support a resolution condemning China' human rights record at the annual meeting of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights in Geneva next month and to do so more forcefully than the Clinton administration, which he said failed to lobby other countries effectively. China' human rights record has come under increasing international scrutiny recently. An International Olympics Committee delegation arrives in Beijing next week to evaluate the city' application to host the 2008 Summer Games; it was criticism of China' rights record that helped sink its bid for the 2000 Games. In addition, human rights groups are drawing attention to the trial of a computer engineer and entrepreneur that begins Tuesday in the western city of Chengdu. Huang Qi was charged with subversion last year after articles about the 1989 Tiananmen Square democracy demonstrations appeared on his Web site. Police allegedly beat him on Sept. 25, knocking out a tooth and leaving a scar on his forehead. China is also under fire for its crackdown on the Falun Gong spiritual group, which it considers an "[Chinese government' slanderous word]" and has banned. Since the sect was outlawed 18 months ago, as many as 120 Falun Gong members have died in police stations, labor camps and mental hospitals, many of them tortured to death, according to human rights groups. Amnesty International said it was not able to verify all the reports of abuse of Falun Gong adherents, but that it is "extremely concerned at the inadequate, contradictory response of the authorities to mounting credible evidence." The report said the crackdown on Falun Gong fit a pattern in which the Communist Party creates the conditions for torture to occur by launching high-profile campaigns, demanding quick results from local officials and then looking the other way. For example, the report said, officials have been urged to use "every means possible" against alleged separatists in western Xinjiang province, where a majority of the population is ethnic Uighur and Muslim. The report quoted an unidentified former court official in Xinjiang as saying that 90 percent of defendants there tell judges that they confessed after being tortured but that the judges ignore such allegations. In one case, a man named Zulikar Memet denied charges he had taken part in separatist activity and showed the court that his fingernails had been pulled out. He was executed on June 14, the report said. Goering said Amnesty International concluded that torture in China was expanding by comparing the reports it receives with those received in previous years, taking into account the improved flow of information from China.

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Falun Dafa in the News

  • AP: China Accused of Widespread Torture
  • AFP: China's Crackdown on Falun Gong Takes on Draconian Proportions
  • AFP: British Team in China for Dialogue on Human Rights
  • Reuters: Falun Gong Among 126 Nominees for 2001 Nobel Peace Prize
  • SCMP: Chretien raises [group] crackdown with Zhu
  • Houston Chronicle: Local Falun Gong seek probe They believe Chinese government staged self-immolation
  • Ames Daily Tribune: Followers find peace in Falun Gong
  • AFP: China Objects to Planned Falun Gong Meeting in Bangkok
  • CNEWS/CANOE: PM pans China's human rights record
  • AFP: US legislators demand action on China human rights
  • Radio Netherlands: China Turns Screw on Falun Gong
  • Time: Litmus Test
  • Personal Accounts of Persecution

  • The Power of Dafa
  • My Eight Detentions
  • Police Brutality at Beijing's Puhuangyu Police Station
  • Record of Persecution of Falun Gong Practitioners in the Detention Center of Yushu City Police Department, Jilin Province
  • Experiences of a 61 Year Old Practitioner
  • Experiences From Dafa Practitioners In Xiangtan City, Hunan Province
  • Persecution Report From Heizhuizi Labor Camp, Changchun City, Jilin Province
  • Persecution of Practitioners in Labor Camp of Daqing City, Heilongjiang Province
  • Family in Misery from Persecution
  • The Spring Festival in Guangzhou Difficult Time for Familiies of Falun Dafa Practitioners
  • News from China - 02/05/2001
  • News from China - 02/09/2001
  • Rallies & Protests

  • Australian Practitioners Once Again Appeal to Australian Parliament
  • Community Events

  • News from Swedish Practitioners
  • Spreading Dafa in Bangalore, India
  • The First Promotion of Falun Dafa in Vermont State
  • Falun Gong Lecture in American University
  • Photo report: Hongfa Activities in Oregon Public Libraries
  • Opinion

  • "Are You from the CIA?"
  • Solemn Declarations

  • Solemn Statements of Practitioners Who Were Compelled to Write Pledges Against Their Wills
  • People Awaken

  • Jiang Zemin Staged Self-Immolation on Tiananmen Square to pave the Way for Armed Suppression
  • Recent News