Peace and Justice Commission
Resolution Regarding Falun Gong and President Bush's
Planned October Visit with Chinese President Jiang Zemin
Passed at the Berkeley City Council on October 22, 2002
WHEREAS, in accordance with Berkeley Municipal Code section 3.68.070.A, it is
the function of the Peace and Justice Commission to "advise the Berkeley
City Council and the Berkeley Unified School Board on all matters relating to
the City of Berkeley's role in issues of peace and social justice, including ...
support for human rights and self-determination throughout the world"; and
WHEREAS, section 3.68.030 of the Berkeley Municipal Code defines "peace and
justice" as "the goal of creating a world community in which the
relations between people are based on equality, respect for human rights, and
the abhorrence of exploitation and all forms of oppression"; and
WHEREAS, section 3.68.070 (H) of the Berkeley Municipal Code say the Peace and
Justice Commission shall "[a]ct as a liaison between community groups
organizing around issues of peace and social justice and City government";
and
WHEREAS, Berkeley residents who are Falun Gong members have reported to the
Peace and Justice Commission about actions by the Chinese government taken
against them and other Falun Gong practitioners living in the United States,
including arrest and beating of a Berkeley resident when he visited China, and
the naming of Berkeley residents on a list used to interfere with their freedom
of international travel ; and
[...]
WHEREAS, President Jiang Zemin is reportedly responsible for suppression of
religious and ethnic groups such as Tibetans, Buddhists, and Christians; and for
a vicious campaign since July 1999 to targeting practitioners of the Falun Gong
meditation practice ; and
WHEREAS, Falun Gong is a practice for improving the body, mind, and spirit
through exercise, meditation, and teachings that are rooted in ancient Chinese
culture ; and
WHEREAS, Falun Gong practitioners have peacefully appealed to the Chinese
government for over three years, but have been met with incarceration and
torture in return, resulting in at least 200 confirmed deaths, and thousands
being put into labor camps.?In February 2002, the Chinese police in
Tiananmen Square beat a Berkeley resident for peacefully appealing for civil
rights for Falun Gong practitioners ; and
WHEREAS, Falun Gong supporters allege that on March 5, 2002 President Jiang
Zemin ordered police to shoot Falun Gong practitioners who were caught
distributing flyers, banners or posters ; and
WHEREAS, in June 2002, Berkeley residents who are Falun Gong practitioners were
apparently put on a blacklist and barred from entry to Iceland as the
practitioners sought to appeal directly to the President of China during his
visit to Iceland ; and
WHEREAS, Amnesty International named President Jiang Zemin a "human rights
scoundrel" in 2001?due to the worsening human rights situation in
China; and
WHEREAS, on July 24, 2002, the United States Congress unanimously passed House
Concurrent Resolution 188 , condemning the persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners in China and calling on the United States government to use every
appropriate public and private forum to urge the government of the People's
Republic of China to end such persecution; and
WHEREAS, the City of Berkeley has sent letters to the head of its "sister
city," the Haidian District in Beijing, and to other Chinese officials
(Attachment B) regarding the persecution of the Falun Gong; and
WHEREAS, prior to President Bush's visit to China in February, 2002, 94 members
of Congress sent a letter to him asking him to raise specifically the issue of
the treatment of Falun Gong in China , but he made no such mention during his
public speech there ; and
WHEREAS, President Bush has extended an invitation to President Jiang Zemin to
visit his ranch in Crawford, Texas during President Jiang Zemin's visit to the
United States this October ;
NOW THEREFORE, be it resolved that the Council of the City of Berkeley send this
resolution and the attached letter (Attachment A) to President George W. Bush
expressing concern regarding inviting Jiang Zemin, President of the People's
Republic of China, to visit the United States and President Bush's Crawford
ranch, and asking the President Bush to specifically raise the issue of human
rights abuses against Falun Gong members in his discussions with President Jiang
Zemin, with copies to Berkeley's Members of Congress and the U.S. Secretary of
State.
Peace and Justice Commission
Resolution Regarding Falun Gong and President Bush's
Planned October Visit with Chinese President Ziang Zemin
ATTACHMENT A
President George W. Bush
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. President:
It has been reported that you have invited Jiang Zemin, President of the
People's Republic of China, to your ranch in Crawford, Texas, during his visit
to the United States this October. The Berkeley City Council voted on [date] to
express its deep concern about this invitation, and to urge you to speak with
President Jiang specifically about the treatment accorded Falun Gong
practitioners by his government.
President Jiang Zemin is a leader whose power is based on violence and tyranny.
He supported the declaration of martial law during the 1989 student
demonstrations in Tiananmen Square, which led to the massacre of many innocent
people. A report from Amnesty International in May 2000 reveals that those who
try to seek justice for the victims, or even commemorate the anniversary of the
massacre, continue to be subjected to detention and harassment over a decade
later. In one instance, a man was sentenced to three years in a labor camp for
collecting signatures on a petition that called for an inquiry into the 1989
crackdown.
In addition to suppressing religious and ethnic groups such as Tibetans,
Buddhists, and Christians, President Jiang has waged a vicious campaign since
July 1999 to target and "eliminate" the Falun Gong meditation
practice. He has established an agency to oversee this persecution, known as the
"610 Office." By the end of 2001, more than 1000 people had reportedly
been tortured to death, and thousands are currently imprisoned in labor camps,
mental institutions, and detention centers where they are beaten and tortured.
Amnesty International awarded President Jiang the title "human rights
scoundrel of the year" in 2000.
The House of Representatives on July 24, 2002 unanimously passed House
Concurrent Resolution 188, which condemns the persecution of Falun Gong and
urges your administration to investigate allegations of Chinese government
interference with the lives of Falun Gong adherents on American soil.
Before you visited China earlier this year, you received a letter signed by 94
members of Congress asking you to raise the issue of Falun Gong with the
President of China. During your speech there, while you did mention human
rights, a creditable inclusion, you did not mention Falun Gong by name.
Your invitation to President Jiang in the context of continued Chinese human
rights violations is troubling. Should you go forward with this meeting, we
strongly urge you to specifically raise the issue of human rights abuses of
Falun Gong members during your discussions with President Jiang.