ELEANOR HALL: Mr Chen's allegations that Chinese agents have been spying on
Falun Gong members in Australia has also raised questions about the way
Australian authorities treat members of the group, which is legal here but
banned in China.
And today Australia's Foreign Affairs Department has defended its attempts to
restrict protests by Falun Gong practitioners outside the Chinese Embassy in
Canberra.
Members of the spiritual movement have accused the Australian Government of
changing its attitude to them in recent years, and say they've been harassed and
even assaulted by Chinese diplomats in Sydney and Canberra, as Brendan Trembath
reports.
BRENDAN TREMBATH: Australia has special rules to keep the peace outside the
Chinese Embassy in Canberra. Practitioners of Falun Gong are free to meditate,
but they can't play amplified music.
So Chinese diplomats are spared from hearing this sort of music, which tells how
the group began.
MUSIC EXCERPT: In May of 1992, an astounding Qigong practice caused a sensation
in Beijing, the capital city of China. With its profound principles and
miraculous effects, it took this ancient city by storm.
The news travelled fast, as word spread from person to person. Very quickly the
practice found its way to over 50 countries and regions around the world, and
has been warmly welcomed by those governments.
BRENDAN TREMBATH: The Australian Government also stops protestors from attaching
banners to walls or vehicles. A Department of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman says
it's in line with an international agreement to protect the dignity and security
of diplomatic staff.
But Falun Gong supporters say Foreign Minister Alexander Downer stopped the
music several years ago for fear of offending his Chinese counterpart.
Jennifer Zeng is a Falun Gong practitioner who's written a book on the group's
fight for acceptance. She says the Australian Government's attitude to Falun
Gong has hardened.
JENNIFER ZENG: We think this is very wrong, and Australia is the only Western
democratic country that restricts Falun Gong practitioners' right to [display]
banners. [...]Falun Gong practitioners are doing the same thing in any other
countries, just except in Australia.
BRENDAN TREMBATH: China banned Falun Gong in 1999. [...]
Jennifer Zeng says she was among the people persecuted for practising Falun
Gong. She spent a year in a labour camp where she was abused physically and
mentally.
Jennifer Zeng says even though she and other supporters are free to practice in
Australia, Chinese diplomats have tried to stop them.
She says diplomats have harassed and even assaulted Falun Gong members.
JENNIFER ZENG: There are many, many of that kind of cases, and even to the
extent that actually a Chinese official walked out of the Chinese Embassy in
Canberra and actually slapped the face of a female Falun Gong practitioner
called Jen Shi (phonetic) on her face, and when this lady protested this is
Australia, she has the right to be there and to just keep doing mediation there,
and that a Chinese official says I'm a Chinese diplomat. Who cares? What can
Australia do to me.
BRENDAN TREMBATH: The Australian Federal Police have confirmed they enforce the
ban on amplified music and banners. The Department of Foreign Affairs says the
ban is renewed monthly. A Federal Police spokesman says the protestors are well
aware of the limits, and police have not taken any action.
While China calls Falun Gong a [slanderous terms omitted] , Jennifer Zeng says
that's propaganda.
JENNIFER ZENG: And before actually the crackdown in 1999, Falun Gong spread in
China for seven years, and the Chinese Government at that time actually
encouraged people to practice.
ELEANOR HALL: Falun Gong practitioner Jennifer Zeng ending that report by
Brendan Trembath.