FALUN GONG NEWS BULLETIN


Monitoring the Falun Gong Human Rights Crisis in China



Worldwide Vigils Mark April 25th Falun Gong Appeal


Practitioners of Falun Gong marked April 25 last Friday with candlelight vigils around the world, renewing calls for the Beijing regime to end a nine-year campaign of suppression that has recently escalated with the approach of the Olympics. It was on April 25, 1999, that Falun Gong first gained worldwide attention when some 10,000 adherents petitioned the central government in Beijing. Those gathering asked officials to release 40 practitioners who had recently been subjected to police abuse and unlawfully detained, and called for protection of their right to practice their beliefs in peace. Falun Gong practitioners and their supporters participated in candlelight vigils and sit-ins outside Chinese embassies and consulates in New York, Washington DC, London, Paris, Sydney, and other cities around the world.

Media Alert: http://www.faluninfo.net/displayAnArticle.asp?ID=9519


Falun Gong Arrests and Deaths in Custody Escalate as Olympics Approach


Chinese security agencies have been conducting large-scale arrests of Falun Gong adherents throughout China in recent months as authorities step up efforts to “stamp out” the practice in advance of the Olympic Games in August. Since January, the Center has been receiving regular reports from adherents and their families inside China of door-to-door searches and arrests. According to statistics compiled from these reports, there have been at least 1,878 arrests across 29 provinces, major cities, and autonomous regions.

In an alarming and related trend, the Center has received reports indicating adherents in China are being killed in custody within days, or even hours, of being detained by the authorities. Among those reportedly killed in custody shortly after detention was folk musician and Beijing resident Yu Zhou (see below).

For more information:

“Hundreds of Falun Gong Adherents Arrested in ‘Preparation’ for Olympics:” http://www.faluninfo.net/displayAnArticle.asp?ID=9517
“Falun Gong Deaths Escalate as Olympics Approach:” http://www.faluninfo.net/displayAnArticle.asp?ID=9518


Sunday Times (London): Yu Zhou Dies as China Launches Pre-Olympic Purge of Falun Gong


April 20, 2008 – “Members of a peaceful Chinese spiritual movement say that more than 1,500 of its supporters have been detained in the run-up to the Olympic Games and that one of them, a popular folk singer, has died in custody….

The official media have not reported the arrests, but there has been lively discussion among music fans on Chinese websites over the fate of the singer Yu Zhou, 42. “Another beautiful soul has left the world,” commented one distraught fan.

Falun Gong representatives said Yu was arrested on January 26 while returning home from a concert in Beijing. His family were called to the Qinghe district emergency centre on February 6 to view his body, which was covered in a white sheet…..

Yu won a following among young Chinese for his mellow folk ballads. His group, Xiao Juan and Residents from the Valley, released two successful CDs and appeared on the Phoenix television channel.”

Full Story: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/china/article3779899.ece


Weekly Standard: Carrying a Torch for China


Ethan Gutmann, author of Losing the New China, has called for President Bush to boycott the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics because of the severity of the persecution of Falun Gong, including evidence of organ harvesting from detained adherents of the practice:

April 21, 2008—“Beijing's was always a blackmail bid….The blackmail bid took place in clear sight of the mindbending persecution of Falun Gong, an operation that had already mobilized China's state security forces on a scale that dwarfs the current Tibet crackdown….I have interviewed some of the survivors. Roughly half of the Falun Gong practitioners who have emerged from the camps describe physical exams aimed at determining the health of their internal organs, along with close examination of corneas. Ears, genitals, and the other parts of the body usually scrutinized in medical exams--all of which have no value in the organ market--were routinely ignored…

…As an indigenous Chinese movement, rather than a separatist one, Falun Gong has taken a neutral position on boycotting the Chinese Olympics, sensing correctly that it has become a matter of Chinese “face” that the Olympics continue. But we in the West have our own version of face, a genocide line that cannot be crossed without our identity beginning to crack. No matter how much we ignored the crying, the persecution of Falun Gong demonstrably crossed that line, and even if the Chinese leadership calls off the torch relay or makes an effort to resolve the Tibet situation, it is too late for this Olympics.”

For more information visit: http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/986himak.asp


Daily Mirror: Annie Yang reveals Olympic torch guards place her into labour camp.


The story of how Falun Gong practitioner Annie Yang was taken from her home by Chinese special police and tortured for a year in a labour camp was reported in detail in Britain’s national newspaper The Daily Mirror.

The brigade of guards—the Flying Dragons—who took her from her home were the same who donned blue tracksuits and accompanied the Olympic torch in its progress around the world.

“When I saw the torch in London being guarded by men in blue tracksuits, it brought back terrible memories,” she told the newspaper. Also covered in the article was the story of Wenjian Liang, sister of a Nottingham resident who was sentenced to a labor camp last year and remains in custody.

For more information visit: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/topstories/2008/04/12/annie-yang-reveals-olympic-torch-guards-place-her-into-labour-camp-89520-20380214/


TRADITIONAL CHINESE CULTURE


If only todays China would return to their ancient Chinese culture . We could all learn so much from these traditional values and ethics . WE all used to think and behave this way once ...Oh yes didn't you know we were all Chinese once ?


One Should Keep a Distance from Those Who Curry Favor


According to Shishuoxinyu from the Great Tang Dynasty, one day after he had finished a court session, Tangtaizong (Emperor of the Tang Dynasty) walked by a tree and was delighted to see that its branches and leaves were flourishing. Standing next to him, Yuwenshiji tried to curry favor with Tangtaizong and kept praising the tree. Tangtaizong scolded him solemnly: "Wei Zheng advised me to keep a distance from those with lowly character. Although I suspected that you might be such a person, I was not sure. But now I know." Yuwenshiji was terrified and begged for forgiveness.


Confucius said, "I hate those who harm the country with their sharp mouths." He also said, "One should keep a distance from those who like to curry favor." Those who are used to ingratiating themselves are good at figuring out what their superiors have in mind and how to make them happy. With their superiors being happy, they can make up things and distort the truth, and succeed in harming those who are righteous and honest. So the sages always are on guard for those who curry favor. Tangtaizong's scolding Yuwenshiji right in his face is a good example.


To distinguish a person of lowly character from the rest may not be that difficult. If a person talks straightforwardly and dares to say what is on his mind, he is more righteous. Those who like to ingratiate themselves and curry favor are the cunning ones.


Chinese version available here

Popular Chinese folk singer murdered for practising Falun Gong in China



Yu Zhou dies as China launches pre-Olympic purge of Falun Gong


Michael Sheridan in Hong Kong

MEMBERS of a peaceful Chinese spiritual movement say that more than 1,500 of its supporters have been detained in the run-up to the Olympic Games and that one of them, a popular folk singer, has died in custody.

The arrests have been carried out against Falun Gong, a group that practises traditional meditation and exercise. The Chinese government banned Falun Gong in 1999, calling it “an evil cult”.

The official media have not reported the arrests, but there has been lively discussion among music fans on Chinese websites over the fate of the singer Yu Zhou, 42. “F*** authority. Another beautiful soul has left the world,” commented one distraught fan.

Falun Gong representatives said Yu was arrested on January 26 while returning home from a concert in Beijing. His family were called to the Qinghe district emergency centre on February 6 to view his body, which was covered in a white sheet.

Yu’s relatives were told that he had died of diabetes or as the result of a hunger strike. They replied that he had never suffered from diabetes and refused official demands for an immediate cremation, the group said.

Yu won a following among young Chinese for his mellow folk ballads. His group, Xiao Juan and Residents from the Valley, released two successful CDs and appeared on the Phoenix television channel.

Yu was a graduate of Beijing University. He married Xu Na, 40, a poet and painter who was imprisoned between 2001 and 2006 for her association with Falun Gong. The group said she was also arrested on January 26 and remains in custody.

It was not possible to verify Falun Gong’s allegations. Officers at the Tongzhou district detention centre would not respond to telephone inquiries.

Friends and colleagues of Yu said they have lost contact with the parents of the couple, whose homes were said to be under police surveillance.

However, a member of Yu’s band, contacted by telephone, said in response to a question about his reported death: “It is not suitable to answer this question. As you know, if I answer it I will be in trouble.”

While global attention has focused on the uprising in Tibet, the renewed attack on Falun Gong shows that the state security apparatus is determined to crush any domestic opposition before the Beijing Games start in August.

“It is increasingly clear that much of the current wave of repression is occurring not in spite of the Olympics but actually because of the Olympics,” said Amnesty International, which has detailed numerous arrests and the harassment of Chinese civil rights activists.

Now operating from exile, Falun Gong said that at least 1,878 of its adherents had been arrested since January 1. The detainees included 156 people in Beijing. Of these, 26 were residents of the Chaoyang and Shunyi districts, which host Olympic venues.

Falun Gong was founded in 1992 by Li Hongzhi, a former government grain clerk who is said to have achieved enlightenment. At first it attracted little official attention. As it grew in numbers, however, the group clashed with the authorities and a ferocious crackdown was launched.

The US State Department estimates that at least 100,000 Falun Gong members have been imprisoned, locked up in psychiatric hospitals or sent to “reeducation” camps, where they are made to denounce Li.

The group itself says several thousand of its followers have died in prison as a result of torture and beatings.

Video: Why is Falun Gong persecuted in China

Yu Zhou (playing drums) in music video

Global Human Rights Torch Relay

More than halfway around the world this inspirational Human Rights Torch Relay will inspire you to join in when it reaches your country.

Check the route here


Inhuman Torture in China dwarfs Tibetan crisis




With the Chinese regime’s roundup of Falun Gong practitioners in anticipation of the Beijing Olympics, the massacre in Lhasa, Tibet, and the clampdown on the media, the spotlight has been shining ever brighter on China’s horrendous human rights abuses.


The FLGHRWG wishes to announce that it has sent out millions of emails around the world to alert government officials, NGOs, human rights groups, and many individuals of the inhuman torture going on in China. In order to win the Olympics, China made a promise to improve human rights. Far from keeping its promise, the human rights violations have gotten worse - much worse.

The Tip of the Iceberg


The following torture cases of Falun Gong practitioners represent just the tip of the iceberg. They are typical of what tens of thousands have experienced, what hundreds of thousands face, and what millions fear if they dare to place their own belief above belief in the Chinese Communist Party.


Ms. Zhang Yulan: In 2000, at the Changchun Women’s Labor Camp Ms. Zhang was forced to do slave labor, often until midnight, and was beaten and shocked with electric batons. In 2003, just two years after the Communist regime promised to “improve human rights” in order to get the Olympics, Ms. Zhang’s father and brother were tortured to death for practicing Falun Gong. On November 28, 2007, the police arrested Ms. Zhang, and caused her to “disappear.” The authorities refuse to give her family any idea of her whereabouts, or even tell them whether she is still alive.


Ms. Zhao Zhongling: Ms. Zhao was arrested five times for practicing Falun Gong, and suffered injuries due to torture each time. One month after her arrest on March 23, 2007, the authorities reported she was in critical condition. However they refused to release her. They continued to use heavy shackles on her legs, kept her tied to bed and even sentenced her to three years of forced labor. Ms. Zhao was tortured to death less than a month and a half after her arrest. She was only 44. After her death, the local authorities forced her family to sign a statement acknowledging her guilt.


Mr. Liu Hongwei and Ms. Mu Ping: On May 13, 2003, Mr. Liu’s wife was tortured to death at Jilin Province Hezuizi Women’s Prison for practicing Falun Gong. To avoid capture and further persecution, Mr. Liu had to leave his daughter and wander about. Ms. Mu Ping’s husband was tortured to death on May 13, 2002. For practicing Falun Gong, she herself had been tortured at a labor camp for close to three years. After she was released, her son never left her side.


The two adults came together, formed a new family, found work and settled down. On October 24, 2006, the police arrested them again, ransacked their home, and froze the 70,000 Yuan in their bank account. Their children were left without care, one of their parents suffered a heart attack. Both of their elderly mothers are on the brink of mental collapse, and Mr. Liu and Ms. Mu are still in prison for their belief.


Ms. Wei Fengju: Ms. Wei was first arrested in 1999. She was jailed for speaking the truth about Falun Gong. She was forced to work 17 to 20 hours per day and was sometimes not allowed to sleep at all. The guards used electric batons to shock her on her chest and in her mouth, which disfigured her mouth. When she was detained in February 2007, the torture left her with abdominal pain and she could not eat. After her release, she could not recover and died on July 12, 2007. Before her death, she told others, “I won’t be able to recover because they injected some unknown drug into me.”


Mr. Li Hongfu: Mr. Li was repeatedly jailed and tortured for telling people the truth about Falun Gong. The torture included the tiger bench, electric shocks, nailing bamboo shoots under his fingernails and merciless daily beatings by convicted drug addicts. The brutality caused Mr. Li’s spleen to rupture and his chest to collapse. He vomited and had difficulty breathing. He weighed less than 40 kg, could no longer walk unaided, and was in constant excruciating pain. Mr. Li never recovered and died on December 8, 2006, at the age of 31.

David Matas Explains Organ Harvesting in China


Matas said that he feels that the Chinese government's avoidance of producing any valid refutations or plausible arguments to his report and their gravitation towards lies and propaganda is itself an admission to guilt. "The propaganda doesn't refute the report, but it certainly does confirm it," said Matas.

Of the calls, 10% confirmed that the organs were from Falun Gong practitioners, with voice recorded admissions. Other evidentiary trails pointed to things such as military involvement in organ transplants, systematic blood testing of only prisoners who practice Falun Gong, and a large spike in the number of organ transplants in China corresponding with the Communist Party's launching of their persecution of Falun Gong.

Read the report and all the evidences here.

By Joshua Philipp

Epoch Times San Diego Staff


David Matas, human rights attorney, speaking at a seminar on organ harvesting and human rights in China, Apr. 3, 2008, at the University of California San Diego. (Alex Li/The Epoch Times)

SAN DIEGO, CA ─ David Matas, an award winning international human rights attorney gave a seminar on organ harvesting and human rights in China on Apr. 3 at the Cross Cultural Center, UCSD.


Matas discussed the findings of an investigative report, "Bloody Harvest," which he co-authored with David Kilgour, a former Canadian Crown Prosecutor, member of Parliament, and Secretary of State. The report investigates the allegations that the Chinese government has been harvesting organs from living Falun Gong practitioners, which concludes, "... there has been and continues today to be large scale organ seizures from unwilling Falun Gong Practitioners."


Matas discussed why he had decided to take the responsibility to do an investigation on the issue after having heard the allegations from a medical doctor's wife, under the alias of "Annie" back in 2006, that Falun Gong practitioners were being killed for their organs.


He mentioned that as a human rights lawyer who has worked with many major human rights groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, he recognized that this would be an investigation that human rights organizations would have difficulty with, illustrating this point by describing the case that he and Kilgour were faced with, saying, "Somebody is killed in an operating room and their body is cremated. So there are no surviving victims and there's no corpse. It's an operating room so it's cleaned up afterwards, there's no crime scene. It's a hospital, it's a closed place, no witnesses."


Matas continued, "There'd be presumably hospital records, but this is the Chinese government, no access to information, so we're not going to get any documents. . . that was the kind of evidentiary panorama we were faced with."


Facing this challenge, Matas and Kilgour found a way to launch an investigation by creating a list of evidentiary trails that could either prove or disprove the allegations. Altogether, they came out with 33 evidentiary trails to follow at the time of the report.


"Basically, in a nutshell, what we came up with was that every evidentiary trail that we could think of, that could have disproved the allegations, went nowhere. Every evidentiary trail that proved the allegations gave us something. The result of which is, putting it all together, that 'standing back from the pile,' so to speak, we came to the conclusion that this was true. That what Annie had said was true. Not just for corneas, but for all organs. Not just for 2002 to 2003, like she talked about, but from 2001 till when our reports came out. Not just in Sujian [province], but in all of China," said Matas.


The evidentiary trails included a number of different areas that would be necessary for or would allow for the harvesting of organs from people. Matas said that one evidentiary trail was calling the hospitals, posing as patients looking for organ transplants, and asking the doctors whether the organs were from Falun Gong practitioners on the grounds that since Falun Gong practitioners do exercises, they must have healthy organs.


Of the calls, 10% confirmed that the organs were from Falun Gong practitioners, with voice recorded admissions. Other evidentiary trails pointed to things such as military involvement in organ transplants, systematic blood testing of only prisoners who practice Falun Gong, and a large spike in the number of organ transplants in China corresponding with the Communist Party's launching of their persecution of Falun Gong.


"The almost exclusive source of organs in China, from the very moment that transplants began, was prisoners. It started off being prisoners sentenced to death and that was the, more-or-less, sole source of organ transplants in China, until the persecution of Falun Gong began. But after a year or two of the persecution of Falun Gong began, the transplant numbers started going way up. The numbers went way up, but the people being sentenced to death remained the same," said Matas.


Also pointed to was the fact that with China's switch from socialism to capitalism, the central government started withdrawing money from the health system as they figured the hospitals would charge people for services and make their own money. This caused the Chinese health system to become heavily reliant on money from organ transplants in order to stay in business.


"Not only do the hospitals raise money through private sectors, the army raises money through private sectors. The military in China is a conglomerate business so they're involved in all sorts of different ways to raise money, including selling organs," said Matas.


Now with 51 evidentiary trails and with a possible third edition of their report in the works, Matas said that he and Kilgour have been doing much work speaking with officials around the world and holding seminars on their findings in hopes to stop the practice of organ harvesting in China.


Despite the findings of their report, Matas explained that he and Kilgour have received heavy pushback by the Communist Party in China through methods of false propaganda. Matas said that one of his first encounters with their propaganda on his report was during a debate with a representative from the Chinese Embassy in Israel.


Matas said, "What he did was manufacture quotations from our report and disagreed with the quotations [he manufactured]. I mean I could see those quotations. First of all, I remember what I wrote, but also, our report is on the internet and it's word searchable."


"Normally when people disagree with me they tend to adopt a position that looks plausible or sounds sensible or is a position that somebody might reasonably take. But that's not what the Chinese government has done. The Chinese government, in disagreeing with us, seems to avoid the plausible and gravitate towards the outrageous to take positions that no person would possibly believe. At first I was quite taken back by this. I wasn't quite sure what to make of it," said Matas.


Matas continued by illustrating other examples of his encounters with the Communist Party's propaganda. "It's called the 'big lie technique' it's a propaganda technique. It was actually something defended and articulated by the Nazis, by Hitler, who said that if you're going to succeed in propaganda, you're more likely to succeed with a big lie than a little lie because a big lie is going to be so outrageous that people won't think you have the impudence to engage in such a lie," said Matas.


Matas said that he feels that the Chinese government's avoidance of producing any valid refutations or plausible arguments to his report and their gravitation towards lies and propaganda is itself an admission to guilt. "The propaganda doesn't refute the report, but it certainly does confirm it," said Matas.

Despite China's resistance, Matas said that some progress has been made. Yet, he pointed out that there is still much to be done. "Even if the problem were to cease completely, which I'd certainly hope. Even if China were to cease the persecution of Falun Gong, which it certainly should. Even if China became democratic, which is something I guess we can all hope for, there would still be a problem because what has happened is a crime against humanity and as a crime against humanity, It cries out for redress," said Matas.


Read the report and all the evidences here

A Righteous Stance on Falun Gong from Australias' PM Rudd is still yet to be realised


TO THE CHIEF EDITOR


Jane Dai and daughter Fadu, are Australian citizens who were persecuted for practising Falun Gong in China. Fadu's father was brutally tortured and murderd leaving Fadu without ever knowing her father. www.falunart.org



I am quietly applauding Australias PM Kevin Rudd for finding the courage to challenge China’s Communist officialdom on the relentless human rights violations perpetrated against the people of Tibet.


Not since the Tiananmen Square Massacre of 1989 have we as a nation taken such a forthright stance on justice and human dignity in the face of the Chinese Communist Party’s undeniable repression.




The upcoming Olympics have proven to be a catalyst for changing our perception of modern-day China forever - that behind its walls lurks an authoritarian and atheist regime intolerant of all that who choose to think beyond its regressive ideologies. I do hope that the fundamental rights of all citizens of China, regardless of belief, will one day be restored.



I watch with interest to see how this unfolds and how committed Mr Rudd will remain to not only the cause of Tibet to but the 70 million persecuted Falun Gong practitioners who are also being sacrificed speedily and ruthlessly in the lead up to the “harmonious and peaceful Beijing Games.”

CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY AND POLITICS


www.falunart.org


TO THE CHIEF EDITOR


How often we have heard in recent weeks that - sport and politics don’t mix?



This is a faulty notion because advocates are not accusing the Chinese communist party of Politics. We are accusing them of “Crimes Against Humanity”.




For instance if a politician says that you should vote for them because that have a better education plan, that’s politics. If a politician murders his opponent, that is a crime.


The IOC awarded Beijing the Games seemingly unaware of its well-oiled repressive apparatus against all who would think outside of the Communist Party line - faith communities, Falun Gong, democracy activists, human rights defenders and even journalists who dare to report beyond the confines of its State-controlled media.



Tens of thousands are now being rounded-up and imprisoned throughout China so that all voices of dissent and freedom will, come August, be forcibly silenced.




Please lets not make the mistake of equating the Chinese communist regimes Crimes Against Humanity with Politics.

CHINA’S INTERNAL AFFAIRS AND THE WESTS CREDIBILITY


WWW.FALUNART.ORG


TO THE CHIEF EDITORS


As China’s State-sanctioned repression inside Tibet receives worldwide attention, many may still be unfamiliar with the human rights atrocities that China’s own citizens face everyday - crimes that remain virtually unpublicised.




Millions who practice Falun Gong continue to be systematically persecuted under China’s regime due to its popularity and the reawakening to China’s rich cultural heritage before the rise of communist ideology. These innocent individuals, aside from being barred from attending the Olympic Games, are subjected to arbitrary arrest, illegal imprisonment without trial, forced labour, all manner of inhuman torture methods, and even to the forced pillaging of their vital organs to supply an overseas demand (including Australia) - all to renounce their adherence to the peaceful tenets of “truthfulness, compassion and tolerance” and a spiritual focus beyond China’s atheist control.




For Hu Jintao to dismiss the world’s concerns of the human rights abuses against Tibetans as “meddling in China’s internal affairs” is a crime against our sense of justice and humanity.




Its also time for all western leaders to openly speak to Hu Jintao on the mind-bending persecution of Falun Gong.



It is timely that the all media also report widely the immoral persecution of Falun Gong without fear of censure or retribution from the Chinese communist regime or indeed our own leaders.




I remain hopeful that such violations against all innocent citizens living under China’s leadership’ continue to be exposed and rightfully condemned in the lead up to the Games.

Angry young Chinese men are concerned by the hypocrisy of Western journalists.



An insightful yet essential core analysis of the persecution of Falun Gong and why the western world has largely ignored this mind bending Genocide to date.


excerpt:

"And here, again, the angry young Chinese men have a point concerning the hypocrisy of Western journalists.It was all a charade. The blackmail bid took place in clear sight of the mindbending persecution of Falun Gong, an operation that had already mobilized China's state security forces on a scale that dwarfs the current Tibet crackdown.

The West had three clear openings to bring the issue to a head:

when the Beijing bid was nearing fruition in 2000;

when an energized Falun Gong movement in the West emerged four years later with documentation that thousands had been murdered and over 100,000 had been thrown into labor camps;

and finally in 2006 when credible reports of systematic organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners seeped out, pushing the potential death toll well into the tens of
thousands"




Carrying a Torch for China

by Ethan Gutmann

Excerpt Please read full article here

As the Tibetan and Falun Gong protests surrounding the global trail of the Olympic torch pick up intensity, Europe has already begun to pick sides. Haunted by the Berlin Olympics of 1936, universally regarded as Europe's dress rehearsal for the disastrous policy of appeasement, it is no coincidence that the two populations that bore the immediate brunt of the Nazi war machine, Poland and the Czech Republic, were the first to pull out of Beijing's political opening ceremony. Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, recently announced that she will not attend either. Nicolas Sarkozy has publicly threatened to do the same and possibly to carry the European Union along with him. You'd have thought that Britain might be inhibited by London's role as Olympics host city in 2012, but Prime Minister Gordon Brown went back late last week on his previously stated intention to attend the opening ceremony (while still clinging to a fig-leaf appearance at the closer).


The answer to the question of how comprehensive a boycott we are looking at probably lies in the United States, the global superpower. Given China's status as America's second largest trading partner, Washington cannot easily embrace the unbearable lightness of boycotting, but it is hard to imagine that President Bush, who has accepted a Chinese invitation to attend the Olympics, can easily stomach the Chinese rationalizations for the Tibet crackdown either.


Once you get past the usual Chinese admonitions about interference in internal affairs, the first Chinese argument is that Tibetan monks and activists are essentially terrorists, with the Dalai Lama standing in for bin Laden. Thus Chinese suppression of Tibetan Buddhism and the strategic resettlement of Han Chinese in Tibet are downplayed in favor of a serial loop of badly shot "atrocities of the Tibetan independence forces." (The Chinese government recently warned of "Tibetan suicide squads," indicating that they may consider staging an event with better lighting in the near future.) This argument doesn't really fly. Too many Washington leaders, Bush among them, have met the Dalai Lama, and it won't work with U.S. journalists either--the Chinese have shut down press access to Tibet all too frequently.


The second defense, favored by angry young Chinese males in reader comment sections throughout the Internet, parrots the Chinese government's depiction of Tibetans as picturesque but feckless (like our caricature of American Indians back when we still called them that), who desperately need Chinese modernization for their own good. The problem with the "Han Chinese burden" rationale is that we stopped slaughtering our natives some time ago.


The third Chinese argument is rarely stated openly. To do so would negate not only the two previous arguments, but also China's commitment to improve the human rights situation in advance of the Olympics. It goes like this: You are hypocrites. You knew the human rights situation in China when we made our bid. Your journalists only give human rights sporadic, selective coverage anyway. So why are you complaining at this late date? And here, as the context of the original bid and the tragic history of Falun Gong fully demonstrate, the Chinese are dead right.


Beijing's was always a blackmail bid. The IOC likes to profess a studied disinterest in politics, but that pose was only possible because of the equally studied neutrality by the United States and other Western countries towards Beijing's ambitions. I was a business consultant in Beijing during the bidding process, and it was common knowledge that the West would receive some much-needed political restraint from the Chinese in return for our support. It was whispered that the Beijing Olympics would buy peace in the Taiwan Strait for eight years, ensure continued economic liberalization, mollify runaway Chinese nationalism (by bolstering Chinese self-esteem), permit journalists to operate in a slightly more plausible working environment, and inhibit the Chinese leadership from overtly slaughtering its citizens.


When it comes to Taiwan and economic liberalization, China has technically lived up to its promises, pulling Taiwan into the Chinese orbit through business interests rather than by naval blockade or missile attack. In terms of nationalism, journalistic freedom, and human rights--well, best not to dwell on how that turned out--but in all fairness, the only one of these issues that the IOC appeared to be mildly serious about was human rights. Even there, it was always a same-bed-different-dreams deal. For Western business in China, "human rights" translates as: Please don't embarrass us publicly. For the Chinese government "human rights" was always translated within the prism of "social stability": How else can you ensure a smooth Olympics? And the way to ensure social stability was to neutralize the "five poisons"--Tibetan separatists, democracy activists, Taiwan independence supporters, Xinjiang freedom fighters, and Falun Gong practitioners. And here, again, the angry young Chinese men have a point concerning the hypocrisy of Western journalists.


It was all a charade. The blackmail bid took place in clear sight of the mindbending persecution of Falun Gong, an operation that had already mobilized China's state security forces on a scale that dwarfs the current Tibet crackdown. The West had three clear openings to bring the issue to a head: when the Beijing bid was nearing fruition in 2000, when an energized Falun Gong movement in the West emerged four years later with documentation that thousands had been murdered and over 100,000 had been thrown into labor camps, and finally in 2006 when credible reports of systematic organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners seeped out, pushing the potential death toll well into the tens of thousands.


I have interviewed some of the survivors. Roughly half of the Falun Gong practitioners who have emerged from the camps describe physical exams aimed at determining the health of their internal organs, along with close examination of corneas. Ears, genitals, and the other parts of the body usually scrutinized in medical exams--all of which have no value in the organ market--were routinely ignored. Yet it is a curious fact that American newspapers barely mentioned the targeted organ harvesting. Indeed, studies within the Falun Gong community demonstrate that the higher the Falun Gong death toll, the less the reporting. A former Beijing bureau chief of one of America's top networks accurately represented the average China journalist's view of Falun Gong in a candid conversation with me: The crackdown was indeed absurdly harsh, even by Chinese standards, but it was a drag to cover the story because "I hate both sides."


For American journalists, Falun Gong has three strikes against it. First, Falun Gong's emergence in 1999 took them by surprise, and journalists don't like feeling out of the loop. Second, reporters depend on the party's minimal cooperation for access and accreditation. Falun Gong is the party's enemy number one, as a Chinese spiritual movement from the heartland is more difficult to contain than a separatist movement like the Tibetans'. This meant the hot zone was not just in Lhasa, but everywhere, and that news stories had to be suppressed directly rather than just by limiting geographic access. Stories about persecution and torture could bring retaliation--blocked websites, detention, and, worst of all, loss of the journalist's ability to actually work. Stories that stuck the cult label on Falun Gong or, better still, avoided the issue altogether, ensured access.


The third strike against Falun Gong is that many Beijing-based journalists have gone slightly native. They see themselves as the arbiters of Chinese social progress. Falun Gong, with its insistence on traditional values--marriage and morality--looked like an enemy of the New China that journalists actually like: the hip, urban, ironic, way-cool place where cynical artists dish out scorn for crass Western commerciality. Falun Gong, simply put, is a Buddhist revival movement with all that entails: passion, talk of miracles, are-you-running-with-me-Master-Li individualism, and a reflexive mistrust of establishments and outside agendas. By contrast, the Tibetans had the far safer veneer of an ancient, well-established religion, and Hollywood's Richard Gere (and even some dimly remembered associations with tantric sex). Here, journalists intersected with their U.S.-based editors who not only tend to be suspicious of religion--particularly revivalist versions--but who also had no idea of how to incorporate the mass murder of Falun Gong's followers into the preferred storyline of China's amazing progress.


Thus, in public, foreign businessmen casually inserted anti-Falun Gong rhetoric into speeches to please their Chinese hosts. In private, when Chinese security needed targeted Internet surveillance technology to catch Falun Gong practitioners, Cisco provided it to their specifications. Oversight in Washington of this sort of activity lagged because politicians absorbed the distorted perception pumped out of China by many journalists and succumbed to the lobbying pressures of businessmen eager to cut deals with Chinese officials. And human rights groups appeared curiously unwilling to protest despite the scale of the Falun Gong persecution and the vehemence of the Chinese government's resolve to continue it. The record suggests an informal pact with the Chinese government to trade away mention of Falun Gong in exchange for minor concessions, such as scripted labor camp visits and legal exchanges.


Falun Gong is only one in a long historical line of atrocities the West has chosen to ignore while they were happening. But hating both sides is no longer a valid strategy for the Beijing Olympics. We are assisting in the construction of a simulacrum of an independent, modern society, while the reality is actually quite fascist in nature. Like its forerunners, it alternates between demonizing Western democracy and lusting for the tokens of Western legitimacy to help it maintain power over its citizens--the same citizens it so fears.


U.S. coverage of China has been weak and our policies inconsistent. Terribly so. But it doesn't render us incapable of doing the right thing. Falun Gong has been getting little press in the torch relay fracas. That's not surprising. As an indigenous Chinese movement, rather than a separatist one, Falun Gong has taken a neutral position on boycotting the Chinese Olympics, sensing correctly that it has become a matter of Chinese "face" that the Olympics continue. But we in the West have our own version of face, a genocide line that cannot be crossed without our identity beginning to crack. No matter how much we ignored the crying, the persecution of Falun Gong demonstrably crossed that line, and even if the Chinese leadership calls off the torch relay or makes an effort to resolve the Tibet situation, it is too late for this Olympics.

Boycotts don't work, but the political opening ceremony, for better or worse, is Beijing's big show--its dog party. Let's admit that we screwed up, quietly declare a no-fault boycott of any ceremonies, and move on. President Bush, please stay home.

Ethan Gutmann, an adjunct fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, is the author of Losing the New China. He is writing a book entitled The New Chinese Resistance.

Falun Gong Deaths Escalate as Olympics Approach


Chinese authorities “strike hard” at the group, victims dying within days of arrest


The New York Falun Dafa Information Center is alarmed at a series of reports indicating adherents in China are being killed in custody within days, or even hours, of being detained by authorities. The Center expressed today that the escalating maltreatment is a direct result of efforts to “stamp out” Falun Gong prior to the summer Olympics.


“The speed with which Falun Gong adherents are being seized by police, abused, and turning up dead is alarming and reprehensible,” says Falun Dafa Information Center spokesperson Ms. Gail Rachlin. “These are people who never should have been arrested in the first place. Arbitrary arrests, torture, and extrajudicial executions are no way to ‘prepare’ for the Olympics.”


China order targets dissent” by Bill Gertz at

The Washington Times


China
's ruling Communist Party has ordered regional party leaders to use military and intelligence units to crack down "harshly" on dissent and step up spying throughout the country as part of security measures before the upcoming Olympic Games, according to a purported internal party document.


The 3,600-character document outlines the party's plan for countering expected unrest and opposition, like the violent protests that began last month in Tibet and neighbouring Sichuan province that have been met with attacks on civilians by Chinese military and security forces.


The Washington Times obtained the document from Chinese sources and verified through authoritative sources that it appears to be a legitimate Central Committee document. A translation from Chinese was checked with several U.S. specialists.


"As the Beijing Olympics approaches, various enemy forces inside and outside our border are accelerating their sabotage activities with a focus on the Olympics," the party document states, adding that these forces will exploit the Olympics to "attack our social and political system."

The document identifies the enemy forces as "national separation forces" and violent terrorists, including Tibetans and separatists in western Xinjiang province, who have "joined forces" with dissident religious groups such as the Falun Gong Buddhist group.”


The Center is particularly concerned over recent reports of adherents dying in custody shortly after their arrest. Within the first three months of 2008, the Center has documented six cases of practitioner deaths occurring within merely 16 days of arrest and in some cases, within hours.

In several of the recent cases, family members were able to view the body before its cremation and saw signs of torture, including strangulation marks or bruises from electric batons.

Since January 2007, the Center has documented the cases of 129 Falun Gong practitioners that died of abuse, passing away either in police custody or upon release as a result of injuries incurred while in detention. A complete table of the names and available details surrounding these known cases is available here:


The table was compiled from a variety of sources, including testimony of relatives or friends of the deceased, photographic evidence, and follow-up phone calls made by researchers to the relevant police or prison authorities. Additional details that lend themselves to independent verification can be made available upon request.

Such deaths appear to be the result of official enactments of Chinese communist party policy. Official statements and documents have repeatedly named Falun Gong as one of the key targets for monitoring and repression in anticipation of the Olympics. This fits a regular pattern of cracking down on the group before important national events, such as the recent 17th Party Congress in October 2007.

In total, since 1999, the Center has documented the cases of 3,137 Falun Gong practitioners, who have died as a result of various forms of persecution, not only from abuse in custody, but also of destitution and other traumas related to the campaign. Despite the apparently high count, due to the secrecy surrounding such cases and the danger posed to families sending information overseas, the actual death toll is much higher.


Falun Dafa Information Center, www.faluninfo.net


Background
Founded in 1999, the Falun Dafa Information Center is a New York-based organization that documents the rights violations of adherents of Falun Gong (or “Falun Dafa”) taking place in the People’s Republic of China. In July of 1999 China’s autocratic Communist Party launched an unlawful campaign of arrests, violence, and propaganda with the intent of “eradicating” the apolitical practice; it is believed certain leaders feared the influence of the practice’s 100 million adherents. The campaign has since grown in violence and scope, with millions having been detained or sent to forced labor camps.
http://www.faluninfo.net/DisplayAnArticle.asp?ID=6517#detained.The Center has verified details of over 3,000 deaths and over 63,000 cases of torture in custody (reports / sources). Falun Gong is a traditional-style Buddhist “qigong” practice, with roots in the Chinese heritage of cultivating the mind/body for health and spiritual growth.

The Irony of China's Blinding Torch


courtsey of NOOLYMPICS blog


CHINA’S BLINDING TORCH


How ironic that China’s Olympic torch relay should find its opening stage upon Beijing’s infamous Tiananmen Square where back in 1989 countless students, daring to raise their voices for freedom and democracy, were gunned down by their own government - a massacre that the world rightly condemned - while China still denies any casualties.


How ironic that the torch’s sacred flame should bear its light across this Square of “Heavenly peace” with the image of Mao as the backdrop - one ruthless dictator responsible for some 10 million deaths during the “Cultural Revolution” - a toll exceeding Hitler’s holocaust.


How ironic that this torch relay be named the “journey of harmony”, while millions of China’s own citizens are still subjected to religious repression, public executions, illegal human organ harvesting, suppression of democracy, and more.


How ironic that the world whispers to China for “restraint” regarding the brutal violence in Tibet, while vigorously defending this regime’s right to host the upcoming Games.


How ironic that a 9 year Genocide of the peaceful Falun Gong mediators escalates with thousands being arrested before the Olympic Games under the slogan of China’s harmonious and peaceful society.


How ironic that our International Olympic Committee is so focused on chasing gold in Beijing, while seemingly remaining indifferent to the on going murders and persecutions that occur on a daily basis. How many lives have been lost in the lead up to the peaceful harmonious games?


How ironic that we should allow a torch, symbolising the great virtues of our humanity, to become a light raised to merely blind us to the worst of China’s ongoing human rights atrocities.


The Ccp has changed our thinking, morals and conscience to our detriment.

Latest crackdown now on Falun Gong meditators before Olympic Games


courtesy of Falun Dafa Info Centre


Question: Have Falun Gong members grown angry by years of persecution and the recent arrests?

Answer:"We no longer have the concept of angry. We practice on the principle of truthfulness, compassion and forbearance -- even if they torture or beat us we will use every means to arouse their consciousness to tell them not to persecute us. The world does not know what has happened inside China,"Jiang Zemin claimed that he would destroy us within three months, but now almost nine years have passed and we are still here
."


1,878 Falun Gong Adherents Arrested in “Preparation” for Olympics"

Chinese security agencies offering cash rewards for turning in Falun Gong practitioners


Door-to-door Arrests repeat the Cultural Revolution all over again

The Falun Dafa Information Center (FDI) has been receiving regular reports from adherents and their families inside China of door-to-door searches and arrests. According to statistics compiled from these reports, there have been 1,878 arrests across 29 provinces, major cities, and autonomous regions since January 1 of this year. In Beijing alone, 156 arrests are known to have taken place.


Rewards for Identifying Falun Gong Adherents

In cities a reward system has been put in place offering 500-3,000 yuan (roughly AU$30-AU$330) for identifying Falun Gong adherents to the authorities. In Zibo city (Shandong province), for example, announcements were posted in neighborhood administration offices offering 2,000-3,000 yuan for information leading to the arrest of a Falun Gong adherent.




Beijing regime uses Olympics as incentives to increase human rights violations

Since 2001 various sources, including Reuters, ABC, Intelligence on Line and Amnesty have reported the Chinese communist regimes view of the Olympics as a further justification for increased violence against Falun Gong.


Amnesty International report released a human rights report condemning the CCP for the China's human rights deterioration Report: The Olympics countdown – failing to keep human rights promises.

http://www.amnestyusa.org/countries/china/document.do?id=ENGASA170462006


US State Dept‘s annual 2006 report
stated Falun Gong Adherents constitute at least ½ of the detained in labor camps.


In 2006, U.N. Rapporteur on Torture Manfred Nowak reported that 66% of all victims of torture and ill treatment in China were Falun Gong practitioners. The report states: “The cruelty and brutality of these acts of torture defy description”.


According to Amnesty International, in preparing for the Games, Former Public Security Minister Zhou Yongkang issued the following order in the context of “successfully” holding the Beijing Olympic Games:

“We must strike hard at hostile forces at home and abroad, such as ethnic separatists, religious extremists, violentterrorists and … the Falun Gong.”


A Feb. 21, 2001, Reuters report revealed that the campaign against Falun Gong had escalated as China entered the final stages of bidding for the 2008 Olympics. The report cited the state-run Xinhua propaganda outlet as saying the government had given “citations” to 110 organizations and 271 individuals “for anti-Falun Gong work” and to “wipe out Falun Gong.”


A July 17, 2001, report from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, disclosed that after Beijing landed the 2008 Olympics, China’s then Vice Premier declared that winning the Olympics was “justification for the country’s crackdown on the Falun Gong.”


In 2005, an intelligence journal, Intelligence Online, revealed that China’s deputy public security minister, Liu Jing, had been assigned the responsibility of wiping out Falun Gong before the Games. (news)


“The International community had hoped that awarding the Olympics to China would spur an improvement in human rights,” said FDI representative Mr. Erping Zhang. “But the facts on the ground tell a very different story. The Olympics seem to have given the Beijing regime a new incentive, and excuse, to hasten its abuses of citizens’ rights. The arrests make a mockery of the regime’s promise to improve its dismal record on human rights.


It is now imperative that the international community speak up, leverage real pressure, and stop these deplorable actions.”