Angry Chinese Blogger

Angry Chinese Blogger: The news and views about China that the big media can't, or won't, tell you

The is no single truth

Menu
:
Home

FLG: The worlds most pathetic frame up?

posted Friday, 24 April 2009

 Beijing has a well known reputation for cracking down on any organized group that are not under its direct control. It's nothing new. Indeed, Beijing even clamped down on fan clubs trying to boost support for their favorite reality TV stars. But, over the last decade, Beijing' persecution of one group in particular has stood out as being particularly bad. Not just because Beijing has been particularly vindictive, but also because it has. more than ever, acted like a spoiled child throwing its toys out of the stroller because it has not gotten its own way.

From the pen of Alexa Olsen

China spiritual group endures despite 10-year ban

A musician dies in police custody, a lawyer is beaten, an aid worker abandons China after 10 years of persecution — the stories are the human toll behind China's decade-long campaign to wipe out Falun Gong, a spiritual movement that the government calls an evil cult.

Saturday marks the 10th anniversary of a protest by an estimated 10,000 practitioners who stood silently around the Communist Party leadership compound in Beijing, alerting the government to the group's strength and wide appeal.

The April 25, 1999, demonstration was intended to show how Falun Gong believers had learned compassion, forbearance and tolerance, said practitioner Bu Dongwei in a telephone interview from the United States, where he fled six months ago.

But the size and discipline of those who gathered unsettled the communist leadership, ever wary of independent groups that could threaten its authority.

Two months later, the group was labeled an "evil cult" and banned, its leadership arrested, and a campaign launched to forcibly reconvert millions of believers. Anyone practicing Falun Gong or even possessing materials about it could be arrested.

Falun Gong attracted millions of followers in the 1990s with its program of traditional Chinese calisthenics and philosophy drawn from Buddhism, Taoism and the often-unorthodox teachings of founder Li Hongzhi, a former government grain clerk now living in hiding overseas. Organized by volunteers, the group claims to have no political agenda.

Followers say the crackdown has cost the lives of 3,200 practitioners, including 104 last year.

The government says some Falun Gong followers have died in detention because of hunger strikes or refusing medical help. It denies any have been intentionally killed.

U.S.-based spokesman Levi Browde said since 1999 the group has recorded more than 87,000 cases of torture and estimates that anywhere from 200,000 to 1 million practitioners have been detained for various lengths of time.

Though less visible now that Falun Gong has been driven underground in China, the crackdown remains as vicious as ever, he said.

"The brutality continues and the systematic nature is the same and may have escalated a bit," Browde said.

At a highway off-ramp on the outskirts of Beijing, Yu Qun, a non-practitioner, reluctantly met an Associated Press reporter to show pictures and tell the story of her younger brother, Yu Zhou, a folk musician and a practitioner who died last year in police custody.

Tall and musically gifted, Yu Zhou studied French at the elite Peking University and later lived a Bohemian existence in China's capital with his wife, an artist and poet.

"He had a gentle personality and was always thinking of other people," she said, cradling a small collection of his snapshots in her lap.

Yu, 41, and his wife were stopped, allegedly for speeding, as they drove home from a concert. Police detained the couple after finding CDs and printed material about Falun Gong in their car.

Ten days later, Yu Qun was called to the detention center's hospital. Her brother had died but authorities were unclear about the cause, saying first it was an illness and then later dehydration as a result of a hunger strike. More than a year later, the case remains unresolved. The family's demands for an autopsy and an investigation have not been met.

Yu Zhou's wife, Xu Na, is serving a three-year sentence at a reeducation through labor facility.

The Chinese government contends Falun Gong brainwashes people into believing the practice can cure them of illness. It also alleges the movement persuaded several members to self-immolate at Tiananmen Square in 2001, where a mother and her 12-year-old daughter died.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at a regular press briefing Thursday the movement was harmful because it caused "illness, disablement and even death of many innocent people."

"The Falun Gong cult violates human rights by controlling people's minds," Jiang said. "We encourage the entire society to help those practitioners who have been taken in."

International human rights groups, the United Nations and numerous Western governments have particularly criticized China for using reeducation through labor to punish practitioners. The system allows authorities to imprison suspects without trial.

In recent years, a handful of Chinese lawyers have begun taking Falun Gong cases. Cheng Hai, a self-trained Beijing lawyer represents Yu Zhou's wife and family, as well as six other practitioners. He says he was beaten earlier this month while trying to visit the home of another Falun Gong client.

"In China, a lot of people feel it's not worth fighting for their rights because they are so likely to fail," Cheng said. "They don't know that the big victories are won by adding up many, many small wins and actions."

Bu, the practitioner who took part in the 1999 demonstration, was sent to a labor camp for 2-1/2 years after a search of his home in 2006 turned up Falun Gong books.

In November, Bu and his young daughter boarded a plane for the United States, knowing if he stayed he would continue to be persecuted. He now lives with his wife and daughter in Los Angeles.

"I hope I can go back. I am sure I will go back soon after, you know, the Communist Party is over," he said.

Beijing's continued persecution of FLG in China is both sad and farcical at the same time. It must rate as one of the worst frame ups that has ever been mounted, and if it weren't so brutal ACB would call it pathetic. The actions of a fearfull little govenremnt filled with fearfull little men who are so terified of something that they cannot control that they wish to destroy it.

Beijing has branded FLG a dangerous cult, but over the last 10 years it has not actually provided any evidence that FLG is in any way a threat. There have been "stories" about FLG practitioners doing all kinds of crazy and dangerous things but 99% of the time they never quite add up, and never include sufficient detail for them to be verified.

Probably the most well known of these stories are those regarding people who alledgedly eviscerated themselves to remove a sacred wheel that they believed to be inside of their bodies. However no actual evidence has ever been presented to show that anybody has ever actually done this. Usually the references are vauge, a worker in ... province, a house wife in .... city, yet the local newspapers and TV stations for said city or province do not report on the story. It is almost unknown for the story to include the year that it happened, let alone the actual date, and if a name is included it's often so generic that there could be 100 people with same name in the same region at any given time.

The lack of evidence is quite extraordinary in itself. If there's a grizzly accident you get pictures. If a bus gets washed over the side of a ravine 2 days travel from the nearest town, you get pictures . If a school boy stabs a classmate for no apparent reason, you get pictures. But Beijing hasn't even produced pictures of unidentified corpses under sheets with blood in the appropriate places, or of wailing relative mourning for their poor crazy relative murdered by the wicked cult.

ACB has also never found anybody who claims to have seen an autopsy report or a police report to verify any of these stories, let alone seen an actual report. Not even a fake one. The only conclusion - They don't exist, and the stories are exactly that. Then there are the claims of practitioners jumping off of buildings or refusing medication until they die, or going on homicidal rampages. But again there is a similar lack of evidence. Oh, sometimes there is evidence that somebody committed suicide, or that a mentally ill person killed a relative, but not that they were a practitioner.

Maybe Beijing's claims woudl be more crdible if the same was happening elsewhere. But they aren't. There are countles practitioners in Hong Kong and Canada, and even in Europe, yet they don't kill themselves or cut themselves open. Or go on bloodthirsty rampages.

The simple truth of the matter is that a large group that originated outside of state control, and which remains outside of state control, has Beijing soiling its draws for fear that letting them carry on might encourage others to form their own groups.

Maybe it's time that Beijing grew up.

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit




1. flg left...
Monday, 27 April 2009 7:25 am

"Not even a fake one." You want that? ask Master Li and his frantic admirers, they can surely provide you with a long list.


2. The Angry Chinese Blogger left...
Sunday, 3 May 2009 7:15 pm :: http://angrychineseblogger.blog-city.com

Why would Master Li fake one? Would faking the death of one of their followers at their own hands be playing right into Beijing's hands?

It would be like Beijing faking the confession of a soldier saying that he was ordered to murder civilians during Tiananmen.