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Persecution of Falun Gong refers to the banning of the practice of Falun Gong within the People's Republic of China ("PRC"), and the other actions allegedly being taken by the Government of China against Falun Gong's leader and practitioners in China and elsewhere. Particular concerns have been raised over reports of torture, illegal imprisonment including forced labour, and since early 2006, allegations of systematic organ harvesting from living Falun Gong practitioners.
Falun Gong has been the focus of international attention since July 20, 1999, when the government of the People's Republic of China (PRC) banned the group for "jeopardizing social stability." The Government immediately began a nationwide crackdown, except in the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau, where it is tolerated. Several governments, international human rights organizations and scholars consider the persecution a human rights violation. Amnesty International believes that the persecution is politically motivated, politically-driven, and a restriction of fundamental freedoms.
The U.S. House of Representatives accused China of unlawful harassment of United States citizens and residents who practice Falun Gong, and passed a resolution, by a 420:0 vote, which called on China to "cease its persecution and harrassment of Falun Gong practitioners in the United States".
Background
Falun Gong’s founder, Li Hongzhi, introduced the practice to the public in May 1992. For the first few years after introducing Falun Gong to the world, Li Hongzhi was granted several awards by Chinese governmental organizations to encourage him to continue promoting what was then considered by them to be a wholesome practice. Invited by Qigong organizations from each area in China, during the period from 1992 to the end of 1994, Li traveled to almost all major Chinese cities to teach the practice. In the later part of that period, there were four to five thousand people attending each seminar. Its scale was unprecedented at that time. Since 1995, Li has been teaching outside China. The practice was popularized in mainland China for seven years, mainly by word of mouth and through the Internet.
On June 17 1996, Guangming Daily, one of Chinese government's official newspapers, published an editorial article titled, "A Loud and Long Alarm Must Be Sounded Against Pseudo-Science", which claimed Falun Gong to promote superstition, and to be "Pseudo-Science." In August, FG supporters surrounded the officies of the newspaper in protest.
At the end of May 1998, a Chinese physicist from the Chinese Academy of Science, He Zuoxiu, denounced Falun Gong in an interview on Beijing Television. The program, after showing a video of one of the practice sites, called it a "feudalistic superstition". The TV station was swamped by protest letters from Falun Gong practitioners, and some practitioners also conducted silet sit-ins in front of its offices.
On April 11, 1999, He Zuoxiu published an article in the Tianjin College of Education’s Youth Reader magazine entitled "I Do Not Agree with Youth Practicing Qigong". From April 18 to April 24, Falun Gong practitioners went to Tianjin College of Education, which published the magazine, and related governmental agencies and held protests. Some practitioners were arrested and were beaten by the police according to at least one report. He Zuoxiu, relative of Luo Gan, one of the chief taskmasters of the persecution, is said to have "become a national hero" for opposing Falun Gong.
Zhongnanhai demonstration and aftermath
Several days after the initial protests in Tianjin, on the morning of April 25 1999, allegedly more than ten thousand Falun Gong practitioners and sympathisers surrounded Zhongnanhai, where top Chinese leaders both live and work. They stayed in silence for 12 hours, reading and meditating in protest of the alleged mass arrests and beatings of practitioners in Tianjin city, at the same time seeking legal status and protection of the practice. Premier Zhu Rongji met with some representatives of the practitioners and after the arrested practitioners were released, the protesters dispersed.
According to some estimates, there were more than 100,000 Falun Gong practitioners in Beijing at this time, and it was reported that the practitioners' protest alarmed many senior leaders, particularly Jiang Zemin. This protest immediately brought Falun Gong and its founder, Li Hongzhi, to the attention of the central government of China, and the world. After three months, on July 20 1999, the crackdown of Falun Gong was officially started by the Chinese government and attracted a great deal of media attention around the world.
National Review wrote in September 1999: "After April 25, the government went into a panic". As Robert Thurman, Buddhism scholar at Columbia University, says, Falun Gong had "scared the hell out of them." According to reports, President Jiang Zemin in particular is worried about Falun Gong, even obsessed with it. Jiang drove around Zhongnanhai to observe the protesters through the smoked glass of his limousine. That night, he wrote to the Politburo: "I believe Marxism can triumph over Falun Gong." He has often spoken to Western envoys about the "troublesome movement."
An article published in World Journal in July 1999, asserts that the Zhongnanhai demonstrations might have been organized in part by the government "to help trump up charges against Falun Gong which it had observed and monitored for years through its infiltrators". Luo Gan, credited as the chief Communist organizer of the Zhongnanhai gathering, had wanted FG banned since 1996 but could not find any legal basis for transgression. Luo is alleged to have had the police direct them to Zhongnanhai in order to create an incident. The practitioners have said that they wanted to make a peaceful appeal at the citizens' appeal office, located at Fuyou street, near Zhongnanhai. However, Li denied that the Zhongnanhai protest was organized by anyone. He stated: “there was no organization and no formalities, one person would trigger another person's heart, and that's why everyone came.…No one mobilized them, no one told them.”
On June 10, 1999, the government established the "6-10" office, an extra-constitutional body, to facilitate the crackdown. Most political analysts believe that this was the direct result of events that occurred in April 1999. (See paragraph above beginning "On April 11, 1999, He Zuoxiu published an article...")
In July 1999, the government declared the practice of Falun Gong illegal. The government had become especially concerned by reports that significant numbers of government officials, as well as military and police personnel, were practitioners. Another influence in the change in policy was the cultural memory of the 19th century Taiping Rebellion, when a religious cult had caused a civil war.
"By unleashing a Mao-style movement , Jiang is forcing senior cadres to pledge allegiance to his line," a Communist Party veteran later told CNN's Willy Lam. "This will boost Jiang's authority-and may give him enough momentum to enable him to dictate events at the pivotal 16th Communist Party congress next year."
The Falun Dafa Information Center claims that over 2300 Falun Gong practitioners have died while in police or government custody.
In China, where censorship is known to be draconian, sites containing dissident views, including those of Falun Gong, are targeted by the authorities.. The CPC has burned and destroyed books and other materials about Falun Gong, and blocked access to internet resources about the topic. Treatment of Falun Gong practitioners has been regarded by some in the West as a major international human rights issue affecting freedom of religion and freedom of speech.
Julia Ching from the University of Toronto, writing for the American Asian Review, has suggested it was the Zhongnanhai demonstration of April 25 that led to "fear, animosity and suppression". In addition, it has been alleged that Jiang Zemin had received a letter from the former director of the 301 Military Hospital, "a doctor with considerable standing among the political elite", endorsing Falun Gong and advising high-level cadres to start practicing it. Jiang also found out that Li's book, Zhuan Falun, had been published by People's Liberation Navy, and that possibly seven hundred thousand Communist party members were practitioners. Ching alleges that "Jiang accepts the threat of Falun Gong as an ideological one: spiritual beliefs against militant atheism and historical materialism. He wishes to purge the government and the military of such beliefs." She also claims that "the accusation of Falun Gong's being an "evil cult" made previous arrests and imprisonments "constitutional." Similar theories about the fundamental reasons are also supported by Elizabeth J. Perry in Critical Asian Studies, a peer-reviewed quarterly journal.
"By unleashing a Mao-style movement , Jiang is forcing senior cadres to pledge allegiance to his line," a Communist Party veteran later told CNN's Willy Lam. "This will boost Jiang's authority-and may give him enough momentum to enable him to dictate events at the pivotal 16th Communist Party congress next year."
The Minghui/Clearwisdom website claims that over 3000 Falun Gong practitioners have verifiably died through torture or beating while in police or government custody.
These events also saw He Zuoxiu accuse some Falun Gong practitioners of harassment because of the articles he wrote, publishing a book entitled How Falun Gong Harassed Me and My Family.
Media campaign
The Communist Party of China's nation-wide crackdown of Falun Gong began on July 20, 1999. The state-controlled media was used to label the practice an "evil cult" spreading superstition to deceive people. Jiang, the former leader of the CPC, condemned the group in the state-controlled media, stating a position the Chinese government promotes to this day.
Elizabeth J. Perry, writing for Critical Asian Studies, has described Beijing's use of media in the beginnings stages of the crackdown: "For weeks after the campaign began, each night pictures were broadcast of huge piles of Falun Gong materials that had been either voluntarily turned over by practitioners or confiscated in police raids on bookstores and publishing houses. (Interestingly, the People’s Liberation Army Press was responsible for a number of Falun Gong publications.) Some were disposed of in gigantic bonfires, others were recycled...The basic patterns of the government’s offensive were familiar from decades of previous such mobilized suppression efforts, from the anti-rightist campaign of the 1950s to the anti-spiritual pollution campaigns of the 1980s."
The CPC claims that the practice has exploited spiritual cultivation to engage its practitioners in seditious politics. They also allege that manipulation via their "lies and fallacies", Falun Gong "caused needless deaths of large numbers of practitioners". "Over 1,000 practitioners died because they followed Li's teachings and refused to seek medical treatment for their illnesses. Several hundred practitioners committed self-mutilation or suicide. Over 30 innocent people were killed by mentally deranged practitioners of "Falun Gong".
The U.S. House of Representatives accused China of unlawful harassment of United States citizens and residents who practice Falun Gong, denounced '610' offices inside the China which organized brainwashing, torture, and murder; propaganda from state-controlled media. It passed House Concurrent Resolution 188, by a 420:0 vote, which called on China to "cease its persecution and harrassment of Falun Gong practitioners in the United States; to release from detention all Falun Gong practitioners and put an end to the practices of torture and other cruel, inhumane treatment against them and to abide by the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights"
Clearwisdom alleges that eight Falun Gong practitioners were arrested after one of the jamming incidents in Changchun city; Liu Chengjun was allegedly tortured to death after 21 months incarceration in Jilin Prison.
The Tiananmen Square self-immolation incident
Main article: Tiananmen Square self-immolation incidentThe campaign of government criticism increased in January 2001, when persons whom the government claimed were Falun Gong practitioners, among them a 13-year-old girl, Liu Siying, doused themselves with gasoline and set themselves on fire in Tiananmen Square. Videos of the incident were widely broadcast on Chinese state television, as were interviews with Siying, who was horribly burned and whose mother, Liu Chunling, did not survive the incident. Falun Gong practitioners emphatically deny that the people who set themselves on fire could have been actual practitioners.
On the same day, the Falun Dafa Information Center made an announcement entitled, "China Staged Self-Immolation Act; Xinhua News Framed Falun Gong with Slanderous Lies, calling for a third-party independent investigation to uncover the truth."
Though the Chinese media claimed that it was CNN journalists who recorded the close-up shots, the head of the International Department of CNN stated that CNN did not film anything because at the very beginning of the incident, CNN reporters were arrested and their equipment confiscated. However, in the CNN original report the CNN reporters were able to film the scene. Authorities did not allow any reporters other than those from the Xinhua News Agency to interview 13-year-old Siying, nor did they allow any of her family members to visit. Two months after the incident in Tiananmen Square, the hospital announced the sudden death of Siying.
In slow motion footage made available by Falun Dafa Information Center and Ming Hui Net (chinese language website) of the video broadcast by State-run Xinhua News Agency, an object might be seen flying off Liu Chunling's head or neck just before she suddenly collapses. Charles A Radin of Boston Globe says: "In the slowed version, it appears that Liu Chunling, one of two people who died, collapsed not from the flames but from being bludgeoned by a man in a military overcoat.” An analysis, published by Falun Dafa Information Center, also says that the body language of the policemen suggests foul-play. In addition, the analysis also points out: The burn victims seem to be wearing protective clothing, has unburnt hair, and the green plastic bottle that supposedly carried the gasoline was not even burned. According to Chandra D Smith's paper in the Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion,The propaganda capitalized on the alleged self-immolation of five Falun Gong members in Tiananmen Square on January 23, 2001 in which a mother died and her 12-year-old daughter was severely burned. “By repeatedly broadcasting images of the girl’s burning body and interviews with the others saying they believed self-immolation would lead them to paradise, the government convinced many Chinese that Falun Gong was an ‘evil cult.’”
Alleged torture methods
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Falun Gong related websites, independent organisations monitoring the treatment of Falun Gong by the Chinese government, as well as human rights organisations and other NGOs, have published reports of alleged torture or mistreatment of Falun Gong practitioners by the Chinese government. Falun Gong claim to have documented 44,000 cases of torture, which have resulted in 2,804 deaths. Amnesty International in London believes persecution to exist, but commented that the would be impossible to independently verify because the deaths most likely occur in labor camps, where the related deaths are difficult to monitor.
The United Nations Reports on China’s Persecution of Falun Gong (2004) compiled allegations of torture of Falun Gong practitioners listing 31 different forms of torture, with multiple variations on each type, while Falun Gong sources have suggested that up to 100 different forms of torture are in use. The main purpose of torture is to have suspected Falun Gong practitioners sign "repentance statements" or statements denouncing the practice, and to have them stop practicing Falun Gong. Torture may be by one or more of the most common methods listed below:
Shocking with electricity
The use of electric batons by police officers and prison guards is reported as the most widespread form of torture used against Falun Gong practitioners. The Falun Dafa Information Center claims that the batons carry voltages of up to 300 000 volts, and are used to shock the sensitive areas of practitioners' bodies, such as mouths, centers of the palms, bottoms of the feet, as well as breasts and genitals. Often more than one baton is applied at one time. Police are reported to use homemade versions of these devices, which are more powerful: “The skin will break open and bleed in every place that receives a shock from this device.”
Forced to stand, sit or squat for a long time
These are listed in the UN report as three different forms of torture, and each have their own variations. This form of torture is reported to last “for many days”, and is often accompanied by the deprivation of food, sleep, water and use of the toilet. Sometimes, convicted prisoners watch over practitioners during this type of torture. Failure to hold the positions is said to result in being beaten, shocked with electric batons, kicked or slapped. The sitting and squatting forms may result in necrosis in the buttocks, muscle spasms and nerve damage.
Burning
The Falun Dafa Information Center says they have received “numerous reports” of torture in the form of burning. Reported instruments include car lighters, irons, hot metal rods (see image) or cigarettes. The UN report states that the parts of the body targeted by this form of torture include the fingers, toes, faces, nipples and vagina. In the case of Wang Huajun, Hubei Province, after being seized for speaking publicly about the Chinese government's alleged persecution of Falun Gong, she was "beaten viciously" by police, and later on the verge of death "...dragged outside of the city hall, drenched in gasoline, and set ablaze."
Force-feeding
The Falun Dafa information center states that over 10% of all confirmed deaths of Falun Gong practitioners in custody are a result of force feeding torture, and provides a list of the purported confirmed deaths. The UN report claims that it is the number one cause of deaths. Both Faluninfo and the UN report contextualize this activity not as an attempt by police officers to nourish practitioners who have used hunger strikes as a form of protest, but as a form of either punishment or torture. The UN report states that the purpose is “…to punish practitioners and to cause so much pain that they will renounce Falun Gong practice. To that end, the police have used many different means to cause excruciating pain and injury…” Some examples given are: the insertion and withdrawing of feeding tubes in a violent way which leads to death through puncturing the lungs; leaving the feeding tubes in the stomach for prolonged periods; knocking out teeth to enable force-feeding, including use of pliers and crowbars, or boaring holes in the side of the mouth; force-feeding of either salt water, vinegar, straight alcohol, hot pepper oil, boiling water, or urine and feces.
Chinaview, an independent website focused on human rights abuses in China, states that in the Summer of 2003 the Gaoyang Forced Labour Camp was the first to begin force-feeding Falun Gong practitioners with human urine and excrement, and that “…the Chinese government awarded them for this innovation, and sent labour camp staff from around the country to learn this procedure.”
Sexual abuses
Amnesty International's "Falun Gong Persecution Factsheet" lists sexual abuses as one of the forms of torture Falun Gong practitioners are subject to. Further details are provided in the UN report and on Falun Gong related websites. One article on Clear Harmony, a Falun Gong website, states that in June 2000 "...eighteen Falun Gong women being held at the Masanjia Labour Camp in Liaoning province were stripped naked and thrown into prison cells with violent male criminals, who were encouraged to rape and abuse the women." The article later asserts that of the over 44,000 documented cases of torture and severe abuse of Falun Gong practitioners in China, many have involved sexual abuse or rape. Gao Zhisheng, a prominent Beijing-based human rights lawyer, in his third open letter to the Beijing leadership stated that:
“Among the true accounts of unbelievable brutality, among the records of the government's inhuman torture of its own people, the immoral acts that shocked my soul the most were the lewd yet routine practice of attacking women's genitals by 6-10 Office staff and the police. Almost every woman's genitals and breasts or every man's genitals have been sexually assaulted during the persecution in a most vulgar fashion. Almost all who have been persecuted, be they male or female, were first stripped naked before any torture. No language or words could describe or re-create our government's vulgarity and immorality in this respect. Who with a warm body could afford to stay silent when faced with such truths?”
The UN report provides a list of some of the alleged, female-specific, and sexual violations, including rape and gang rape—sometimes by police officers directly, sometimes by throwing female Falun Gong practitioners into prison cells—forced abortion, pinching or biting off of nipples, sticking needles through the nipples, electric baton shock of nipples and vaginas, rape with bottles or batons, burning the vagina with a cigar, inserting and rotating brushes inside the vagina and inserting hot pepper paste into the vagina. The section concludes with the statement that “This torture has often inflicted permanent psychological and physical damage on the practitioners in question, and on more than one occasion the practitioners have later died under mysterious circumstances.”
Psychiatric abuses
The Chinese government admits a sharp increase in instances of Falun Gong practitioners being detained in psychiatric facilities, attributing the causes to the alleged harmful effects of Falun Gong practice, at the same time maintaining that all remedial actions have been taken in accordance with the law. Falun Gong sources claim that there are illegal, systematic and widespread abuses of mentally healthy Falun Gong practitioners in psychiatric custody. Some independent writers seek to corroborate the claims of Falun Gong while others dismiss them. A noted writer on the alleged psychiatric abuses of the Chinese government is Robin Munro. Sunny Y. Lu and Viviana B. Galli write in the The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law that Munro “…first drew sustained, worldwide attention to the abuses of forensic psychiatry in China in general and of Falun Gong practitioners in particular.” Some third-party commentators, such as Sing Lee and Arthur Kleinman have expressed skepticism and criticism towards Munro’s reports. Lee and Kleinman suggest that Munro may be biased and his sources flawed, and that the profession of psychiatry in China is not severely compromised by the Chinese government's alleged regime of repression, as Munro suggests. Munro responded to these criticisms in the same journal, saying "...nowhere in their critique of my allegations of political psychiatric abuse in China do Lee and Kleinman even attempt to make any substantive rebuttal of the principal evidence I present..."
With regard to allegations of psychiatric abuses of Falun Gong practitioners, the Chinese government has stated that the government’s actions against Falun Gong are carried out in accordance with Chinese law. The Chinese government refers to Falun Gong as a cult, and reports that “The cult has led to more than 650 cases of psychological disorder, with 11 practitioners becoming homicides and 144 others physically disabled.” Ji Shi in his book Li Hongzhi and his “Falun Gong”—Deceiving the Public and Ruining Lives, writes that “According to doctors at the Beijing University of Medical Science, since 1992 the number of patients with psychiatric disorders caused by practicing “Falun Gong” has increased markedly, accounting for 10.2 percent of all patients suffering from mental disorders caused by practicing various ‘’qigong’’ exercises. In the first half of this year the number rose further, accounting for 42.1 percent.”
A report from the Falun Dafa Information Center states that an estimated 1,000 Falun Gong practitioners have been forcefully detained in mental hospitals, with reports of psychological abuses, administration of sedatives or anti-psychotic drugs and torture by electrocution, force-feeding, beating or starvation. It is claimed that practitioners are admitted because they refuse to give up Falun Gong, “...went to the government to appeal for an end to the persecution of Falun Gong, or because they refused to defame Falun Gong's founder, Li Hongzhi, as the authorities demanded.”
In his article "Judicial Psychiatry in China and its Political Abuses" published in the Colombia Journal of Asian Law, Munro attempts to contextualize the alleges abuses of Falun Gong practitioners in a history of politicization of the psychiatric profession by the Chinese government since the 1950’s. He suggests that many outside observers find the Chinese government’s “…continuing campaign against the Falun Gong to be closely reminiscent of the kinds of extreme and unbridled political campaigns waged by the Party during the Cultural Revolution.” And that “Since the latter part of 1999… it has become abundantly clear that religious sectarians also now also form a major target of politically repressive psychiatry in China.” He later adds more specifically that “The most distinctive aspect of the government’s protracted campaign to crush the Falun Gong, aside from its sheer scope and brutality, has been the flood of reports… indicating that large numbers of the group’s detained practitioners were being forcibly sent to mental hospitals by the security authorities.”
Lu and Galli in their study entitled "Psychiatric Abuse of Falun Gong practitioners in China" give a similar portrayal of the alleged psychiatric abuses by the Chinese government:
Using mental hospitals as places of government-directed torture in China had been in a steady decline in the 1990s, but the government of Jiang Zemin resurrected this practice as part of a comprehensive and brutal campaign to “eradicate” Falun Gong. The political abuse of psychiatry by the Soviet Union was aimed at political dissenters and nonconformists, but Falun Gong practitioners are neither political nor nonconformists.”
Munro describes some of the common abuses detained practitioners are reported to receive, such as being drugged with various unknown kinds of medication, kept in dark rooms for prolonged periods of time, subjected to electro-convulsive therapy or painful forms of electrical acupuncture treatment, denial of adequate food and water, restricted access to toilet facilities, and forced confessional statements renouncing belief in Falun Gong (as a condition of eventual release, followed by fines of several thousand yuan for their stay). Lu and Galli include in their list of alleged abuses: medications forcefully administered through nasogastric tubes as a form of torture or punishment, increases in medication dosages of up to five or six times, and physical torture including binding tightly with ropes in very painful positions. They also go on to describe some of the effects of this treatment, including the toxic effects of various drugs, chemicals or other unknown substances: loss of memory, migraines, extreme weakness, protrusion of the tongue, rigidity, loss of consciousness, vomiting, nausea and seizures. They write that medical staff are reported to deal with practitioners violently, reported comments including phrases such as “Aren’t you practicing Falun Gong? Let us see, which is stronger, Falun Gong or our medicines?”
Munro gives an account of the case of Tan Guihua, a 42 year old female from Shandong Province:
On September 12, 1999, Tan went home after appealing in Beijing for the Falun Gong. Before she could sit down, some officers from her work unit and the Politics and Law Commission broke into her home and took her to the mental hospital.
The officers dragged her into the mental hospital by force. By then, they had already prepared a big dose of injection and planned to give her the shot as soon as she arrived. Tan refused to take the injection. A tall nurse then went out and brought back eight mental patients. They pressed her down and gave her the injection. In only a few seconds, she began to feel faint and sick. Her heart started to beat extremely fast. She had to press her head against the wall and hold the ground firmly with both hands. While in great pain, she bit down tightly on the comforter in her mouth and tried not to make any noise. Her mouth bled from the biting. She then lost consciousness. She did not feel better until the effects of the drug gradually abated.
Later, a female doctor asked Tan daily whether she would continue to practice Falun Gong. Tan said "yes," and the doctor then shocked her with electrical needles. She was shocked in this way altogether seven times. Meanwhile, she had been force-fed medicines and given injections three times a day. She spent two months in the hospital like this.
Later, the female doctor asked a nurse named Ma to give her another kind of injection. It was said to be some kind of imported medicine, and the drug effect would last for over one month. After that injection, Tan's period stopped coming. Her eyeballs couldn't move and she became slow in reacting to things. A few days later, they added another medicine to the injection. After this shot, Tan shook all over violently and couldn't even hold the bowl. She was tortured like this for 20 days. When her family members finally picked her up, she was all muddleheaded and could not see things clearly. Her mind was totally blank and could not recall things for a long period. Her whole body was puffy. Her eyes looked dull. Her reactions became slow, and it took a long time for her to say a single word.
Lu and Galli write that not long after the crackdown began, government agents, police, and sometimes family members of practitioners began forcing mentally healthy Falun Gong practitioners into psychiatric facilities. With no formal legal procedures for commitment, local police officers and members of the 610 office have the power to arbitrarily commit Falun Gong practitioners to psychiatric institutions--while lengths of detention may range from days to years. Lu and Galli state that “The perversion of mental health facilities for the purpose of the torture of Falun Gong practitioners is widespread.” Lu and Galli claim that the targets come from all tiers of society, including physicians, nurses, judges, military personnel, police officers and school teachers, and that diagnoses range from obsessive-compulsive disorder, “mental problems induced by superstition”, “qigong-induced mental disorder”, or as Munro points out, the revised “hyperdiagnosis” of “evil cult-induced mental disorder” (xie-jiao suo zhi jingshen zhang’ai)--which he describes as a throwback to the model found in Soviet forensic psychiatry. Munro describes this as a “politically opportunistic new diagnosis,” with the Chinese government effectively issuing the “health warning”: “Spiritual or religious beliefs banned on political grounds can drive people mad.”
Lu and Galli write that in cases where hospitals know that the persons to be committed do not have any mental illness and therefore express reluctance to admit them, the government, through police pressure, often forces them to commit the practitioners. These involuntary commitments are because the individuals practice Falun Gong, pass out flyers against the government suppression, otherwise appeal to the government, refuse to renounce Falun Gong, or write petition letters. It is also claimed that the Chinese government uses extreme measures to prevent any investigation of the alleged psychiatric abuses. Lu and Galli cite: threats or bribes towards family members, summary cremation of victims' bodies, detainment of anyone else who knows the truth or will talk about it to western media, censorship of the internet, restricted access for western media, blocking attempts at investigations by international organizations such as Amnesty International, and detaining, harassing, deporting or revoking the licenses of journalists.
Dr. Arthur Kleinman and Dr. Sing Lee from Harvard Medical School, long-time researchers on various psychiatric topics in China since 1978, both have had experience with patients suffering from “Qigong-induced mental disorder”. Partly in response to Munro’s suggestion that the term “qigong-induced mental disorder” may be in part a politicized, misused term to advance the Chinese government’s regime of suppression, they state that “In the scientific community, controlled phenomenologic, treatment, and outcome studies have been published in the past two decades that support the disease validity of qigong-related mental disorder…” And, go on to state that in international psychiatry this illness would be recognized as “…a specific type of brief reactive psychosis or as the precipitation of an underlying mental illness, such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or posttraumatic stress disorder.”
Lee and Kleinman state that “…Falun Gong is one of many kinds of qigong that share certain similarities, such as the attainment of a trance state, patterned bodily posture or movement…”, the practice of which could induce mental illnesses in some of its practitioners. As part of Lee’s research in China in 1997 she reports interviewing a 54-year-old housewife who had practiced Falun Gong for two years. Before recounting the case directly, Lee narrates that “…the trance state and the spontaneous bodily movement that the practice brought about enthralled her.”—notwithstanding that the references to a “trance state” and “spontaneous bodily movement” are not consistent with the teachings of Falun Gong which state “…You cannot be in a trance or lose yourself when practicing…” and that “Your Main Consciousness should govern you at all times as you do the exercises.”
Despite this, Lee recounts that the patient started to find that her body moved in ways that were no longer under her control, and that:
“She thought that these movements “talked” to her, sometimes by writing through her hand, telling her that continuous practice of Falun Gong could transform her into a Buddha. That she was plump and had long earlobes, resembling the popular appearance of a Buddha, convinced her that this possibility was real. In due course, however, she was frightened because the movements began to tell her to die by not eating and by taking an overdose of pills. She believed she was possessed by a shapeless fox spirit a thousand years old that required her body to turn into a real Buddha. She became an insomniac, restless, and distressed. Her distraught family members took her to a psychiatric hospital where she initially resisted treatment because she did not think that she was mentally ill but was only having a paranormal experience… Subsequently, she stayed in the hospital for one month and gradually recovered with antipsychotic drug treatment. She accepted the advice of her doctor that she had a sensitive disposition that was not suited for practicing qigong and stopped the Falun Gong altogether. She knew of many middle-aged people who practiced and derived benefit from Falun Gong for health reasons and loneliness after retirement. But she also heard about some who died by self-induced starvation or suicide as they attempted to ascend to the Falun heaven.”
In responding to Munro’s report, Lee and Kleinman state that “Much of his argument about the political abuse of psychiatry in China is based on unconfirmed allegations, many from human rights groups with their own axes to grind, and others from the Falun Gong religious cult, which, whatever we think of it, we must remember is engaged in a nasty political struggle with the Chinese state.” And that "Munro has based his essay entirely on indirect accounts and unconfirmed reports from sources that are clearly biased." They express their dissatisfaction that “We are not convinced by Munro’s argument that the Chinese government uses mental hospitals rather than the much cheaper regular prisons to detain Falun Gong practitioners because of the need for ‘self-justificatory vanity’ and ‘international prestige’” and also reject the assertion of both Munro and Lu & Galli that the modern Chinese psychiatric profession has become implicated in the Communist Party’s political agenda, citing personal anecdotes that “...during informal discussions regarding the Falun Gong, a number of Chinese psychiatrists whom we know of have expressed strongly the view that professional practice and politics should be separated, a phenomenon that was barely possible during the Maoist era.” They also caution Munro against “…creating a witch hunt that attributed to the profession as a whole the misuses and abuses of what may well turn out to be only a small number of practitioners.”
In his response to Lee and Kleinman, Munro responds to the claim that he “…based his essay entirely on indirect accounts and unconfirmed reports from sources that are clearly biased”, by saying:
“The overwhelming majority of the evidence I have publicly presented on this question to date consists of facts, commentary, and survey material written and compiled by Chinese psychiatrists and law-enforcement officers themselves, all of it published in China’s officially authorized professional literature over the past few decades. In what plausible sense can such material credibly be characterized as “indirect,” “unconfirmed,” and “clearly biased”? (Lee and Kleinman regularly cite this same scholarly psychiatric literature from China in their own published work.) Above all, nowhere in their critique of my allegations of political psychiatric abuse in China do Lee and Kleinman even attempt to make any substantive rebuttal of the principal evidence I present—namely, the copious documentation drawn from several decades worth of the country’s own professional literature on psychiatry and the law. On all this, they are disappointingly silent. Instead, they rhetorically conflate this formidable body of evidence with the small quantity of unconfirmed Falun Gong material and then misleadingly dismiss both as being “indirect, unconfirmed, and biased.” Because they have chosen not to address the principal evidence I presented, one must assume that they simply have no answer to it.”
He says that the four Falun Gong case notes were selected on the basis of their typicality “…from among several hundred such accounts that have so far been compiled and published by the Falun Gong’s human rights monitoring units.” And that “According to the latter’s extensive network of informants in China, already more than 300 Falun Gong detainees have died in police custody nationwide since July 1999, three of them in forced psychiatric detention and all reportedly as a direct consequence of police brutality… Independent investigations by foreign journalists based in Beijing… have confirmed the Falun Gong’s version of events in the cases that have been examined.”
Munro finishes his response to the question of the quality of the evidence he presented by saying that “…more fair-minded readers will conclude that the more than 100 pages of closely documented evidence of the systematic, decades-long political misuse of psychiatry by the Chinese authorities that directly preceded this short section on the Falun Gong cases… transfer the burden of proof squarely back onto the Chinese authorities, if they want to convince their own citizens and the outside world that the appalling accounts of extreme physical and psychological ill treatment supplied by detained Falun Gong practitioners since the crackdown began in mid-1999 are either false or substantially inaccurate.”
In February 2005, a World Psychiatric Association delegation visited China to investigate the allegation. Dr. Alan Stone, professor of law and psychiatry at Harvard, a former president of the American Psychiatric Association and recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship to study the international political abuse of psychiatry, later published his findings as a member of the delegation. He states: “The lack of qualified psychiatrists, the divergent standards of training, the intense economic pressures, and the absence of central government control and command regulation all suggest a quite different situation than that which existed in the Soviet Union. If Falun Gong practitioners have been misdiagnosed and mistreated in psychiatric hospitals across China (and there is no doubt in my mind that they have been) it is not because orders came down from the Ministry of Health or Security in Beijing. Nor is there any evidence that an influential group of forensic psychiatrists carried out this psychiatric supression of the Falun Gong in the secure Ankang hospitals (mental hospital).”
Miscellaneous
Some of the other forms of reported torture mentioned in the UN report, human rights websites, or Falun Gong related websites employed to have Falun Gong practitioners renounce the practice, include: suffocation with plastic bags, buckets, or thick, soaked paper; ramming bamboo sticks through the fingernails; beating the buttocks with boards up to hundreds of times; exposure to hemp plants; being hand-cuffed and hung up for prolonged periods; being tied-up and hung up for prolonged periods; various forms of solitary confinement including being locked in a small cell or cage, tied to a board, or put in a water dungeon, all for prolonged periods of time; having icy or boiling water poured over the head (the UN report states this is a “routine” form of torture); forced to stay in extreme weather; various types of deprivation of physiological needs, as well as beatings.
Allegations of organ harvesting
Main article: Falun Gong and live organ harvestingThe neutrality of this section is disputed. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met. (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
In December 2005, Chinese officials reportedly confirmed that organs for transplant were obtained mainly from executed prisoners, and that steps were being taken to prevent abuse.
On March 10, 2006 the Falun Gong news paper Epoch Times reported a "heinous crime": six thousand practitioners were killed in a secret concentration camp in Sujiatun District, Shenyang City. “No detainees have managed to leave the concentration camp alive… internal organs are all removed from the bodies and sold,” said Mr. R, an anonymous person who broke the story to Epoch Times.
The story developed further on March 17 when another anonymous person whose family members were allegedly involved in removing organs from Falun Gong practitioners gave further details that were published in the Epoch Times. According to this anonymous source, the concentration camp is located in the Liaoning Provincial Thrombosis Hospital of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine where she once worked. Since 2001, according to this source, the hospital has detained practitioners in a huge system of secret underground chambers. Then she made a horrifying accusation that topped all others ever made by the group: “Many Falun Gong practitioners were still alive when their organs were taken. After their organs were cut out, some of these people were thrown directly into the crematorium to be burnt, thus leaving no evidence.” Claiming no connection with the Falun Gong, she said she had to speak up to save those still alive there. Similar claims were made by Mr. R.
On 12 March2006, Harry Wu, the Executive Director of the Laogai Research Foundation and the China Information Center located in Washington, D.C. released a report stating that:"I arranged for people inside China to visit the Sujiatun scene. From March 12, the investigators canvassed the entire Sujiatun area. On March 17, the investigators visited two military barracks in Sujiatun. On March 27, the investigators secretly visited the Chinese Medical Blood Clotting Treatment Center in Sujiatun. On March 29, the investigators went to the Kongjiashan prison near Sujiatun. None of the aforementioned investigations revealed any trace of the concentration camp. The investigators provided me with photographs and written reports on their investigation and results on March 15, 17, 27, 29, 30 and April 4."
The Washington Times covered the allegations on 24 March 2006 in an article by Bill Gertz. According to the article, Jin Zhong (a pseudonym for the journalist who fled China recently) said he first learned of the harvesting operation between October and December. Mr Jin, who in the past has been a contributor to a Japanese news agency, calls Sujiatun "a murder sponsored by a state". Jin came across the underground detention center while researching the Chinese government's response to SARS. The article claims that several other hospital workers have also revealed details about the prisoner organ harvesting. Jin Zhong has had to hide his true identity after being threatened by Chinese government agents. He was arrested twice for his reporting and recently fled to the United States, where he hopes to seek political asylum. Jin also professes that the bodies of prisoners were burned in the boiler room of the hospital and that boiler room workers had taken jewelry and watches from the dead and sold them.
After more then two weeks, on 28 March, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Qin Gang stated: "This absurd lie is not worth refuting and no one will buy it." He also urged reporters to go to Shenyang's Sujiatun district to look into the claims.
On 30 March, Falun Gong's Epoch Times reported a new informant, identifying himself as a veteran military doctor in Shenyang military zone, has told about a system of similar concentration camps in China. The informant claims: "The reports from outside China about Sujiatun Concentration Camp imprisoning Falun Gong practitioners are true, although some of the details are incorrect." He says that more than 10,000 people were detained in Sujiatun in early 2005, but now the number of detainees is maintained at 600-750. Many detainees have been transferred to other camps, especially after the news on Sujiatun was publicized. The informant also asserts that the hospital in Sujiatun is only one of 36 similar camps all over China. Jilin camp, codenamed 672-S, holds over 120,000 people, not only Falun Gong practitioners. Specially dispatched freight trains can transfer 5,000-7,000 people in one night, and everyone on the trains is handcuffed to specially designed handrails on top of the ceiling, claims the informant.
On 30 March, Reuters released an article entitled "U.N. envoy looks at Falun Gong torture allegations". According to the report, the United Nations torture investigator Manfred Nowak shall be looking into the Sujiatun case. "I am presently in the process of investigating as far as I can these allegations ... If I come to the conclusion that it is a serious and well-founded allegation, then I will officially submit it to attention of the Chinese government," he told a news briefing.
On April 13, 2006, an official from the hospital gave the following statement: “the hospital is lacking the required facilities to conduct organ transplants and has no basement to house the Falun Gong practitioners.”
This hospital—the Liaoning Thrombus Medical Treatment Center—is partly owned by a Malaysian company, Country Heights Health Sanctuary, therefore subject to over sight beyond local Chinese government officials. During an official visit to China in September, 2004 the Minister of Health of Malaysia visited the hospital and reported nothing unusual.
On April 14, 2006 the U.S. State Department reported the findings of its investigation. The report states that: "U.S. representatives have found no evidence to support allegations that a site in northeast China has been used as a concentration camp to jail Falun Gong practitioners and harvest their organs." According to the report stuff from U.S. embassy in Beijing and the U.S. consulate in Shenyang have visited the area and the specific site on two separate occasions and that "the officers were allowed to tour the entire facility and grounds and found no evidence that the site is being used for any function other than as a normal public hospital."
In July 2006, David Kilgour, a former Canadian Cabinet minister, and David Matas, both human rights lawyers, conducted an investigation in response to a request by the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of the Falun Gong in China (CIPFG), a U.S.-based, front organization of the Falun Dafa Association founded in April 2006. They released a report about allegations of organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners which claimed China was secretly mass-murdering Falun Gong practitioners in order to harvest their organs. After being killed and having their organs removed, the report alleged, the victim's body would be incinerated to destroy the evidence. This report has been the subject of controversy and has been disputed by fellow anti-Chinese government activist Harry Wu. A congressional investigative report states that the Kilgour report relied largely upon making logical inferences,without bringing forth new or independently-obtained testimony. Amnesty International has stated that claims of systematic organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners cannot be confirmed or denied.
On January 31, 2007, following travels to approximately thirty national capitals to raise awareness about the issue, Matas and Kilgour released a revised version of their report, now called "BLOODY HARVEST". The revised report adds new allegations and recommendations for action in response to their findings.
Response by Falun Gong
Falun Gong groups outside of China responded to the crackdown by making films such as the anti-CCP "Nine Commentaries on the Communist Party" and initiating a world-wide "Three Renouncements" Campaign. The Three Renouncements campaign was hosted by the Falun Gong funded The Epoch Times and began on 3rd Dec, 2004 and had allegedly caused over 22 million members of the Communist Party of China and its subordinating organizations (the Communist Youth League and the Young Pioneers of China) to resign as of 21st May, 2007, according to Epoch Times' tally. Due to its anonymous nature, the accuracy of the tally is disputed.
Below is the trannslation of the official declaration made by Epoch Times initiating the Three Renouncements:
"Serious statement from Epoch Times: To all Chinese people: The Communist Party's end is coming. But this, most sinister wicked party (evil cult), of history, had committed enormous crimes against all living beings, God and Buddha. And God shall punish this evil. On the day, when God commands to punish the Communist Party, those so-called "loyal" members of this evil party will also be included. We make this serious statement: Anyone who had joined the Communist Party or other organizations under it (those who had been marked by that evil), quit now, erase the evil mark. When that some begins to punish this demonic cult, the records that stored in Epoch Times to renounce the Communist Party and its subordinating organizations can be used as evidence. The Heaven is just and ever vigilant, there is an end to your suffering and whether you'll live or die depends on yourself. Anyone who had been cheated by the most evil demonic cult in history, anyone who had received the beastly brand from the evil, seize this once in a life time opportunity!"
The link between the Three Renouncements and Falun Gong is disputed, since the existance of Buddha and the Christian God is not mentioned in Falun Gong teachings. However, Fei Liangyong, Chairman of the Democratic China Front and senior member of Chinese Free Culture Movement, explicitly mentioned that the Three Renouncements campaign was indeed initiated by Falun Gong via its associated media in his speeches and his various interviews with Falun Gong related media such as Mingjian (明见网,"Clear View Network") and Huiyuan (慧园, "Wisdom Garden").
Legal action
Since 2001, there have been in excess of 70 legal cases launched against the Government of the People's Republic of China, its leaders, and other officers or individuals whom are alleged to have taken part in human rights abuses against Falun Gong practitioners. The cases have been met with varying degrees of success.
- An Overview of Legal Cases Filed by Falun Gong Practitioners Around the World
- Falun Gong files case against Jiang Zemin in Spain
- French court asks China to investigate as part of Falun Gong lawsuits
- United States Supreme Court denies Falun Gong's petition against Jiang Zemin (Case 04-1070, PDF File)
- Belgium throws out Falun Gong case against Jiang Zemin
- Falun Gong supporters fail in legal action against Chinese minister
References
- Amnesty International: The crackdown on Falun Gong and other so-called heretical organizations (23 March 2000)
- Falun Dafa Information Center: U.S. Congress Unanimously Passes Resolution Calling on Jiang Zemin Regime to Cease Persecution of Falun Gong
- United Nations (February 4, 2004) Press Release HR/CN/1073, retrieved September 12, 2006
- "China Bans Falun Gong", (July 22, 1999) People's Daily Online, retrieved June 14, 2006
- Amnesty International: The crackdown on Falun Gong and other so-called heretical organizations (23 March 2000)
- http://clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2004/8/27/chronicle.html A Chronicle of Major Events of Falun Dafa
- Embassy of the People's Republic of China (November 1, 1999) "Falun Gong Is a Cult", retrieved June 10, 2006
- ^ Reid, Graham (Apr 29-May 5, 2006) "Nothing left to lose", New Zealand Listener, retreived July 6, 2006
- "Spiritual Practice or Evil Cult"?: Comprehending Falun Gong in the Context of China's Religious Policy, Zhonghu Yan, Center for the Study of Religion, University of Toronto, December 13, 2001
- Smith, Chrandra D. (March 11 2003) "Chinese Persecution of Falun Gong", Rutgers J. of L. & Relig. New Dev.66, retrieved July 14 2006
- National Review, 27. September 1999, Vol. 51 Issue 18, p. 26
- World Journal, American edition, June 20, 1999
- American Asian Review, Vol. XIX, no. 4, Winter 2001, p. 12
- Sydney, Australia May 2, 1999
- Falun Dafa Information Center, "Deaths in China", retrieved July 10, 2006
- American Asian Review, Vol. XIX, no. 4, Winter 2001, p. 12
- Critical Asian Studies 33:2 (2001), pp. 170-171
- American Asian Review, Vol. XIX, no. 4, Winter 2001, pp. 12-13
- ibid., p. 9
- Critical Asian Studies 33:2 (2001)
- Minghui/Clearwisdom, , retrieved February 5 2007
- Critical Asian Studies 33:2 (2001), p. 173
- Exposing the Lies of "Falun Gong" Cult, Embassy of the People's Republic of China in the United States, 2005(?)
- U.S. Congress (July 24 2002) "H.CON.RES.188 for the 107th Congress (2nd Session)", Library of Congress, retrieved July 31 2006
- UN 2004 report on the persecution of Falun Gong
- ClearWisdom.net
- Smith, Chrandra D. (October 2004) "Chinese Persecution of Falun Gong", retrieved July 8, 2006
- Morais, Richard C. (February 9, 2006)"China's Fight With Falun Gong", Forbes, retrieved July 7, 2006
- The United Nations Reports on China’s Persecution of Falun Gong (2004) (PDF), The Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group, 2004
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(help) - "Norway: Practitioners hold an Anti-Torture Exhibition and Receive Positive Media Coverage (Photos)". Falun Dafa Clearwisdom.net. 2004-08-04. Retrieved 2007-02-12.
- "Torture Methods / Burning". Falun Dafa Information Center.net. Retrieved 2007-02-12.
- "Torture Methods / Electric Shock". Falun Dafa Information Center.net. Retrieved 2007-02-12.
- "Torture Methods / Burning". Falun Dafa Information Center.net. Retrieved 2007-02-12.
- Ibid.
- "Force Feeding: A Form of Torture". Falun Dafa Information Center. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- "Falun Gong Woman Dies from Force Feeding Torture". Falun Dafa Information Center. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- "Torture Methods 05 / Force-Feeding". Chinaview. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- "FALUN GONG PERSECUTION FACTSHEET". Amnesty International. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- "EFGIC Press Release: Two Falun Gong Women Raped Amid UN Rapporteur Visit". European Falun Gong Information Centre. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- "Gao Zhisheng's third open letter to Chinese leaders". Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- The United Nations Reports on China’s Persecution of Falun Gong (2004) (PDF), The Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group, 2004
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(help) - China Refutes Western Accusations against Falun Gong Crackdown, People's Daily, 2000
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ignored (help) - Ji Shi, “Li Hongzhi and His "Falun Gong" - Deceiving the Public and Ruining Lives”, New Star Publishers, Beijing 1999, p 12
- Falun Gong Practitioners Tortured in Mental Hospitals Throughout China (PDF), Falun Dafa Information Center
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ignored (help) - Robin J. Munro, “Political Psychiatry in Post-Mao China and its Origins in the Cultural Revolution”, MA J Am Acad Psychiatry Law, 30:97–106, 2002. p 109
- Ibid., Munro, 2002, p 109
- Ibid., Munro, 2002, p 106
- Sunny Y. Lu, MD, PhD, and Viviana B. Galli, MD, “Psychiatric Abuse of Falun Gong Practitioners in China”, J Am Acad Psychiatry Law, 30:126–30, 2002, p 124
- Ibid., Munro, 2002, p 107
- Ibid., Lu and Galli, 2002, p. 128
- Ibid., Munro, 2002, p 110
- Ibid., Lu and Galli, 2002, p 126
- Ibid., Munro, 2002, p 105
- Ibid., Lu and Galli, 2002, p 128
- Sing Lee, MB, BS, and Arthur Kleinman, MD, “Psychiatry in its Political and Professional Contexts: A Response to Robin Munro”, J Am Acad Psychiatry Law, 30:120–5, 2002, p 122
- Li Hongzhi (Updated April 2001), Falun Gong (PDF), falundafa.org
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- Ibid., Lee and Kleinman, 2002, p 123
- Ibid., Lee and Kleinman, 2002, p 120
- Lee and Kleinman, 2002, p 122
- Ibid., Lee and Kleinman, 2002, p 124
- Ibid., Lee and Kleinman, 2002, p 124
- Ibid., Lee and Kleinman, 2002, p 124
- Munro, Robin (2002). "On the Psychiatric Abuse of Falun Gong and Other Dissenters in China: A Reply to Stone, Hickling, Kleinman, and Lee" (PDF). The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law. 30 (2): 266–274.
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(help) - Ibid., Munro, 2002, p 269
- Ibid., Munro, 2002, p 270
- Ibid., Munro, 2002, p 270
- ^ Thomas Lum, Congressional Research Report #RL33437, Congressional Research Service, August 11 2006
- Gertz, Bill (March 24 2006) "China harvesting inmates' organs, journalist says", Washington Times, retrieved July 6 2006
- "China negatives Falun Gong allegations of organ harvesting" (March 28 2006) Pravda, retrieved July 8 2006
- China harvesting Falun Gong organs, report alleges
- Harry Wu challenges Falun Gong organ harvesting claims, South China Morning Post, September 8, 2006
- http://www.OrganHarvestInvestigation.net/
- "New Evidence in Matas/Kilgour Revised Report on Organ Harvest of Falun Gong Practitioners in China" (Press release). Kilgour, David; Matas, David. 2007-02-02. Retrieved 2007-06-10.
- Epoch Times (January 12, 2005)退党声明 retrieved May 21, 2007
- 明见(Mingjian) (April 8, 2007)费良勇:在中国自由文化运动2007年特别精神信仰奖颁奖典礼上的演讲 retrieved May 21, 2007
- Legal Actions in Chronological Order, Justice for Falun Gong, Retrieved 2007-08-16
External links
- Brutal Persecution a photo collection of the supression from ClearWisdom.net
- Falun Dafa Information Center
- On the Collusion of Jiang Zemin and the Chinese Communist Party to Persecute Falun Gong or see here the video documentary
- China syndrome: the persecution of Falun Gong
- Stepped-Up Crackdown - China's persecution of the Falun Gong - Brief Article
- World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong
- Resolution Urges China to Cease Persecution of Falun Gong
- SOS! URGENT Rescue Falun Gong Practitioners persecuted in china - from YouTube
- Poisonous Deceit ISBN 0-9731181-0-5 © 2002, Deep Six Publishing
- 2001 Pulitzer Prize Article (section 1): A Deadly Exercise: Practicing Falun Gong Was a Right, Ms. Chen Said, to Her Last Day,
- 2001 Pulitzer Prize Article (section 10): Death Trap: How One Chinese City Resorted to Atrocities To Control Falun Dafa
- Association for Asian Research - China genocide suit on U.S. Supreme Court steps
- CNN - Falun Gong sues ex-president Jiang
- Daily Times - Genocide lawsuit filed against Jiang Zemin
- Falun Gong files case against Jiang Zemin in Spain
- US State Department finding - no evidence of concentration camp
- Credibility of Falun Gong's concentration camp claim
- US 9th Circuit Court reverse the Board of Immigration Appeals order of removal of a woman
- Jiang Zemin and the CPC to persecution by Epoch Times
- Falun Gong practitioner's video about the Chinese govt. persecution
- Memorial site for practitioners deaths
- Global Mission to Rescue Persecuted Falun Dafa Practitioners - Includes searchable database of persecution cases.
- World Organization to Investigate the suppression of Falun Gong (WOIPFG)
- Arrest and imprisonment of U.S. Citizen Charles Lee in China
- 2001 Wall Street Journal - Pulitzer Prize winning article on the suppression of Falun Gong by Ian Johnson