An outlawed religious sect in China is charging the government with torturing prisoners, executing them and trafficking in their body parts. The charge, by the banned Falun Gong group, is backed up by Chinese doctors and human rights experts who keep tabs on activities of the Beijing government.
It is that ability to stay pristine and beautiful despite being surrounded by impurities that led the Falun Gong to choose it as a symbol of hope, especially for the children of Falun Gong practitioners.
While the Chinese government claims that international expression of concern over its policies that violate human rights constitute an imposition on its state sovereignty, the regime has no misgivings about sending agents around the world not only to apply pressure and interfere in local events, but also to commit crimes in foreign countries.
Imagine if there existed a book documenting Hitler’s plans and the atrocities he committed throughout Europe while they were still taking place, says John Jaw, President of the World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong, which published the book.
A Chinese minister was served with legal papers Friday charging him with torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. The papers were served upon a guard outside Wang Xudongs hotel room within hours after the Minister of the Information Industry delivered a speech at an internet technology trade summit in Chicago.
Six defendants, including two pro-Communist organizations, were served with a summons for a civil lawsuit yesterday for their roles in an assault against practitioners of Falun Gong last year in New York City.
SYDNEY At 10 am on June 30, Falun Gong practitioners and family members of the victims who suffered at the recent South Africa shooting held a press conference outside of Sydneys Chinese consulate. At the press conference, they talked to media in depth about the incident, in which Australian Falun Gong practitioners were shot…
CHINESE spiritual movement Falun Gong said yesterday it would file charges of human rights violations under international law in SA against China’s communist leaders.
Mr Liang was among nine Australian-based Falun Gong members who entered South Africa on Monday to protest during a visit there of Chinese Vice-President Zeng Qinghong and Commerce Minister Bo Xilai about China’s human rights abuses.
AN Australian man wounded in a drive-by shooting in South Africa alleges he was the target of gunmen hired by the Chinese government. Sydney man David Liang, 41, a follower of the religious group Falun Gong which is outlawed in China, is recovering in a South African hospital from gunshot wounds to his feet.
The weekend of 19 June to 21 June 2004 marked the celebration of National Falun Dafa Day in Canberra Australia. Practitioners from all over Australia took the opportunity to gather in Canberra to make the public more aware of the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in China and to expose the torture methods and lies…
Australian Citizen Shot in South Africa – “This Was Not a Random Drive-by Shooting” – say Aussie Falun Gong practitioners in Pretoria. Australian High Commission Employee’s Claim is Unfounded.