AI Fact Sheet on ongoing Falun Gong Persecution in
China (November
2006)
FALUN GONG
PERSECUTION
FACTSHEET
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL HAS APPEALED TO THE CHINESE AUTHORITIES TO STOP THE CAMPAIGN OF PERSECUTION OF FALUN GONG, INCLUDING BY RELEASING ALL THOSE DETAINED SOLELY ON ACCOUNT OF THEIR PEACEFUL RELIGIOUS OR SPIRITUAL BELIEFS AND PRACTICES.
Repression of Spiritual and Religious Groups in China
# Religious
observance outside official channels in China remains tightly circumscribed. In
March 2005, the Chinese authorities promulgated a new 'Regulation on Religious
Affairs' aimed at strengthening official controls on religious
activities.
# Unregistered Catholics and Protestants associated with
unofficial house churches were also harassed, arbitrarily detained and
imprisoned.
# Freedom of religion continues to be severely restricted in
Tibet and other Tibetan Areas of China, including the arrests and torture of
many Buddhist monks and nuns.
# The authorities continue to use the
global 'war on terror' to justify harsh repression of the mainly Muslim Uighur
community in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR). Repression resulted
in the closure of 'unofficial' mosques and arrests of imams.
Persecution
of Falun Gong
# When the Falun Gong spiritual movement was first banned in
July 1999, police rounded up thousands of practitioners in a Beijing
stadium.
# The crackdown on the Falun Gong spiritual movement was renewed
in April 2005. A Beijing official clarified that since the group had been banned
as a "heretical organisation", any activities linked to Falun Gong were
illegal.
# Amnesty International has raised concerns that the official
campaign of public vilification of Falun Gong in the official Chinese press has
created a climate of hatred against Falun Gong practitioners in China which may
be encouraging acts of violence against them.
# A large but unknown
number of Falun Gong practitioners remain in detention where they are at high
risk of torture.
# More than 250,000 people in China are being detained
in camps known as 'Re-education through Labour', on vaguely defined charges
having never seen a lawyer, never been to a court, and with no form of judicial
supervision. It is unknown how many Falun Gong members are detained in these
camps.
# Falun Gong members are at a high risk of torture while in
detainment. Torture and ill-treatment is endemic and widespread in a wide
variety of state institutions. It is frequently used as a punishment against
those deemed to be "subversive" or "resisting reform".
# Common methods
of torture include kicking, beating, electric shocks, suspension by the arms,
shackling in painful positions, and sleep and food deprivation. Gender-specific
forms of torture, including rape and sexual abuse, have also been
reported.
Report on alleged live organ harvesting of Falun Gong
practitioners
# A report published by independent researchers David Matas and
David Kilgour on 6th July 2006, concludes that large numbers of Falun Gong
practitioners are victims of 'systematic' organ harvesting, whilst still alive,
throughout China.
# Amnesty International is continuing to analyse
sources of information about the Falun Gong organ harvesting allegations,
including the report published by Canadians David Matas and David
Kilgour.
# There is, however, a widely documented practice of the buying
and selling of organs of death penalty prisoners in China. The lack of
transparency surrounding such practices makes it impossible to determine whether
written consent was obtained.
# It is unknown how many Falun Gong
practitioners are being executed by the Chinese authorities. While Chinese
authorities conceal national statistics on the death penalty as a "state
secret", various sources indicate China may be executing between 10,000 -15,000
people a year.
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Human Cost
Gao
Rongrong, who died in custody in June after being detained in Longshan
Reeducation through Labour facility in Shenyang, Liaoning province. Officials
had reportedly beaten her in 2004, including by using electro-shock batons on
her face and neck, which caused severe blistering and eyesight problems, after
she was discovered reading Falun Gong materials.
Deng Shiying reportedly
died on 19 July 2003, the day after her release from Jilin Women's Prison in
Changchun City, Jilin Province, where she was serving a seven-year prison
sentence in connection with producing and distributing information describing
human rights violations against Falun Gong practitioners in China. According to
Falun Gong sources, she was beaten by other inmates, apparently prompted by
prison officials, shortly before her release.
copy of the report
on http://www.amnesty.org.nz/