By Cindy Chan, Epoch Times
October 27, 2009
MP Bill Siksay, first chair of the newly formed Parliamentary Friends of Falun Gong, speaking at the Ottawa Human Rights Torch Relay (HRTR) rally on Parliament Hill in May 2008. The HRTR, through grassroots events, spoke out against the Chinese regime's worsening human rights abuses prior to the 2008 Beijing Olympics. (Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times) |
OTTAWA—An all-party group of senators and members of Parliament concerned about adversities facing followers of the Falun Gong
spiritual discipline have founded a Parliamentary friendship organization to address those issues.
Parliamentary Friends of Falun Gong (PFOFG) is the first such group of Parliamentarians in the world lending focused support to the
practice of meditation and moral teachings, also called Falun Dafa, that has suffered a decade of persecution in communist
China.
“Our first goal is to make sure Parliamentarians are better informed about issues related to Falun Gong,” said PFOFG chair Bill
Siksay. “One of the key purposes of the organization is to encourage respect for fundamental human rights in China.”
Reports from the United Nations, government bodies, human rights groups, and independent investigators worldwide include graphic
accounts of torture and corroborating studies
detailing evidence of state-orchestrated organ harvesting from imprisoned Falun Gong practitioners to supply an illicit organ
trade.
Introduced in China in 1992, the practice based on the principles of “Truthfulness, Compassion, Forbearance” rapidly flourished
due to its benefits to physical and mental health. By 1999, it had 70 to 100 million followers, according to government estimates,
just before the totalitarian state launched a massive campaign to “eradicate” it.
Mr. Siksay said the group’s first step is to meet with the Falun Dafa Association of Canada (FDAC).
Future activities may include sponsoring programs and events with FDAC on Parliament Hill such as the May 27 China human rights forum hosted by MP Scott
Reid, a PFOFG director.
“We are extremely delighted to learn that this group has been formed,” said FDAC president Li Xun. “The concern by
Parliamentarians sends a strong indication of the significance of the matter. It will send an encouraging message to the
practitioners in China.”
Canada First to Condemn Persecution
Ten years ago, Canada also took a lead as the first country to publicly condemn
the persecution. Canada filed an official protest with the Chinese foreign ministry shortly after mass arrests and detentions of
practitioners began on July 20, 1999, as reported by The Globe and Mail.
At a Canada-China human rights meeting that November, then-Secretary of State (Asia-Pacific) Raymond Chan said his delegation would
raise “specific issues related to religious freedoms and basic rights and reports of ill-treatment of Falun Gong adherents.”
The Canadian Press reported that Falun Gong was the third most frequent subject of correspondence to the Prime Minister’s Office
in 2005.
A U.S. State Department 2008 report said foreign observers estimated that at least half of China’s 250,000 labour camp prisoners
were Falun Gong practitioners.
Parliamentarians’ efforts and Canadians’ concerns over the years have led to the release of practitioners in China and compelled
former prime ministers Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin to raise the issue of the persecution with Chinese leaders.
Support has continued despite ongoing attempts by the Chinese embassy and consulates to vilify Falun Gong, including displaying
hate materials in their visa offices, controlling Chinese-language media to turn public opinion against the practice, and
pressuring Canadian officials not to support practitioners.
But the impact of such actions cannot be ignored.
“It’s always been apparent to me that there is significant misunderstanding about the practice of Falun Gong,” said Mr.
Siksay.
MP Scott Reid (2nd L), a Parliamentary Friends of Falun Gong director and chair of the Parliamentary Subcommittee on International Human Rights, hosted a China human rights forum on May 27, 2009, on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. (Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times) |
He said if his colleagues have good information and are aware of the important issues concerning the practice, “I can’t see how it wouldn’t have an effect on government policy.”
All-Party Membership
The founding PFOFG membership comprises two senators and 18 MPs from all parties represented in
Parliament.
Liberal Borys Wrzesnewskyj and Conservative Stephen Woodworth are vice-presidents. The executive also includes New Democrats Peter
Julian and Don Davies; Conservatives Scott Reid, Rob Anders, and Senator Consiglio Di Nino; and Diane Bourgeois from the Bloc
Québécois. Mr. Siksay is an NDP member.
Mr. Di Nino initiated the idea of the PFOFG six months ago.
Mr. Wrzesnewskyj has introduced a private member’s bill to fight the international underground trade in human organs and other
body parts. He drafted the bill partly due to a 2006−2007 Canadian report documenting evidence that the Chinese regime has killed
tens of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners to extract organs for lucrative transplant surgeries.
“Bloody Harvest” was co-authored by Winnipeg-based
international human rights lawyer David Matas and former Secretary of State (Asia-Pacific) David Kilgour.
Mr. Reid, Conservative Party Deputy Government House Leader, in 2002 introduced a motion that passed unanimously in the House
urging Mr. Chrétien to request then-Chinese leader Jiang Zemin to free 13 imprisoned practitioners with Canadian family ties.
M-236, co-sponsored by current International Trade Minister Stockwell Day, resulted in the release of eight practitioners within a
year.
Irwin Cotler, another PFOFG member, is the Liberal Party’s Special Counsel on Human Rights and International Justice. He has
helped secure the release of prisoners of conscience worldwide, including Falun Gong practitioners.
Mr. Li believes the PFOFG “will play a significant role in the Parliament” as it reflects the wish of Canadians as well as
advances Canada’s leadership role taken as early as 1999 when the persecution began.
“Canadians who practice Falun Gong have asked for our help,” said Mr. Woodworth in a news release. “The very least
Parliamentarians can do is stand up for human rights whenever they are called upon to do so.”