By Charlotte Cuthbertson, Epoch Times
September 09, 2009
NEW YORK—As residents in New York gear up for the local elections, an unseen force may be hard at work.
City Comptroller candidate John Liu has a friendly relationship with Chinese Communist Party (CCP) organizations and former Canadian diplomat Brian McAdam says New Yorkers should be concerned.
“Wherever there is a Chinese community, the CCP is going to try and infiltrate, if they haven't done so already,” McAdam said.
City Councilman John Liu is vying for the New York City comptroller job, with the primary elections on Sept. 15.
He will face David Weprin, Melinda Katz, and David Yassky in a bid to be the Democratic candidate for the main race for comptroller—the caretaker of the city's more than $60 million budget.
McAdam agrees, saying cooperation with the CCP front organizations is very beneficial for overseas Chinese.
“If you’re not cooperative you can’t really advance far in these Chinese communities now,” said McAdam.
He worked as a Canadian diplomat in Hong Kong from 1989 to 1993 and was instrumental in uncovering triad operations.
He said the CCP has high hopes for its efforts abroad.
“My estimation is absolutely they’re a threat to the rest of the world, they’re covertly doing what they need to to accomplish their goals, which is to be the most powerful nation on earth,” said McAdam.
There were roughly 10,000 overseas Chinese organizations around the world in 2005, according to the Yunan Returned Overseas Chinese Federation Web site. Not all Chinese associations are influenced by the CCP.
Overseas Chinese Used as Propaganda Bases
The Chinese government puts a high value on propaganda work, describing it as the lifeblood of the Party-State in the current era, according to Anne-Marie Brady, a New Zealand academic whose research focuses on China’s propaganda system. Brady spoke at the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission in April this year.
“Gaining influence over overseas Chinese groups outside China in order to turn them into propaganda bases for China is a key task in foreign propaganda work,” Brady said.
She said the goal is to neutralize antagonism toward the CCP government, enhance antagonism toward anti-CCP forces within China and their adherents in exile, and at the same time, encourage a constructive attitude toward overseas Chinese helping to make China “rich and strong.”
“These efforts have been remarkably successful,” said Brady.
The Office for Foreign Propaganda/State Council Information Office (OFP/SCIO) is tasked with managing any sensitive news stories on the following topics, especially when they involve loss of life, Brady said: foreign embassies, diplomats in China, overseas Chinese business people, foreign students, foreign travelers, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan residents. They also guide the Chinese media during any major events regarding Tibet, Xinjiang, ethnic minorities, religion, human rights, democracy movements, internal and external terrorist activities, and Falun Gong.
Multiple media outlets are used by the CCP in its foreign propaganda efforts, said Brady. Also used are cultural activities— support for the teaching of Chinese language internationally, which includes the rapid spread of Confucius Institutes; and special activities organized for the overseas Chinese community such as conferences and “root-seeking” cultural tours.
Liu and Peng Supporting Violence in Flushing
New York-based attorney, James Li, said he opposes Liu's political campaign because Liu “has no political principles.”
“He is a politician without any of the fundamental values of America—liberty, freedom, democracy—those are our fundamental principles,” Li said.
“He supports or sympathizes with the people who attack Falun Gong practitioners and others, and he never supports or sympathizes with dissidents from China. He sympathize with the attackers. It’s ugly.”
Li heard of the attacks on Falun Gong practitioners in Flushing last year. The attacks were supported by Chinese Consul General Peng Keyu, who was recorded as congratulating the pro-CCP groups.
“They came over after they fought with Falun Gong (practitioners),” Peng was recorded as saying about the pro-CCP group. “I shook hands with them one by one to thank them. Then I said a few words (to them), encouraging words.”
Victor Yau (a.k.a. Qiu Wei), founder and CEO of the Overseas Chinese Ethnic Foundation, was involved in the hate campaign against Falun Gong practitioners that began in May 2008.
Yau was arrested in June 2008, for allegedly attacking a practitioner with a steering wheel lock. Less than two weeks later, Yau joined a meeting in John Liu's office with other supporters of the attacks against Falun Gong. Liu kicked local Falun Gong practitioners out of the meeting.
Falun Gong is a spiritual discipline based on truthfulness, compassion, forbearance, and includes five exercises. People who practice it have been persecuted by the Chinese Communist Party since July 1999. Before then it had attracted between 70-100 million practitioners since its introduction to the public in 1992.