Amnesty International: Falun Gong Persecution Fact Sheet

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.

Persecution of Falun
Gong

  • The Falun Gong spiritual movement is banned. When the 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 organization", 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 ‘Reeducation 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.
  • 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.

Trade in Organs of Executed
Prisoners

  • Chinese authorities conceal national statistics on the
    death penalty as a "state secret". Based on public reports available,
    AI has estimated that at least 1,770 people were executed and 3,900 people were
    sentenced to death during 2005, although the true figures are believed to be much
    higher. In March 2004, a senior member of the National People’s Congress announced
    that China executes around 10,000 people per year.
  • There is 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. Amnesty International also remains deeply
    concerned that those faced with imminent execution are not in a position to provide
    ‘free and informed consent’ to having their organs extracted.
  • Amnesty
    International notes the introduction, in China, of new regulations on organ transplants
    on 1 July 2006 banning the buying and selling of organs. However, questions remain
    about how well the regulations will be enforced, particularly in view of the high
    commercial value of organ sales in China. Amnesty International also notes that
    the regulations fail to address the basic issue of the source of organs for transplantation.

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.
  • Amnesty International is carrying out its
    own investigation on this issue. These investigations are being hampered by the
    particular difficulty of collecting reliable evidence in China, including official
    restrictions on access for international human rights organizations.
  • Amnesty
    International has noted the response of the Chinese authorities to the Canadian
    report, which states among other things that China has ‘consistently abided by
    the relevant guiding principles of the World Health Organization endorsed in 1991,
    prohibiting the sale of human organs and stipulating that donors’ written consent
    must be obtained beforehand’. Amnesty International considers this statement to
    be at odds with the facts in view of the widely documented practice of the buying
    and selling of organs of death penalty prisoners in China.

http://www.amnesty.org.nz/web/pages/home.nsf/dd5cab6801f1723585256474005327c8/83fba691f912206bcc2571d3001824ed!OpenDocument


Posting
date: 5/Nov/2006
Original article date: 3/Nov/2006
Category: Media Report

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