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Truth in China

Archive for 200711     ( return to current blog )


 Falun Gong Protest Against Persecution in China
 

The Czech News Agency reported on the 19th of November, that the European Celestial Marching Band, consisting of over eighty European Falun Gong practitioners, performed at the Old Town Square in Prague on the 17th of November. After the performance, they started a parade in protest against the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) persecution against Falun Gong.

The organisers of the event expressed that they chose the anniversary of Czechoslovakia’s overthrowing of the Communist regime in 1989 as the date for the event. A participant of the event told journalists that a lot of countries are still waiting for the day when Communist powers will be completely disintegrated. Eighteen years ago, the Czech Republic used peaceful ways to change the political situation in their country, so now some Chinese people are using the Czech Republic as an example.

Falun Gong started spreading in 1992, with millions of practitioners following the principles of Truth, Compassion and Tolerance. The Communist regime started persecuting Falun Gong in 1999. Since then, tens of thousands of practitioners have been arrested. Falun Gong practitioners’ organs are also harvested for transplants. Practitioners hope that people over the world can pay attention to the happenings of the persecution.

According to reports, the European Celestial Marching Band formed at the end of last year, consisting of 160 Falun Gong practitioners. Around half of the members of the Band performed in Prague. The organisers of the event expressed their opinion that political activists in other countries and the Czech Republic should speak out and oppose the violating of human rights in China.

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http://en.clearharmony.net/articles/200711/42203.html

Posted by truthinchina at 1:49 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Naked-eye comet bursts into view
 

Comet 17P/Holmes has brightened nearly a million times in the past 2 days and can be seen as a point of light with the naked eyes in Perseus.

October 24, 2007
A nearly unprecedented outburst has raised Comet 17P/Holmes from a 17th-magnitude object visible only through large telescopes into plain view without optical aid. The comet lies in Perseus the Hero and will remain visible all night from most of the Northern Hemisphere.

(Total Story:Astronomy)

Amazing! The comet is so bright that I had to do a short exposure not getting the comet overexposured in the photo! A really surprise!

(Total Story:Comet 17P/Holmes Photo Galllery)

E. Holmes (London, England) was a regular observer of the Andromeda galaxy (M31), so he knew the region very well. On the evening of 1892 November 6, with skies that were not very favorable, he finished making a few observations of Jupiter and some double stars with his 32-cm reflector, and then decided to take a quick look at the faint companions of Mu Andromedae and the nearby galaxy M31 before quitting for the night.

(Total Story: C&MS 17P/Holmes)

Posted by truthinchina at 2:43 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Epoch Times: CBC Airs Falun Gong Documentary With Edits
 

By Jason Loftus and Joan Delaney

Epoch Times Toronto and Victoria Staff

Nov 21, 2007

CBC Newsworld aired a highly anticipated documentary on the persecution of Falun Gong Tuesday night following a media storm over the controversial pulling of the film two weeks ago.

CBC admitted that it pulled Beyond the Red Wall: The Persecution of Falun Gong , five hours before it was to air on Nov. 6 after being contacted by the Chinese embassy in Ottawa. CBC denied it was giving in to Chinese pressure. Some segments of the film dealing with reports of organ harvesting against Falun Gong practitioners by the Chinese authorities were removed, as well as some of the strongest statements regarding the Beijing Olympics. CBC holds the rights to broadcast those Games in Canada.

However, human rights lawyer Clive Ansley, who appears in Red Wall , says that while the impact of the film was "blunted to some extent" by omitting these segments, it was still "very hard-hitting."

"It's probably the first exposure most people have ever had to this issue, and think most Canadians will be shocked and will have heard things they haven't heard before." Ansley says he regrets the CBC "took things out that would have added to the film," including his quote comparing the Beijing Olympics to Hitler's 1936 Berlin Games. "That particular quotation was innocuous really except that it was one of the most upsetting things to Beijing because it dealt with the Olympics."

The Epoch Times learned Monday that CBC reporters in Beijing had also been pestered about the documentary, which details the harsh persecution suffered by Falun Gong practitioners at the hands of the Chinese authorities. The edited version of Red Wall aired on CBC Newsworld's documentary program The Lens. The program bills itself as a platform for independent documentaries with independent perspectives.

However, although the documentary was still highly critical of the persecution of Falun Gong, CBC editors appear to have made a number of changes to the original version of the film circulated to media weeks ago. That version of the film had been approved by CBC editors and lawyers, and has already been shown in French Canada, New Zealand and Spain. Lucy Zhou, spokesperson for the Falun Dafa Association of Canada (FDAC), says that while FDAC is pleased the CBC aired a film that will help Canadians understand the realities of the persecution, the group regrets the "watering down" of certain segments.

"We are disappointed the CBC made cuts in three important areas: the self immolation, the organ harvesting, and the message that the Olympics and crimes against humanity cannot coexist."

"We still hope the CBC will have the courage-in spite of intimidation from the Chinese Communist Party-to air the producer's independent work one day," says Zhou. More details to follow.

Posting date: 11/21/2007
We welcome your comments and suggestions, please email:
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http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2007/11/21/91515.html
Posted by truthinchina at 3:36 AM - 2 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Falun Dafa Information Centre: Olympic-Size Violations
 

Beijing Olympic organizers have openly expressed a policy banning Falun Gong adherents from attending the 2008 summer Olympics, the Falun Dafa Information Centre reported Wednesday. Beijing’s decision stands in stark violation to Articles 35 and 36 of China’s own Constitution, which promise freedom of association and religious belief, as well as the International Olympic Committee’s bylaws, which prohibit any form of discrimination - including that religious or political.

The Falun Dafa Information Centre condemns Beijing’s decision, and calls upon the international community to pressure China’s communist officials to reverse the unlawful policy.

“The Olympics must not be turned into a theatre of intolerance, a celebration of communist machinations,” said Information Centre spokesperson Mr. Erping Zhang. “We’re talking about tens of millions being barred from the Games simply for who they are. This amounts to a violation of the Olympic Charter on a scale nobody could have imagined.”

News of Beijing’s discriminatory plans was made public in a November 8 report from the Associated Press. The report indicates that Beijing’s new, allegedly-more-tolerant religious policies “do not apply to Falun Gong,” and instead only reassert “China’s determination to marginalize, persecute and eradicate the spiritual movement.”

Li Zhanjun, director of the Beijing Olympics media centre, told AP that, “Falun Gong texts, Falun Gong activities in China are forbidden,” and that, “Foreigners who come to China must respect and abide by the laws of China.”

Beijing’s explanation is not satisfactory, however, in that the branding of Falun Gong as “illegal” was in contravention to the constitution of the People’s Republic of China, as well as numerous international rights accords and covenants of which the PRC is a signatory. Article 35 of China’s own constitution, for instance, claims that citizens “enjoy freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession and of demonstration.”

Article 36 of likewise declares that citizens “enjoy freedom of religious belief,” and that, “No state organ, public organization or individual may compel citizens to believe in, or not to believe in, any religion; nor may they discriminate against citizens who believe in, or do not believe in, any religion.”

The Olympics should hardly occasion an exception to such policies, even if PRC authorities have flaunted them for decades. To the contrary, the IOC had indicated that the Games would compel China’s rulers to improve the nation’s abysmal human rights record. The Olympic Charter states clearly: “Any form of discrimination with regard to a country or a person on grounds of race, religion, politics, gender or otherwise is incompatible with belonging to the Olympic Movement.”

The IOC’s regulations thus protect against the marginalization of groups such as the Falun Gong, even if such discrimination is internally legislated; the branding of Falun Gong as “illegal” does not change the religious character, or rights, of the group, and only bespeaks of the willingness and disposition of China’s communist authorities to subordinate rule of law to political caprice.

“Beijing’s calling Falun Gong ‘illegal’ is a clumsy attempt to justify what is a program of institutionally-sanctioned violence and persecution. The fact remains: millions of peaceful, law-abiding citizens who aspire merely to better health and moral living are being brutalized and deprived of their rights by an authoritarian communist regime,” says the Information Centre’s Zhang. “In all of the other 75, non-communist states around the world where Falun Gong is found it is freely, legally, and openly practised. Only in communist China does it face relentless suppression.”

According to a 2005 report by the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture, 6634bbcercent of reported victims of torture in China were Falun Gong adherents. In a 2006 report, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture expressed concern over increasing reports of systemic repression against the Falun Gong saying, “reports of arrest, detention, ill treatment, torture, sexual violence, deaths, and unfair trial of members of so-called ‘heretical organizations,’ in particular Falun Gong practitioners, may reflect a deliberate and institutionalized policy of the authorities to target specific groups such as the Falun Gong.”

The Falun Dafa Information Centre has verified details of over 63,000 instances of torture, with over 3,000 deaths in custody. The actual death toll is believed to be as high as 10,000 or more.

Beijing’s latest statement follows a series of warnings sounded by the Information Centre. The Centre anticipated such policies, and has sought international support in preventing their enactment.

In 2005, for instance, the Center received credible reports that PRC authorities were, in preparation for the Olympic Games and in contrast to their promise to improve human rights, stepping up measures to “stamp out” Falun Gong prior to summer 2008.

In May 2007, the Centre reported on a secret directive from the Ministry of Public Security, provided to the Center by sources in China, that lists 43 categories of unwanteds who are to be investigated and barred from the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

The Information Centre is currently seeking statement from IOC officials on Beijing’s announcement, and seeks clarification of what measures will be used to ensure that policies of discrimination are not carried out, be it openly or covertly, by PRC authorities.

# # #

NEWS - Nov. 14, 2007
Falun Dafa Information Centre, www.faluninfo.net

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========================

NTD TV GALA



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 CBC Pulls TV Documentary After Pressure From Chinese Envoy
 

--Canada's Olympic broadcaster pulls film on Falun Gong after Chinese embassy complaint

By Joan Delaney and Matthew Little - Epoch Times Victoria and Winnipeg Staff


Filmmaker Peter Rowe gathering footage for his documentary Beyond the Red Wall at World Falun Dafa Day activities in Toronto, Canada, in May, 2005. (Jan Jekielek/The Epoch Times)

A CBC documentary about human rights abuses in China has been pulled from Canadian airwaves after the Chinese embassy put pressure on the nation's broadcaster.

"I'm pretty sure Stephen Harper is not happy about this," a government official said on condition of anonymity. "Last week, the prime minister stands up to Chinese threats and meets with the Dalai Lama. This week, the CBC kowtows to Chinese threats and brings Chinese-style censorship to Canada--one day after Harper's hand-picked CBC president is announced."

Peter Rowe, who wrote, directed, and produced Beyond the Red Wall: The Persecution of Falun Gong for CBC, said he received a surprise call Tuesday from CBC just hours before the program was to air.

"They said they had some bad news, and they were sorry but the film wasn't going to be shown," said Rowe.

Jeff Keay, CBC's head of media relations English communications, admitted a cultural representative in Ottawa's Chinese embassy had called CBC within the last week to complain about the film. Days later, the film was pulled.

CBC editors and lawyers approved the documentary in March. It aired last week in French Canada and has also been shown in Spain, Portugal, and New Zealand, with Ireland soon to follow.

Rowe questions why the film should be revised for English Canadian viewers.

"When you have a decision at the 11th hour like this you've got to wonder if it's a rational, measured decision about the quality of the film, or if it's a reaction to pressure."

CBC has denied it is giving into pressure from the Chinese regime.

"I wouldn't put it that way," Keay says. But Rowe says CBC editors asked him to change segments of the film that are particularly sensitive to the Chinese authorities.

One such segment deals with reports that the Chinese communist regime has been killing Falun Gong believers for their organs and selling the organs for profit, some to foreigners.

In the film, Rowe interviews former Canadian parliamentarian David Kilgour who together with human rights lawyer David Matas has investigated the organ harvesting claims.

Their report, released last year, confirmed the practice is taking place.

Rowe says CBC also asked for edits to a segment of the film that discredits an alleged "self-immolation" incident. In January of 2001, several people set themselves on fire in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.

The Chinese authorities widely propagated footage of the incident, claiming the immolators to be Falun Gong practitioners and alleging that Falun Gong had led them to burn themselves. The footage has been one of the regime's greatest justifications for its now-seven-year persecution of the group.

An analysis of the self-immolation video in Rowe's film supports that the incident was staged by the Chinese communists.

Cutting such content would amount to censorship, believes Rabbi Reuven Bulka, a doctor and co-president of the Canadian Jewish Congress. Bulka has supported investigation into the persecution of Falun Gong in China.

"Those things are true," said Bulka. "If you take that out you are not going to have an honest picture of what is going on."

Viewers in French Canada who saw the documentary said it offered information on a topic not often covered in mainstream media.

Ginette Collin, a 63-year-old nurse in Edmundston, New Brunswick, saw the documentary in French recently on RDI Reportage.

"It is very well done to the tee and a current topic, especially in the run-up to the Olympics," said Collin. "I had no idea that they were doing this and if it's true it's a real butchery, and I think that the people should boycott the Olympics."

Last week, Rowe had praised the CBC--Canada's broadcaster for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing--for its courage to cover the persecution of Falun Gong despite its interests in China.

This week, he's wondering if his film will ever air on the CBC's national network, let alone CBC Newsworld.

CBC said it still intends to broadcast Beyond the Red Wall, but so far has given no date.

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