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Why Persecute Falun Gong?
by Shiyu Zhou, Ph.D.
On April 25, 1999, more than
ten thousand Falun Gong practitioners held a peaceful
gathering on Fuyou Street in Beijing to appeal to the
Chinese State Council Appeal Office for the release
of 45 practitioners arbitrarily detained by the police
in Tianjin during the previous two days.
This incident at once received
international attention, for Fuyou Street is right next
to the Communist Party leadership compound Zhongnanhai,
and was portrayed by many as the besieging
of the Chinese leadership compound. The incident was
later utilized by the Chinese Government as a major
charge against Falun Gong to justify the persecution
and was also mistakenly considered by many to be the
direct cause of the crackdown.
Why the April 25th incident?
And why the crackdown? This article explores some possible
answers to these important questions. It includes some
crucial comments made by Chinese President Jiang Zemin
in two classified documents (based on information recently
revealed by high level officials in the Chinese Communist
Party) that Jiang issued as he decided to crackdown
on Falun Gong, and is provided as reference for those
who are interested in getting to the bottom of the most
frequently asked question about Falun Gong: Why
is the Chinese government doing this?
Misconceptions about the April 25th Incident
The Falun Gong incident of April
25, 1999 was not a sudden, accidental event that caught
the Chinese government by surprise as is commonly believed.
Nor was it the kind of political demonstration involving
the besieging of the Chinese leadership compound as
claimed by the Chinese Government. From the written
attacks that begun during the Guangming Daily incident
in June 1996 to the mobilization of police and use of
violence in Tianjin in April 1999, the development and
escalation of the Falun Gong persecution actually happened
over a period of three or four years.
The Introduction of Falun Gong to the public
Falun Gong is a traditional Chinese
cultivation practice system. It was first introduced
to the public by its founder, Mr. Li Hongzhi, on May
13, 1992. For the first four years, the Chinese Government
enthusiastically endorsed the practice due to the health
benefits it had brought to practitioners, which helped
reduce the troubled governments health care burden.
Many governmental organizations, including the Qigong
Scientific Research Association of China and the Public
Security Ministry of China, had given awards and recognition
to Falun Gong and Mr. Li.
Though Falun Gong has no formal
organization, through word of mouth the number of people
practicing quickly reached millions in a short few years.
By early 1999, based on a Chinese government survey,
there were at least 70 million people from all walks
of life practicing Falun Gong all over China. Falun
Gong has become the largest voluntary organization
in China, larger even than the Communist party,
according to the U.S. News and World Report February
1999 issue.
The escalation of the Falun Gong persecution
Since the ending of the Great
Cultural Revolution in the late 1970s, Chinas
focus has been shifted from political campaigning to
economic and technological development. This change
in the political climate has reduced the opportunities
for political advancement for those who specialize in
political propaganda and ideological battles. To remain
necessary components of the government, these people
typically rely on political unrest to provide them with
a cause used to gain political power. The
rapid development of Falun Gong was noticed by some
departments in the central government. Falun Gong, they
decided, was just what was needed.
These individuals began by spreading
negative publicity through government-run media to defame
Falun Gong and its founder since June 1996. On July
24, 1996, the Chinese News Publication Office issued
a nationwide circular banning the distribution of all
Falun Gong publications. In early 1997, the Public Security
Ministry of China began a nationwide investigation to
gather evidence in the hopes of casting Falun Gong as
an evil cult. The investigations came to
a quick end for no evidence was found. In
July 1998, another investigation was ordered by the
Public Security Ministry, which resulted in the illegal
harassment of Falun Gong practitioners by the local
Public Security Bureau in a number of areas around the
country. On April 23, 1999, police were ordered to beat
and arrest people who expressed their concerns to a
magazine in Tianjin, which had published a slanderous
article against Falun Gong.
On April 24, 1999, when Falun
Gong practitioners in Tianjin requested the release
of the arbitrarily detained practitioners, they were
told by the Tianjin government officials that the Public
Security Ministry of China had been involved in this
matter, so the arrested Falun Gong practitioners would
not be released without authorization from Beijing.
In short, Falun Gong practitioners were told they must
take their appeal to the State Council Appeal Office
in Beijing.
This triggered the April 25th
incident during which Falun Gong practitioners appealed
to the Chinese State Council Appeal Office for the release
of the detained practitioners in Tianjin. After Premier
Zhu Rongji, the official head of the State Council and
second in command of the country under President Jiang,
personally came out to meet with practitioners. The
situation was handled in a friendly manner and a resolution
was reached that was acceptable to both the government
and the practitioners. The entire event was peaceful
and characterized by orderliness and all the practitioners
who had gathered outside the State Council Appeal Office
quietly dispersed, content with Premier Zhus handling
of the issue.
Then, why the crackdown?
On the very night of April 25,
1999, however, Chinese President Jiang Zemin took a
completely different stand on the incident from Zhu
Rongji, who was heartily cheered by thousands of Falun
Gong practitioners as he met with them in the morning.
In a letter written on the evening of April 25th, 1999,
entitled Comrade Jiang Zemins Letter to
the Standing Committee of the Politburo and Other Concerned
Leader Comrades, Jiang denounced Falun Gong as
an (approved to be) cult, asking is
there a mastermind [inside the Party] plotting
and directing behind the scenes?Thus, President
Jiang makes clear his suspicion that the incident indicated
foes within the Party were aligning against him.
Clearly, Jiang Zemin could not
tolerate such a social group [Falun Gong] involving
a large number of Party members, cadres, intellectuals,
as well as army men, workers and peasants, who
were not under the direct control of the Party as he
indicated in his April 25th letter. . In particular,
he felt threatened by the potential that such a large
group could be directed by a mastermind
among his political rivals within the Party.
Jiang further revealed his perception
of Falun Gong in a June 7th letter entitled Comrade
Jiang Zemins Speech at a Meeting of the Politburo
of the Central Committee Regarding Handling and Resolving
the Falun Gong Issue Without Delay,
where he fully developed the crackdown policy.
Obviously, Jiang
wrote in the letter, an individual like Li Hongzhi
does not have that much power. The Falun Gong
issue has a very deep political background
He then drew the conclusion that the April 25 incident
is the most serious incident since the political
turbulence in 1989 and effective countermeasures
must be taken.
What happened in the political
turbulence in 1989? As many still remember, the
then Chinese Communist Party leader Zhao Ziyang was
replaced by Jiang soon after his meeting with the students
on hunger strike in Tiananmen Square. Under similar
pressure from Jiang, it was said that Zhu Rongji had
to do a self-criticism in front of the politburo members
shortly after his meeting with Falun Gong practitioners
outside the State Council Appeal Office.
Jiangs letters clearly
demonstrate his view of Falun Gong as a tool being utilized
by political foes within the Party, and how, without
any concrete evidence, he made the erroneous policy
decision to persecute Falun Gong strictly on this basis.
It is no secret that several
Politburo members thought Jiang had used the wrong tactics,
said Willy Lam in his CNN report. By unleashing
a Mao-style movement, Jiang is forcing senior cadres
to pledge allegiance to his line, quoted a party
veteran in Lams report. This will boost
Jiangs authority-and may give him enough momentum
to enable him to dictate events at the pivotal 16th
Communist Party congress next year.
Since the crackdown was
launched by Jiang Zemin in July, 1999, tens of thousands
of innocent Chinese citizens have been detained for
practicing Falun Gong. Thousands have been tortured,
sent to labor re-education camps without
trial, illegally encarcerated in mental institutions,
and millions have been left homeless, jobless or expelled
from school. In short, Jiangs crackdown has devastated
a large segment of Chinese society, which includes farmers,
academics, business people, government officials, military
personnel, etc. The true tragedy of this crackdown,
however, lies not only in its affects on the Chinese
people, but the fact that the persecution against Falun
Gong, in fact, has little to do with the content of
Falun Gong nor the character of those who practice it.
Falun Gong has simply been used as a pawn in the hands
of those seeking to secure and vie for power. In this
sense, Falun Gong is a victim of circumstance within
the complex landscape of Chinese political power.
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