CRIME OF THE CENTURY

THE PERSECUTION OF FALUN GONG: 1999 - 2006
  • July 20, 1999: Chinese Communist Party leader Jiang Zemin bans Falun Gong. Practitioners are categorized as "felons" and regarded as raw materials to be handled in any way profitable, without penalty.
  • 70 - 100 million practitioners overnight are labeled as criminals because of their spiritual beliefs.
  • As of September 2006, 2930 practitioners are confirmed dead; the actual death toll is estimated to be 10,000+.
  • 100,000 - 500,000+ have been sent to labor camps, prisons and mental hospitals.
  • Collusion between the Chinese judiciary, police and hsopitals, overseen by the CCP military, sustains a network to harvest Falun Gong practitioners' organs, while they are still alive, fo transplant operations. The huge profits fuel China's "organ tourism".
  • The CCP blacklists and harasses practitioners worldwide.
  • Using technologies largely developed and sustained by North American companies, the CCP maintains an information blockade and disseminates propaganda.

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First, through a concerted, non-violent protest by all citizens of the country at home and international fora. If it is responded by repression and harsher measures, then, through an armed revolution. Such moves are sure to be supported by all democratic and peace loving countries of the world. (modest)

(The question for above answer was asked by Min Myo Naing using another name in June of 2006.)

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An exiled journalist from Burma, I have taken refuge in the United States with my family thanks to CPJ in New York, UNHCR (Cambodia) and the States Department. I was detained for one and a half year in 1969 for burning effigy of the late dictator Ne Win in the Rangoon University campus during SEA Games Strike. I was also actively participated in 8888 nationwide uprising by taking charge in publishing The Guardian Daily as independent newspaper for 22 days before I resigned from the newspaper as Assistant Editor in September,1988. Fortunately, I was escaped from arresting by the military regime. In 1990, I left for Bangkok where I had an assignment to translate the "Outrage: Burma's Struggle for Democracy". The book was originally written by Bertil Lintner, a Swedish journalist. I fled my country in December 2005 after my life was threatened by the military intelligence service for involving in political movements and had given assistance to foreign journalists who came to Burma. I am still active with the movement for restoring democracy in Burma.