Falun Gong Practitioner Shot During Visit from Chinese Officials Known to Be
Responsible for the Murder of Falun Gong Practitioners in China

Chinese officials Zeng Qinghong (left) and Bo Xilai
(right) were visiting South Africa when a Falun Gong
practitioner was shot in an unusual attack that is
drawing international attention. Zeng and Bo are known
to be responsible for murder and torture of Falun Gong
practitioners in China.
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NEW
YORK (FDI) - Who shot Falun Gong practitioner David Liang last week in South
Africa is a question drawing international attention, and one casting light on
the notorious records of two Chinese officials who were visiting South Africa at
the time.
On
June 28, nine Falun Gong practitioners from Australia, including David Liang,
arrived in South Africa to assist locals in raising awareness about the
persecution of Falun Gong, as well as the particular role of two visiting
Chinese officials: Vice President Zeng Qinghong and Minister of Commerce Bo
Xilai.
The
practitioners intended to hold a press conference to expose the crimes of the
two officials to the people and media of South Africa, and to have legal papers
served against them.
While
en route from the Johannesburg airport to Pretoria around 8:30 Monday evening, a
white car with three occupants overtook them and fired at least five shots at
their vehicle. The driver, Australian citizen David Liang, was hospitalized with
bullet wounds and his car was disabled in the incident.
Who
shot David Liang? How did the gunmen, who are still at large, identify their
target? Why did they flee immediately after the shooting, without robbing them
of anything? How did the shooters obtain their AK-47 rifle? Was it a coincidence
that the two Chinese officials, Zeng and Bo, were visiting South Africa that
week - two officials responsible for the torture and murder of large numbers of
Falun Gong practitioners in China?
The
following analysis will shed light on these two officials, China's Vice
President Zeng Qinghong and Minister of Commerce Bo Xilai, and explore how this
shooting may fit into a larger pattern of harassment and violence conducted
outside of China's borders as part of Jiang Zemin's campaign to "eradicate"
Falun Gong throughout the world.
Top
Human Rights Abusers Visit South Africa
Mr.
Zeng Qinghong is considered to be one of the most powerful men in China. Zeng's
nickname among his colleagues in the Communist Party can be translated as "the
black masked assassin." Born in 1939 as the son of the former Director of the
Bureau of Internal Affairs in the Chinese-Soviet government in the early years,
Zeng followed Jiang Zemin to Beijing after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre,
and became his right-hand man and personal consultant.
Zeng
is known for employing electronics to monitor CCP members in their offices and
at their homes. Numerous Chinese sources say he holds "sensitive" information he
collects and uses to curry favors and control CCP members. Zeng has reportedly
hired criminal gangs to attack democracy activists in Taiwan and Hong Kong.
Recently three talk show hosts in Hong Kong well known for their pro-democracy
stance have suddenly quit their posts due to death threats.
From
1999 to 2002, Zeng held, among other offices, the directorship of the
Organization Department of the Chinese Communist Party. In that role, he
personally ordered all Communist Party members to take part in the persecution
of Falun Gong and "prove their loyalty" to Jiang or else be stripped of their
positions. He rewarded prisons, labor camps and individuals who persecuted Falun
Gong most severely.
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"Zeng's nickname among his colleagues in the Communist
Party can be translated as 'the black masked assassin.'
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Zeng
is also one of the founders of the secret "610 Office," an extra-governmental
body charged with eliminating Falun Gong. Under Zeng, the 610 Office (report)
was given unrestricted jurisdiction to operate outside the scope of the Chinese
constitution and to commandeer any local or national law enforcement resources.
On
August 29, 2000, two Falun Gong practitioners in Mainland China filed a lawsuit
against Zeng (along with Jiang Zemin and Luo Gan) for crimes in the persecution
of Falun Gong. Nine days later the two men were arrested and imprisoned.
In
October 2002, citizens and residents from six countries jointly submitted a
legal case against Zeng and two other top Chinese officials to three United
Nations bodies. Chinese authorities then abducted one of the plaintiffs' family
members in China, apparently in retaliation.
Accompanying
Zeng to South Africa was Mr. Bo Xilai, the former mayor of Dalian City in
Northeast China.
In
an apparent attempt to curry favor with the then-Chinese leader, Bo
enthusiastically carried out the orders of Jiang Zemin to persecute Falun Gong
starting in 1999, resulting in at least 15 deaths of practitioners and hundreds
of cases of torture during his tenure in Dalian. Jiang Zemin then personally
promoted Bo to be governor of Liaoning province, which, under Bo, became one of
the deadliest provinces for Falun Gong practitioners in China. (news)
In
2003, Liaoning Province reportedly invested five hundred million Yuan in
Shenyang to construct China's first prison complex built solely to detain Falun
Gong practitioners. The huge complex covers 1.3 square kilometers.
On
March 9th, 2004, "Friends of Falun Gong" and "The World Organization to
Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong" (WOIPFG)
submitted a list of 102 key responsible persons in the persecution of Falun Gong
to the U.S. government, and urged the U.S. government to prohibit these people
from entering the U.S. (news)
Bo Xilai's name is on this list.
On
April 22, 2004, Bo was sued in a lawsuit charging him with genocide and torture
while on a visit to Washington, D.C. (news)
According to the process server, upon realizing he had been served with court
papers, Bo threw the papers to the ground and his entourage immediately
physically attacked the process server.
Bo
Xilai is also among the defendants listed in a criminal lawsuit filed with the
Federal Prosecutor's Office in Germany by forty Falun Gong practitioners.
More
information on Zeng Qinghong (article)
and on Bo Xilai (report).
Pattern
of Violence Extends outside China
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"The
attacks are carried out by individuals who are either
known to have close ties with Chinese consulates or
believed to be hired thugs for consulate officials ... " |
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What
is bringing international attention to last week's shooting in South Africa,
however, is not merely Zeng and Bo's notorious record against Falun Gong in
China, but the fact that the attack fits a disturbing pattern of violence
targeting Falun Gong practitioners outside China.
Soon
after Chinese leader Jiang Zemin initiated the persecution of Falun Gong in
1999, incidents appeared of Chinese officials threatening, harassing and
assaulting Falun Gong practitioners, as well as pressuring foreign officials,
businesses, and free media around the world to adopt Jiang's stance against
Falun Gong. (special
report)
According
to reliable sources inside China, as early as October 2000, Jiang had given the
order to implement a policy to "intensify the campaign [against Falun Gong]
overseas, collect more information and prevent protests."
During
the past several years, scores of cases of harassment or physical attacks
against practitioners and supporters of Falun Gong have been documented (
report) in the United States, Canada, Australia, France and other nations.
The
attacks are carried out by individuals who are either known to have close ties
with Chinese consulates or believed to be hired thugs for consulate officials,
fitting the pattern of crimes targeting Falun Gong practitioners outside of
China.
A
few examples:
- In
2000, Canadian Member of Parliament Rob Anders was physically jostled and
threatened while wearing a shirt with a slogan in support of Falun Gong to a
function held in the Canadian House of Commons and hosted by the Chinese
Embassy.
- In
2002, a Chinese immigrant believed to be involved with local Chinese gangs
was found guilty of battery for beating Falun Gong practitioners outside the
Chinese consulate in Chicago (news).
- In
2003, the head of a Chinese business association in New York City with
direct and public ties to the Chinese consulate was arrested for leading a
group assault against Falun Gong practitioners (news).
Targeted
Shooting in South Africa

At least five bullets penetrated the car driven by David
Liang in last week's shooting. South African police are
investigating the case as an attempted murder.
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Regarding
last week's shooting, there are a couple of noteworthy points that stand out. In
more typical shooting and robbery crimes, the gunmen would have approached the
disabled car, but in this case they drove off immediately without taking
anything. What was their motive, if not robbery?
The
weapon used was described as an AK-47 rifle, not at all common to that region,
and reportedly hard to come by. Where did the gunmen obtain the weapon? The
driver and passengers had just arrived at the airport a few hours prior to the
shooting with no previous ties to anyone in South Africa. How did the gunmen
identify their victims?
Who
would wish to terrorize and disable the vehicle of perfect strangers to South
Africa?
Since
the shooting, Jing Shizhong, a columnist specializing in China's affairs,
commented on this incident, saying, "Zeng Qinghong gets backfired in South
Africa." Jing said that the gunmen who fired the shots in this incident and the
gangs who were involved are very likely to be killed by Zeng in order to ensure
this is a "closed" case.
"If
Zeng or Bo are implicated in this case, currently under investigation by the
Johannesburg police, it will fit the pattern of growing global violence
instigated by Chinese officials and those loyal to Jiang Zemin, and at the same
time, mark a terrifying escalation in this violent initiative," commented Falun
Dafa Information Center spokesman Mr. Erping Zhang.
Mr.
Zhang adds, "We have a word for these kind of actions - hiring local gunman to
carry out a drive-by shooting - in order to silence Falun Gong practitioners: It's
called terrorism."
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NEWS
- July 6, 2004
Falun Dafa Information Center, www.faluninfo.net
Background
Falun
Gong, also known as Falun Dafa (about),
is a practice of meditation and exercises with teachings based on the universal
principle of "Truthfulness-Compassion-Tolerance." Practiced in over 50
countries world-wide, Falun Gong has roots in traditional Chinese culture.
With government estimates of as many as 100
million practicing Falun Gong, China's Communist leader Jiang Zemin outlawed
the peaceful practice in July 1999 (report).
Since that time, Jiang's regime has intensified its propaganda campaign to turn
public opinion against the practice while imprisoning, torturing and even
murdering those who practice it. The Falun Dafa Information Center has verified
details of 992 deaths (reports
/ sources)
since the persecution of Falun Gong in China began in 1999. In October 2001,
however, Government officials inside China reported that the actual death toll
was well over 1,600. Expert sources now estimate that figure to be much higher. Hundreds
of thousands have been detained, with more than 100,000
being sentenced to forced labor camps, typically without trial.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT THE FALUN DAFA
INFORMATION CENTER
Contacts: Gail Rachlin (+1 917-757-9780), Levi Browde (+1 914-720-0963), Erping
Zhang (+1 646-533-6147), or Christina Chai (+1 917-386-5068).
Fax: 646-792-3916 Email:
,
Website: http://www.faluninfo.net/