The Weekly Standard: An
American Prisoner in China
By: Katherine Mangu-Ward
September 18, 2003, Thursday
DR. CHARLES
LEE, an American citizen, was arrested immediately after arriving at Guangzhou airport in January
2003. He left his home in Menlo Park, California, to join the effort in
drawing attention to the persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners by the Chinese government. He has been imprisoned in China ever since.
Yesterday, a crowd wearing
yellow shirts bearing the legend "Truthfulness, Compassion,
Tolerance" gathered outside the State Department, performing
the exercises central to the practice of Falun Gong. They were there to deliver
a thick packet of letters and signatures asking
the State Department to bring Lee back to the United States.
The event also
featured speeches, most of which focused on the dangers of Lee's current
situation. Lee was tried in March, in the presence of at least one U.S. consular official. The
trial, which lasted one day, was a
"show trial" at which Lee "had no chance to defend himself"
according to materials distributed by the organizers. Lee
was sentenced to three years in prison.
Under Chinese
law, Lee should be held in a separate cell for foreigners
since he's American. But the company of Chinese inmates is an essential part
of Lee's punishment. Yeongching Foo,
Lee's fiancee, says that he is being kept under
surveillance at all times by 9 of his 12 cellmates, who keep him from
doing Falun Gong exercises.
Lee's cellmates also assist in forcing
him to attend mandatory "reeducation" sessions.
These sessions, which Foo calls "mental
torture," focus on getting the prisoner to renounce Falun Gong.
Gang Chen, a
speaker at the rally, described these sessions--which he referred to as
"brainwashing"--by analogy: "It's like forcing a Christian to
renounce God and Jesus Christ by distorting what's in the Holy
Scriptures." Falun Gong practitioners deny that their movement is either
religious or political.
The point of the
prison's policy, says Foo, "is to occupy all of
his time, to keep him from thinking." Moreover, she says, even if the U.S. government demands and
receives assurances that Lee will be treated humanely, "it is
very dangerous being in a jail cell, knowing that the Chinese government is
committing genocide" against Falun Gong practitioners.
IT IS ON THESE
GROUNDS--the charge of genocide--that Falun Gong members around the world are
suing China's former president
Jiang Zemin, who started the campaign against Falun
Gong in July 1999. Human rights organizations have confirmed the deaths of more
than 782 people for their practice of Falun Gong and opposition to Chinese
authorities. Thousands more are in labor camps, where mental and physical torture are common and well-documented.
After speaking to the crowd
about the 18 months he served in the Tuanhe Labor
Camp, Chen, who arrived in the United States just 7 weeks ago,
offered his thoughts on Zemin: "He has done so
many crimes, he must be punished, and he is afraid."
Heads of state are not immune from
prosecution for genocide under international law and Chen
believes that Zemin is exerting pressure to keep Lee
in prison. Zemin is hoping, Chen says, to use Lee as
a "bargaining chip" with the United States. The first lawsuit
against Zemin originated in Chicago.
On September 10, Richard
Boucher, spokesman for the State Department, said the
department maintains "continuing interest in Mr. Lee's
welfare and his well-being while he remains in custody serving his sentence." When asked if
the most recent meeting between U.S. embassy officials in Beijing and officials from the
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs on September 8 addressed the
"genocide lawsuit filed by the Falun Gong practitioners around the
world," Boucher said he was not aware of any discussion of the lawsuit at
that meeting.
THOUGH FALUN
GONG is often associated with democratic
activism, the people at the rally said they did not consider their movement
political. "We are not asking for democracy, never have, and never
will," said Foo. Democracy activists and Falun
Gong practitioners are treated as equally subversive
by the Chinese government, said Chen, which is why the two are often associated. "When they
learned in 1999 that Falun Gong had more members than the [Chinese Communist
Party]," said Chen, "they decided Falun Gong was a threat, just like
democracy."
Wednesday's
rally was the culmination of a tour of more than 100 cities where signatures
and letters of support on Lee's behalf were gathered.
Chen says
American efforts can make a big difference: "While I was in the labor
camp, I knew that the guards heard about the overseas rescue efforts on my
behalf. Because they knew they were being watched, what they did to me was not
as bad as what they did to some others."