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Speech by Canadian Member of Parliament Mr. Irwin Cotler at a Press Conference in Support of Falun Gong, Marking Prime Minister Jean Chrétien's Departure for the APEC Summit in Shanghai, China
18 October 2001 in Ottawa, Canada I would like to make a number of points here to summarize the condition of human rights and, in particular, the Falun Gong.
Number two: in particular, the assault on the human rights of the Falun Gong has taken on the character of a total onslaught against fundamental rights -- the criminalization of innocence -- an escalation in the persecution and prosecution of innocence. Number three: that their fundamental rights have been violated. The case here of Shenli Lin is a case study of this violation of the fundamental rights of the Falun Gong. The violations include a denial of their freedoms: freedom of conscience and religion, freedom of association and assembly, freedoms of expression and information. And secondly, a denial of their right to equality before the law, as it singles out the Falun Gong for differential and discriminatory treatment in China. The denial of their fundamental rights of life, liberty, and security of person, as in the beating, the torture, and indeed the deaths in detention, and otherwise, which amount to state-orchestrated extrajudicial executions. The denial of their legal rights, including protection against arbitrary arrest and detention, protection against coercive interrogation, and protection against cruel and unusual punishment, of which Shenli Lin is again a case study. And finally, this total onslaught in singling out the Falun Gong not for what they do but for who they are. What we have here is the criminalization of a group that is nothing more than a spiritual, exercise, meditation group and [a government that] seeks to convert this group, which espouses values of truth, compassion, forbearance, and portray them as moral lepers in Chinese society. In effect what we have here is a state-orchestrated attempt to put them beyond the pale, to deny them the right to protection against group vilification and hate. And I just want to say something because we sometimes forget it -- that it is this promotion of hatred and contempt against a vulnerable group, which in cases like Bosnia and Rwanda ended up taking us down the road to ethnic cleansing and, God forbid, genocide. So one has to sound the alarm when you've got this state-orchestrated prosecution and persecution. I want to close by saying that I've asked the Prime Minister on the eve of his trip:
Thank you.
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