Tuesday, August 28, 2007

BIG Torch Relay Poster


Banners: No Human Rights, No Olympics





Poster: Support the relay

Newsletter # 2

The Global Human Rights Torch Relay, a year long event initiated by the CIPFG, is currently relaying in Europe. It has gained much support wherever it goes. We are most grateful for the great number of international organizations that have contacted us and inquired about global participation. As well, we warmly welcome volunteers from the international community that have expressed an interest in making contributions to the torch relay activities. In order to make participation easy, we would like to take this opportunity to make the following announcements:

1. Countries and regions receiving the torch:

As of August 28, 2007,so far there are 37 countries and regions that have registered to participate in the Human Rights Torch Relay. They are:

Greece, Germany, Czech, Austria, Romania, Switzerland, France, Slovakia, Lithuania, Italy, Latvia, Estonia, Belgium, Holland, Bulgaria, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Ireland, the United Kingdom, Israel, Australia, New Zealand, Ghana, Ethiopia, the United States, Canada, Argentina, Malaysia, Taiwan, Japan, Korea, Indonesia, Macau, Hong Kong and China.

As the countries that would like to participate continue to grow, the torch relay route might be readjusted accordingly. Please go here from time to time for updated information.


2. Suggested slogans used at Human Rights Torch Relay events: (can be made
into banners and T-shirts)

a. Olympics & Crimes Against Humanity Cannot Co-exist in China

b. Stop Killing Falun Gong Practitioners for Their Organs

c. Free Falun Gong Practitioners and Supporters

d. No Human Rights, No Olympics

e. Support an Olympic Organized by the Chinese People without the
Communists

August 28, 2007

Monday, August 27, 2007

Kilgour, Darfur, Organs and Torch Relay

GOVERNMENT OF CHINA ROLE IN SUDAN/DARFUR, ORGAN SEIZURES, OLYMPIC GAMES AND GLOBAL HUMAN RIGHTS TORCH RELAY

Address by Hon. David Kilgour, J.D.

Institut des Affaires Publiques de Montreal/Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal

Hotel Delta, 777 University Avenue

Montreal

15 August 2007

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The China Fantasy book by an American, James Mann, is helpful here because it challenges a number of three decades-old assumptions of U.S. politicians of both parties, Fortune 500 executives, sinologists and diplomats. He argues that it is time to stop overlooking the government of China’s human rights abuses, the crushing of political dissent at home and support for pariah regimes abroad.

On the activities of the government of China abroad generally, Mann notes that it undermines democratic values and human dignity wherever it can get a foot in any door. For example, it gave Robert Mugabe a honourary degree and economic help to his regime, which is one of the most brutal on earth. It also supplied him with helicopter gun ships. It is the principal backer of the military junta in Burma/Myanmar, where Aung San Suu Kyi continues under house arrest 16 years after she and her supporters won an open election. When Uzbekistan president Islam Karimov ordered a murderous crackdown on demonstrators in 2005, China’s government supported him.

Mann reminds readers that a continuing totalitarian China also bolsters Russia’s currently diminished commitment to democracy. For example, during the 1991 coup attempt by the Soviet military and intelligence officials against Mikhail Gorbachev, China’s government media gave positive and extensive coverage to the plotters, barely mentioning Boris Yeltsin or his democratic allies, and was left disappointed when the coup attempt failed.

In short, principled people everywhere should be working much smarter and harder to encourage the development of a China that is democratic. Dunn correctly notes that every American president since Nixon has either given up on or ignored the issue of democracy in China. The same is certainly true of other leaders of democratic countries, including our own, although Prime Minister Harper said recently that our relationship with China will from now on be determined by both human values and commercial interests.

Government of China role in Sudan/Darfur

In Sudan, where many independent observers have concluded that the Bashir regime has been committing crimes against humanity and genocide in its province of Darfur since mid-2003, not to mention similar methods used in South Sudan for many years earlier, the Beijing remain his major diplomatic backer. There is little doubt that the government of China’s recent sudden interest in stopping the killing, burning and raping, which continues against communities deemed ‘African’ in Darfur, is related to offsetting for public relations purposes the “Genocide Olympics” charge about which Darfur supporters like Mia Farrow continue to raise public awareness.

Consider:

  • Over the past decade, the government of China has provided the Bashir government with more than $US ten billion in commercial and capital investment, mostly for oil investments, with crude oil comprising virtually all of Sudan’s exports and much of it going to China. Approximately seven percent of China’s oil imports currently now come from Sudan.

  • According to one source within Sudan, up to seventy percent of the Sudanese government’s revenues from oil are spent on arms, a good deal of them coming from China. Nick Kristof of the New York Times has reported that the government of China has built four small arms factories in Sudan.

  • In February of this year, President Hu of China, visiting Khartoum, offered to forgive $80 million of his host government’s debt and promised another $13 million for infrastructure, including a new presidential palace.

  • The most valuable service Hu has provided to Bashir’s government is using China’s permanent veto at the UN Security Council to protect the Sudanese regime from any robust peacemaking initiatives while the slaughter in Darfur continues. Only following Mia Farrow’s op-ed piece in March, 2007, which accused the government of China of assisting in genocide, did China’s UN representative join in the Security Council initiative to send 26,000 civilian police and soldiers to Darfur.

  • The problems already evident with this latest in a long series of ineffective Security Council initiatives on Darfur include:

Ø Will a good faith peace process begin for Darfur and continue in South Sudan (where there are indications that the peace agreement is breaking down in part because the Bashir government refuses to withdraw its army from the South as required by the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA))?

Ø Will Chinese, Russian and other arms exports to Khartoum continue?

Ø Will Beijing pressure Bashir to honour his previous ceasefire agreements and get him to disarm the janjaweed militias, which have caused so much human suffering, murder and destruction?

Ø Will Hu help UN Secretary General Ban to persuade Khartoum to stop bombing civilian targets in Darfur?

Ø Will the Sudanese government permit humanitarian agencies much needed unfettered access to all regions of Darfur?

Resolution 1769

  • The specifics of UN SC resolution 1769 passed at the end of July in fact demonstrate how well Beijing continues to protect Khartoum:

Ø The hybrid UN/African Union force will have no authority to seize weapons from belligerents, thus probably making it impossible to control the janjaweed and other militias,

Ø There is no provision for sanctioning the government in Khartoum in the highly-probable event that it refuses to comply,

Ø The watered down command-and-control provisions will inevitably create problems between the African Union commander on the ground in Darfur and the UN Department of Peacekeeping in New York,

Ø Nothing is specified about containing the violence that has spread into Chad, where China is looking for oil, and the Central African Republic,

Ø Not a word is said about halting aerial assaults by Khartoum’s helicopter gunships and Antonov bombers,

Ø Tragically, the deployment of the peacekeepers is still to be very slow, with December 31, 2007 being the deadline for the transfer of authority from the AU to the AU/UN hybrid, although this itself is merely symbolic and unlikely in practice to save civilian lives in the meantime or quite probably for a considerable period thereafter, and

Ø The inability of the AU to solicit enough trained troops and civilian police for the hybrid force remains unaddressed. The AU Commission chair Alpha Konare this week indicated that he wants only Africans to be deployed and that they must be under African command.

Ø

Shaming Genocidaires

In my view, shaming the government of China over its partnership role in Sudan offers the best hope to save civilian lives in Darfur. How to proceed? Let me adapt here some earlier language of Prof. Eric Reeves to Canada:


The key task is to transfer knowledge to those presently unaware of China’s role in Sudan generally and Darfur specifically.

What happens, for example, if students and others demonstrate in front of the Chinese embassy in Ottawa or the consulate in Montreal, declaring with banners, placards, and T-shirts that China must be held accountable for its complicity in the Darfur genocide? What happens if such demonstrations are continuous, and grow, and take place outside China’s embassies in other countries? What happens if everywhere Chinese diplomats, politicians and business people travel they are confronted by those who insist on making it an occasion for highlighting China’s destructive role in Darfur?

To succeed, the campaign must be creative and focused. It must take advantage of every means offered through electronic communications. The government of China must be forced to see that there is a stark choice before it: either it uses its leverage effectively with Khartoum to improve and speed up the UN/AU deployment discussed above or it will be the target of the most powerful international shaming campaign in history.

The general lack of effective advocacy initiatives has not been lost on Khartoum’s génocidaires. Despite the enormous and consequential successes of the American-led divestment campaign, pressure must be ratcheted up even higher. Other European companies should follow the lead of Germany’s Siemens and Switzerland’s ABB Ltd; both have suspended operations in Sudan. Such ongoing loss of European commercial and capital investment certainly has the full attention of the Bashir regime.

The task is daunting but fully achieveable, given the moral passion and creative energies of the Darfur advocacy communities. All success to the campaigns!

Beijing Olympic Games

Turning to the Beijing Olympic Games now, I’ve been asked to add a word about what was happening in Athens recently, where some of us were calling for a shunning of the 2008 Beijing Olympics at the launch of the Global Human Rights Torch Relay. The relay will travel to about 100 cities during the next twelve months on five continents, urging the government of China to stop the systematic human rights abuses to Falun Gong practitioners, human rights lawyers (e.g. Gao Zhisheng) and to provide religious freedom for all citizens as stated in the Constitution of China.. You’re all welcome to join/support the ‘Run for Human Dignity!”

Any national government whose medical professionals are executing without any species of prior judicial proceeding members of an officially disapproved spiritual community, as has been occurring for more than half a decade across China to numerous Falun Gong practitioners, is self-evidently unsuited to host the Olympic Games in its capital city.

If agents of the same government are selling the vital organs-livers, kidneys etc-of such prisoners of conscience for high prices and often to organ tourists, the case for a games boycott or shunning by governments, spectators, prospective event sponsors and athletes becomes even more compelling under the Olympic Charter and a host of United Nations instruments dealing with dignity for all people.

I hasten to stress here that the Falun Gong community present in approximately seventy countries is not calling for a boycott or shunning of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The boycott effort is coming from others of us who are deeply worried about the worsening state of human rights in China generally.



Numerous kinds of Proof

The government of China has continuously denied that it is engaged in organ seizure activities, which David Matas has termed "a new form of evil on this planet". It has, however, not responded to the 33 kinds of evidence Matas and I have gathered in various parts of the world in our revised report available in 17 languages at organharvestinvestigation.net. It was not any of the 33 in isolation but the combination of them that led us to the chilling conclusion we reached.

Among the sources of proof and disproof we examined:

The waiting times for organ transplants in China are astonishingly short, days and weeks, contrasted with months and years in the rest of the world. Hospital websites in China boast short waits for all organs for those who can pay large sums.

Corruption is a major and continuing problem in China, large profits being made from transplants and the general lack of control. The prices charged foreigners vary from US$ 30,000 for corneas to 180,000 for liver/kidney combinations.

President Jiang Zemin, then leader of the government in China, decided in the summer of 1999 that the then estimated 70-100 million Falun Gong practitioners in the country posed a threat to his government. He declared a brutal war, which involved imprisonment, systematic torture and forced labour for thousands of practitioners. The government of China media demonization and dehumanization of Falun Gong practitioners across the country since mid-1999 appears to have exceeded what was directed at persons convicted of capital offences.

The government of China gave its military-the PLA-the authority to raise money privately. It is now heavily involved in organ transplants but operates outside the rules of the civilian health system. Transplants are performed in military hospitals and in civilian ones by military personnel.

Falun Gong practitioners have been arrested in huge numbers since mid-1999 and held without trial until they renounce their beliefs. Our report names more than three thousand Falun Gong practitioners who died as a result of torture; if a government is willing to murder large numbers of them through torture, it's easy to accept that it will do the same crime against humanity through organ seizures.

“Organ Donors”

The usual sources of organs for transplants in China-executed convicted prisoners, donors and brain dead persons-come nowhere near in numbers to explaining the rapidly rising number of transplants across the country since the persecution began and are the only other explanation for where the 'donors' come from.

In researching our report, Matas and I had persons calling hospitals and detention centres throughout China posing as family members of persons who needed organ transplants. In a wide variety of locations, those who were called asserted that Falun Gong practitioners (reputedly healthy because of their exercise regime) were the source of the organs. We have recordings and telephone bills for these calls.

We also interviewed the ex-wife of a surgeon from Sujiatun, who had said her husband personally removed the corneas from approximately 2000 anaesthetized Falun Gong prisoners Sujiatun hospital in Shenyang city in northeast China during the two year period before October, 2003. Her testimony was credible to us.

There have been two investigations independent from our own which have addressed the same questions we have addressed whether there is organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners in China one by Dr. Kirk Allison of the University of Minnesota, another by a European Parliament Vice- President, Edward McMillan-Scott. Both have come to the same conclusion we did. These independent investigations corroborate our conclusions.


The hardship a Games boycott would create for the affected athletes is enormous. The consequences for humanity, however, of having Olympic Games go ahead in the capital of a country where innocent Chinese citizens continue to be murdered for their vital organs are even greater. If the killing seizes across China, this particular call (my own) for a shunning or boycott will also cease.

Global Human Rights Torch Relay

The first flame was lit at the ceremony in Athens, Greece on August 9th. As mentioned, the “Run for Human Dignity” will pass through more than 35 countries and 100 cities, received by rallies and concerts along the way. The torch relay will be a beacon of hope bringing improvement in human rights and awareness that the Olympic Games and crimes against humanity cannot co-exist.

The relay was initiated by the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (CIPFG). Key ambassadors and supporters for the HRTR are

  • Baroness Caroline Cox of the House of Lords in the United Kingdom
  • Senator Andrew Bartlett of the Australian Democrats
  • US Congressmen Hon. Dana Rohrabacher and Hon. Thaddeus McCotter
  • Taiwanese Legislator Lai Ching-Te
  • Rabbi Dr.Reuven Bulka of Ottawa,
  • Award-winning actor Michael Riley
  • Gemini award winner Michael Mahonen
  • President of Agir pour les droits de l'Homme Marie-Françoise Lamperti, Paris
  • Olympic Silver Medalist Xiaomin Huang
  • Winter Olympic Medalist Martins Rubenis

The Global Human Rights Torch Relay is, I understand, supported by the Australian Darfur Network, Canadian Students for Darfur, Network for Human Right in China (Denmark), International Society for Human Rights (Germany), Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting, Federation of Vietnamese Communities in Australia.

We welcome all individuals and organizations that are concerned about human rights abuses in China or related to the Chinese regime to join the Global Human Rights Torch Relay. All relay activities will be jointly organized by local human rights groups and individuals, and CIPFG delegations. For additional information or to register for the torch relay, please send an email to torch@cipfg.net.

Thank you.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Newsletter #1

The objectives of the Global Human Rights Torch Relay are to reveal the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) tyranny and stop human rights violations, with the theme that "Olympics and Crimes Against Humanity Cannot Co-exist in China." The human rights torch is a symbol of peace, justice and freedom. It has broken through many obstacles put in place by the CCP, and the first flame was lit on August 9, 2007 in Athens, Greece, the birthplace of the Olympics.

This event has been widely reported by the international media. Many people have approached us to inquire about the details and ways of participating. We would like to address this by providing the following information:

  1. The Global Human Rights Torch Relay is a series of activities initiated by the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (CIPFG) (www.cipfg.org). The coalition consists of over 350 government officials, lawyers, doctors, clergymen, and human rights activists from around the world. Through the torch relay activities, the CCP’s cruel eight-year persecution against the peaceful Falun Gong community will be exposed, with a focus on the illegal harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners’ organs that is currently being carried out in China.
    CIPFG is urging the CCP to end the persecution immediately and not to turn the 2008 Olympics into the Bloody Harvest Olympics. Olympics and crimes-against-humanity cannot co-exist in China.
  2. After the first flame was lit in Athens, many international human rights organizations and individuals expressed their support. We welcome all those who have shown an interest and who have committed to participating for the entire route or part of it. Supporters will expose and condemn the CCP’ human rights violations in suppressing the Chinese people, especially those who are most vulnerable.
  3. Many Mainland Chinese are also participating in the torch relay in their unique way, eager to pass on their wish of "Human rights wanted, not Olympic Games" to all corners in the world. So far, eight provinces have confirmed their participation. (For security reasons, the names of these provinces will not be announced.) Concrete plans are underway and will be announced in due course.
  4. Relaying the human rights torch is a grand event that has never been done before in history. The extensive press coverage and community participation so far have been extraordinary and encouraging. As of August 12th, 35 countries and 128 cities across five continents have already made their commitment to receive the torch. The event will last for an entire year, or until the time when the persecution ends or the CCP collapses. The human rights torch will be relayed through the following countries in this order: Europe, Oceania, Africa, North America and Asia.
  5. Method of relay: The Human Rights Torch Relay events will take place at a site that best describes the characteristics of the host city. At the ceremony, all those who participate will symbolically jog for a distance and pass on the torch. Between countries and cities, the torch will travel by plane, car, and any other suitable means. With the torch relay ceremony in Athens just completed, it is now on its way to its next stop. It will arrive in Germany on August 18. The first city in Germany that receives the torch will be Berlin.
  6. In order to maximize participation, we are in the process of designing an online human rights torch relay website (http://www.humanrightstorch.org/) which is expected to be in full function within days. The new website will provide all the necessary details about the relay and welcome participants.

CIPFG

August 12, 2007

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Human rights group lights torch for Beijing games boycott

A woman, playing the role of a priestess, raises a torch during the lighting ceremony of a global human rights torch relay in Athens, August 9, 2007. Hundreds of human rights activists and spectators gathered in central Athens to launch the relay urging the boycott of next year's Beijing Olympics over what they said was China's dismal human rights record. REUTERS/Yiorgos Karahalis
A woman, playing the role of a priestess, raises a torch during the lighting ceremony of a global human rights torch relay in Athens, August 9, 2007. Hundreds of human rights activists and spectators gathered in central Athens to launch the relay urging the boycott of next year's Beijing Olympics over what they said was China's dismal human rights record. REUTERS/Yiorgos Karahalis

Karolos Grohmann, Reuters - Published: Thursday, August 09, 2007

ATHENS (Reuters) - Hundreds of human rights activists from across the world gathered in central Athens on Thursday to launch a global torch relay urging the boycott of the 2008 Beijing Olympics over China's human rights record.

Beijing has been under fire for what groups say are extensive human rights violations, including against the spiritual group Falun Gong, ahead of next year's Games.

China classified Falun Gong as a cult and banned it in 1999. Since then the group has campaigned from abroad against what it says is brutal persecution of its followers in China.

Organizers of the event in the central Syntagma square, the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (CIPFG), said Beijing was involved in systematic "organ harvesting" from jailed Falun Gong members and other dissidents.

"We want to put enough pressure on China to stop killing its people and selling livers and kidneys to people around the world," former Canadian junior foreign minister David Kilgour told Reuters.

Kilgour, co-author of a report on Chinese "organ harvesting," said the International Olympic Committee was turning a blind eye to violations of its own charter.

IOC President Jacques Rogge on Monday fended off criticism saying the Games were a force for good but were no panacea.

"That's garbage," said Kilgour. "Jacques Rogge should know what the Olympic charter states. It talks about human dignity."

The global human rights torch relay will stop over in 25 countries and more than 100 cities in Europe, Asia, North America and Australia, organizers said.

Among the speakers were former Olympic athletes, including the 2006 Olympics luge bronze medalist Martins Rubenis from Latvia.

"The Chinese Communist Party has not fulfilled the promise to adjust the situation of human rights," Rubenis said.

Beijing marked the one-year countdown to the Games on Wednesday with spectacular celebrations in Tiananmen Square.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Global Human Rights Torch Relay About To Kick Off


Global Human Rights Torch Relay Kicks Off in Athens 9 August 2007

Scoop NZ: In Athens, Greece, at 8:30pm on 9 August 2007 the Global Human Rights Torch Relay, initiated by the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (CIPFG) and supporters, will light its first flame in a solemn ceremony at Syntagma Square to urge the international community to press for the release Falun Gong practitioners in China or there will be a call to boycott the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.

Over 25 countries and more than 100 cities will be taking part in this torch relay that is going to span 5 continents. Starting from Europe and ending in Asia in 2008, wherever the Torch travels, CIPFG members and supporters will raise public awareness of the organ harvesting crimes and call to end the genocide of Falun Gong in China.

New Zealanders and Australians are among the initiators of the Human Rights Torch Relay. Senator Andrew Bartlett, Australian Democrats, Dr Sev Ozdowski OAM, Human Rights Commissioner (2000-05), Pan Qing, Democracy advocate, and Olympian Jan Becker, Australian Swimming team, Tokyo 1964 will greet the ceremony in Athens via recorded message or in person. Ms Jan Becker will be at the ceremony in Athens, Greece.

Background:

The Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China (CIPFG) is a global organisation established in 2006, prompted by the reports of forced organ harvesting from living Falun Gong practitioners in an organised manner, with apparent state involvement, for profit.

Falun Gong is a peaceful spiritual discipline attacked by the Chinese regime due to its popularity and its belief in traditional values.

CIPFG now has four chapters - Oceania, Asia, Europe and North America - and more than 300 members. Last year, CIPFG wrote to the Chinese Consulates, Embassy and the State Council of China, demanding the release of Falun Gong prisoners of consciences and requesting admittance into China to investigate the persecution.

Due to a lack of any response, CIPFG published a statement on 30 May 2007 that "Crimes Against Humanity and the Olympics cannot Co-exist in China". On 8 June 2007, an open letter was sent to Chinese leaders Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao, again calling for the release of all incarcerated Falun Gong practitioners and to allow an independent investigation by CIPFG. Two months have passed and there has still been no response.

CIPFG has initiated the Human Rights Torch Relay along with Hon David Kilgour, Canadian Students for Darfur, Network for Human Rights in China (Denmark), Doctors Against Organ Harvesting (USA), and many more groups. The purpose of the torch relay is to FREE Falun Gong practitioners in CHINA and to End the Persecution or there will be a call to BOYCOTT the Olympic Games in Beijing.

END

'Human Rights Torch Relay' Logo and Theme Song Unveiled

Global Human Rights Torch Relay symbol. (CIPFG)
Global Human Rights Torch Relay symbol (CIPFG)

Epoch Times: August 6, 2007 - The Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (CIPFG)—consisting of more than 300 public officials, lawyers, doctors, religious leaders, and human rights advocates—unveiled the logo and theme song for its "Human Rights Torch Relay." The Coalition plans to ignite a human rights torch in Athens, Greece, on August 9, 2007.

Since CIPFG published an ad for a logo design and a theme song several weeks ago, it has received hundreds of responses, including some from mainland China.

The logo's main component is a torch with a dove in front of it, representing freedom and a bright future. The background is a map of China outlined in barbed wire. The logo illustrates that China is a prison, and the torch of human rights will bring freedom and a bright future to the Chinese people.

The theme song is also refreshing and powerful. The composer is from Europe. The theme song is currently being recorded in multiple languages including English, German, French, Italian, and Japanese.

The lyrics are as follows:

Human Rights Torch

The sacred flame of the Olympics is lit from Mt Olympia
The Olympic flag, a wreath of olive branches
Cooperation, teamwork, brotherhood and friendship
Honor, glory and dedication
Peace and justice
Freedom and Human rights
The heavens and earth, mountains and seas
The spirit soars and the heart calls
May the consecrated Olympic flag
Be forever raised on high

Beijing Olympics Year 2008
The scent of blood hangs in the air
80 million ghosts paved to prosperity
The blood and tears of hundreds of millions spawned
extravagant palaces

Stop the persecution
Give back our rights
Shackles cannot replace the Olympic wreath
Let the human rights torch
Kindle the whole world
Blood cannot taint the Olympics' purity and sacredness

Wash clean the blood drenched stains and filth
May the Human Rights Torch of freedom, peace and justice
light up the world forever.

Kilgour, Athens and the Bloody Harvest Olympics

Kilgour Heads to Athens to Light the First Flame of the Human Rights Torch Relay Calling for Boycotting Beijing’s “Bloody Harvest Olympics”

OTTAWA: August 6, 2007 -The co-author of the “Bloody Harvest” report and former Canadian Secretary of State for Asia-Pacific, David Kilgour is to head to Greece with delegations from other countries to light the first flame of the Global Human Rights Torch Relay (HRTR) this week. They will call for boycotting the “Bloody Harvest Olympics”.

The Torch Relay is expected to last for an entire year and to involve participants in more than one hundred cities in Europe, Asia, North America and Australia, including Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa, Montreal, Edmonton, Calgary and other Canadian cities. The core message of the relay is that the Olympics and crimes against humanity cannot coexist in China."

Kilgour said: “Over six years, the government of China and its agents have killed a large number of Falun Gong prisoners of conscience and sold their vital organs for high prices often to organ tourists. The Matas-Kilgour revised report (http://organharvestinvestigation.net) and much other evidence establish beyond any doubt that this is occurring.”

“This new crime against humanity is incompatible with the Olympic Charter and Olympic movement. It also violates the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, much of which was drafted by a Canadian, and many other UN human rights covenants. If the killing ceases across China, this particular call for a Games boycott will also stop.”

“The hardship a boycott would create for the affected athletes is enormous. The consequences for humanity, however, of having Olympic Games go ahead in the capital of a country where innocent Chinese citizens continue to be murdered for their vital organs are even greater.”

“The invasion of Afghanistan by Russian troops caused a boycott by some countries of the 1980 Games in Moscow. In hindsight, all nations should have boycotted the Berlin Olympics in 1936, but at the time most governments claimed not to know what Hitler had in mind. Today, we do know what the government of China has in mind for its Falun Gong community because of what it continues to do to them. This is an important difference between 1936 and 2008.”

Telephone contact in Athens:  011-30 69 45 148 152
Email contact: investigation.team@gmail.com

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Olympics-Taiwan torch relay to spotlight China 'abuses'

By Benjamin Kang Lim
REUTERS 12:06 a.m. August 2, 2007 - TAIPEI – A group of Taiwanese critics of China on Thursday announced a plan to launch a rival torch relay to highlight human rights abuses on the mainland, months after the island rejected the 2008 Beijing Olympic torch.

The announcement came as New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said China's dire human rights record and a renewed crackdown on media freedom may spoil the Chinese government's hopes of a successful coming-out-party at the Olympics.

Taiwan and China have been at loggerheads over whether to take the Olympic torch relay to the self-ruled democratic island, over which Beijing has claimed sovereignty since their split in 1949 at the end of the Chinese civil war.

'The (rival) human rights torch relay will expose the inside story of the bloody Olympics,' Lai Ching-Te, a deputy of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party, told a news conference.

The human rights torch will be lit in Athens on Aug. 9 and the relay will cover about 100 cities worldwide.

'No human rights, no Beijing 2008,' read a banner on display at the news conference venue.

Abuses listed by Lai and other China detractors included the 'persecution' of Tibetans and adherents of Falun Gong, a spiritual movement banned by Beijing as a cult in 1999.

The Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China, a non-governmental organisation, quoted a Chinese Ministry of Public Security classified document as saying 43 types of 'hostile' people would be barred from the 2008 Olympics.

China has lumped Falun Gong followers, Chinese defectors, pro-democracy activists, religious 'extremists and infiltrators', exiled Tibetans and Moslem Uighurs together with 'terrorists' on its persona non grata list, a spokeswoman for the coalition said.

Chow Meili, president of Taiwan Friends of Tibet, an NGO, urged Taiwanese to show support for 14 exiled Tibetans on hunger strike to press China to stop human rights abuses.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment when reached by telephone.

Human Rights Watch said Beijing is more worried about political stability and tightening its grip on domestic human rights defenders, grassroots activists and media to choke off any possible expressions of dissent ahead of the Games, the group said.

'Instead of a pre-Olympic 'Beijing spring' of greater freedom and tolerance of dissent, we are seeing the gagging of dissidents, a crackdown on activists, and attempts to block independent media coverage,' said HRW Asia director Brad Adams.

'The government seems afraid that its own citizens will embarrass it by speaking out about political and social problems, but China's leaders apparently don't realise authoritarian crackdowns are even more embarrassing.'

One Hundred Cities to Participate in the Human Rights Torch Relay on Five Continents

MEDIA ADVISORY


One Hundred Cities to Participate in the Human Rights Torch Relay on Five Continents Urging China that "Crimes Against Humanity and Olympic Games Cannot Co-exist in China”

The Global Human Rights Torch Relay will light its first flame in a ceremony in Athens, Greece on August 9, 2007. Led by the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China, hundreds of individuals and organizations will support and participate in this global event inspired by the Olympic Torch relay.

Over 20 countries and more than 100 cities will be part of the Human Rights Torch Relay, calling on the international community to urge the Chinese communist regime to respect the spirit of Olympics; to expose the ongoing and increasing human rights violations in China; and stop China from continuing to commit the most gruesome and unspeakable evil crimes - including the murdering of Falun Gong practitioners for their vital organs for profit. This crime against humanity must end. We have an obligation to ensure that the 2008 Olympics will not turn into the Bloody Olympics.

The Human Rights Torch Relay ceremony in Athens will highlight speeches of government officials, human rights organizations, former Olympic medallists, and human rights activists from China. Canadian Former Secretary of State and co-author of the Independent Investigation into Allegations of Organ Harvesting of Falun Gong Practitioners in China, David Kilgour will also be present. New evidence of the organ harvesting will be disclosed.

Background Information:

The Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong is a global non-profit organization established in 2006. Four delegations from Oceania, Asia, Europe and North America, total more than 300 members The ambassadors of the four delegations are Senator Andrew Bartlett of the Australian Democrats, Lai Ching-Te, a Taiwan Legislator, Rabbi Dr Reuven Bulka, Chairman of the Organ Donation Committee of the Kidney, and Baroness Caroline Cox, Member of the House of Lords in UK.

CIPFG continues to request for an end of the persecution of Falun Gong and to go into China to investigate the persecution. To date the Chinese communist regime has never replied.

On May 30 2007, CIPFG held a press conference and released a joint statement: "Crimes Against Humanity and Olympic Games Cannot Co-exist in China”. On June 8, an open letter was sent to the Chinese leaders Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao, calling for them to stop the persecution by August 8, 2007 -- otherwise, a series of global actions would be taken to call for the boycott of the Beijing Olympics.

Hundreds of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners languish in prisons without warrants while the Chinese regime uses the Olympics to accelerate the persecution.

The Global Human Rights Torch Relay is supported by the Canadian Students for Darfur, Network for Human Rights in China (Denmark), Doctors Against Organ Harvesting (USA), and many more groups. Chinese people in China are embracing the Human Rights Torch Relay.

Representatives from the National Human Rights Protection and Anti-Violation Organization will participate in the entire human rights torch relay route, spreading the message that "Chinese people from China want human rights rather than Olympics."

It was picked by a few media:

Olympic torch for human rights to highlight Beijing abuses
AsiaNews.it, Italy - 9 hours ago
On 9 August, a day after the official Olympic torch is lit, a group of human rights activists will light an alternative flame in Athens, to remind the world ...
http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=9997&geo=6&size=A

Rival Olympic torch relay targets human rights abuses
ABC Online, Australia - Aug 2, 2007
By China correspondent Stephen McDonell Taiwanese human rights activists have announced they will start a rival Olympic torch relay next week to draw ...
http://abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/08/03/1995532.htm?section=justin

Human rights torch relay to spotlight China "abuses"
Radio Taiwan International, Taiwan - Aug 2, 2007
Human rights activists are planning an international torch relay to highlight human rights abuses in China. The announcement came as New York-based Human ...
http://english.rti.org.tw/Content/GetSingleNews.aspx?ContentID=41415

Slamming Beijing for alleged Olympic black list
http://www.taiwanheadlines.gov.tw/ct.asp?xItem=83138&CtNode=46

International Herald Tribune
Taiwanese group sees PR opportunity in Beijing Olympics (English)
| TAIPEI: A group of Taiwanese critics of China on Thursday announced a plan to stage a rival torch relay to highlight human rights abuses on the mainland, months after the island rejected the 2008 Beijing Olympic torch. | The announcement came as Ne...
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/02/news/taiwan.php

DPP lawmakers call for boycott of 2008 Olympics
By Shih Hsiu-chuan
STAFF REPORTER Taipei Times
Friday, Aug 03, 2007, Page 1
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2007/08/03/2003372469

Olympics-Taiwan torch relay to spotlight China 'abuses'
San Diego Union Tribune, United States - 11 hours ago
Abuses listed by Lai and other China detractors included the 'persecution' of Tibetans and adherents of Falun Gong, a spiritual movement banned by Beijing ...
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20070802-0006-olympics-beijing-taiwan.html

Taiwan torch relay to spotlight China "abuses"
Phayul, Tibet - 18 hours ago
Abuses listed by Lai and other China detractors included the "persecution" of Tibetans and adherents of Falun Gong, a spiritual movement banned by Beijing ...
http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?article=Taiwan+torch+relay+to+spotlight+China+%22abuses%22&id=17410

Taiwan torch relay to spotlight China "abuses"
Reuters India, India - 18 hours ago
Abuses listed by Lai and other China detractors included the "persecution" of Tibetans and adherents of Falun Gong, a spiritual movement banned by Beijing ...
http://in.reuters.com/article/sportsNews/idINIndia-28782420070802

Taiwan torch relay to spotlight China "abuses"
Guardian Unlimited, UK - 19 hours ago
Abuses listed by Lai and other China detractors included the "persecution" of Tibetans and adherents of Falun Gong, a spiritual movement banned by Beijing ...
http://sport.guardian.co.uk/breakingnews/feedstory/0,,-682227