Friday, August 26, 2011

South Korea Deports Falun Gong Practitioners, Yielding to Chinese Regime Pressure


Falun Gong practitioners in South Korea are displaying a banner at a press conference in front of the Korean government building complex in Gwacheon on Jan. 24, 2011, protesting South Korea's decision to deport Falun Gong practitioners back to China. Th (Jin Guohuan/Epoch Times)

By Wen Long and Gisela Sommer
Epoch Times Staff

South Korea, in violation of the United Nations Refugee Convention, deported three Falun Gong practitioners back to China this July, where they may face imprisonment and torture. This is the latest in a string of such deportations and is believed to be due to pressure from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Li Xiaoce, the spokesperson for the Global Mission to Rescue Persecuted Falun Gong Practitioners, told The Epoch Times in a phone interview that in the past two years, the South Korean government has forcefully deported a total of 10 Falun Gong practitioners to China on six separate occasions, five of them ethnic Koreans.

“When we told this to the governments and organizations of various countries, they were all shocked and showed great concern. There is not a single country in the world that assists the CCP to this extent,” Li said.

Li said others have asked him if the South Korean government has arranged these deportations out of fear of the Chinese regime. He believes the South Korean government does not act out of fear, but out of a desire to flatter the Chinese regime by assisting it in the persecution of Falun Gong.

When South Korea forcefully deported two Falun Gong practitioners in July 2009, 23 U.S. legislators sent a joint letter to the South Korean government, asking them to not let this happen again. However, four more incidents of deportation followed, with more people deported each time, according to Li.

“The decision by President Lee Myung-bak’s government to deport Falun Gong practitioners has damaged South Korea’s image in the international community,” Li said.

Violating International Law

Li supplied transcripts to The Epoch Times from a press conference he organized earlier this year in front of the Korean government building complex in Gwacheon.

Theresa Chu, the Asia director of the American Human Rights Lawyers Association and one of the speakers, said the United Nations clearly states in its Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment that no country must send someone back to an area where he or she might face torture.

“The torture methods the CCP has used on Falun Gong practitioners are widely known; sending them back [to mainland China] is like murder. South Korea should not commit such an international human rights violation,” Chu said.

David Matas, a renowned international human rights lawyer from Canada said the CCP violates the Refugee Convention and forcefully deports North Korean refugees, but South Korea—a democratic country—also violates the convention by deporting Falun Gong practitioners.

Matas said this is why it’s very important for the South Korean people to oppose the decision to deport Falun Gong refugees.

Also speaking at the press conference was Taiwanese lawyer Kenneth Chiu, who said it is common knowledge that the CCP persecutes Falun Gong practitioners. Chiu addressed the questionable legal basis for the deportations.

Chiu also explained that according to Articles 1 and 33 of the Refugee Convention, people who have been given refugee status can’t be deported, and these two articles also cannot be altered by any individual country. In other words, the South Korean government is in clear violation of the convention.

Chiu pointed out that many Korean legal professionals are of the opinion that, based on the law, the sentences given to Falun Gong refugees are too harsh and very likely due to foreign factors, such as pressure from the CCP.

Chiu also said the South Korean court has violated Article 76, Section 8 of the Immigration Control Act. The article says that those who have not received refugee status, especially those awaiting verification, can be permitted to temporarily stay by approval of the President.

Official Visits from China

Li Xiaoce said the South Korean Ministry of Justice began receiving refugee applications from Chinese Falun Gong practitioners in 2002. In the first few years, the Ministry of Justice neither granted nor rejected these applications.

After a meeting in March 2006 by Chun Jung-bae, the South Korean Minister of Justice, with China’s Public Security Minister, Zhou Yongkang, the refugee applications of over 20 Falun Gong practitioners were rejected, and the practitioners were immediately deported to China.

Falun Gong practitioners started legal procedures right afterwards.

When the CCP’s Politburo Standing Committee member and director of Propaganda Li Changchun visited South Korea in April 2009, a Korean reporter, who did not want to give his name, told The Epoch Times that Li clearly told the South Korean government “to kick out any Falun Gong practitioners.”

Soon after, the South Korean Ministry of Justice started quickly rejecting Falun Gong practitioners’ refugee applications and deporting them.

Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a traditional Chinese mind-body cultivation practice that consists of exercises, meditation, and following the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and forbearance in daily life. Practitioners generally say that Falun Gong has dramatically improved their health and mental wellbeing.

In July 1999, the CCP under the leadership of Jiang Zemin began a campaign to “eradicate” the practice of Falun Gong. The Falun Dafa Information Center can confirm the deaths of over 3,400 practitioners from torture and abuse. According to the Information Center, the true death toll may be in the tens of thousands.

http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/world/south-korea-deported-falun-gong-practitioners-yielding-to-chinese-regime-pressure-60640.html