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{{short description|2001 incident in China}}
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{{ChineseText}}
{{EngvarB|date=September 2014}}
The '''Tiananmen Square self-immolation incident''' was an event which took place in ] on the eve of ], ] ] when seven people attempted to set themselves on fire. Footage was broadcast nationally in the ] by ] (CCTV).
{{Chinese
|s=天安门自焚事件
|t=天安門自焚事件
|p=Tiān'ānmén Zìfén Shìjiàn
|order=st }}


The '''2001 Tiananmen Square self-immolation incident''' took place in ] in central ], on the eve of ] on 23 January 2001. There is controversy over the incident; ] sources say that five members of ], a new religious movement that is banned in mainland China, set themselves on fire in the square. Falun Gong sources disputed the accuracy of these portrayals, and claimed that their teachings explicitly forbid violence or ].<ref name="FDI_PressRelease"/><ref>, Falun Dafa Information Center, 19 January 2011</ref> Some journalists have claimed that the ]s were staged.<ref name=Ownby/>
The broadcaster claimed the ]s as Falun Gong practitioners.<ref name="Sunderland">Judith Sunderland. From the Household to the Factory: China's campaign against Falungong. Human Rights Watch, 2002. ISBN 1564322696</ref> ''Time'' said that it was possible misguided practitioners took it upon themselves to demonstrate in this manner, sparking a "propaganda bonanza" for the Chinese authorities.<ref name=breakingpoint/> Falun Gong in ] emphatically denies that the people could have been practitioners because the teachings forbid suicide and killing.<ref name="TheIssueOfKilling"> from ], ]</ref> Falun Gong and some third-party commentators point to apparent inconsistencies in the government's version of events and assert that the incident was staged in order to turn public opinion against the practice and build support for the ].<ref name="Sunderland" />


According to ], a group of seven people had travelled to Beijing from ] province, and five set themselves on fire on Tiananmen Square.<ref name="xinhua1"/> In the Chinese press, the event was used as proof of the dangers of Falun Gong, and was used to legitimise the government's campaign against the group.
According to ], the government's media war against ] gained significant traction following the act; the six-month campaign successfully portrayed Falun Gong as an "evil cult" which could unhinge its followers.<ref name=breakingpoint/> Repeated broadcasts of images of a girl’s burning body, and alleged practitioners declaring self-immolation would "lead them to paradise" convinced many ] that Falun Gong was an "evil cult".<ref name=pomfret>John Pomfret and Philip Pan, Washington Post, 5 Aug 2001 at A1, , October 2004, retrieved July 8, 2006</ref> ] commented that the campaign is probably the government's first effort to gain public support for the crackdown of Falun Gong, and is reminiscent of its past political movements such as the ] and the ].<ref name=tense/>


The official account of events soon came under scrutiny, however. Two weeks after the self-immolation event, '']'' published an investigation into the identity of the two self-immolation victims who were killed, and found that "no one ever saw practice Falun Gong".<ref name="Pan">{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/2001/02/04/human-fire-ignites-chinese-mystery/e27303e3-6117-4ec3-b6cf-58f03cdb4773/ |author=] |title= Human Fire Ignites Chinese Mystery |newspaper=The Washington Post|date=4 February 2001|access-date=13 February 2012}}</ref>
==Background==
{{main|Persecution of Falun Gong}}
From ] to July ] approximately 300 Falun Gong demonstrations were held in China, often in response to reported mistreatment of practitioners. On ] of the same year, a decision was made by the Chinese Government to ban the group.<ref name="Perry">Elizabeth J. Selden, Mark Perry. Chinese Society: Change, Conflict and Resistance. Routledge, 2003. ISBN 041530170X</ref> The ban and the associated ] is considered "politically motivated" and a major violation of human rights by human rights organizations.<ref>Human Rights Watch, </ref><ref name="AI2000">Amnesty International, , 23 March 2000, accessed 11 September 2007</ref>


] (HRW) wrote that "the incident was among one of the most difficult stories for reporters in Beijing at the time to report on" because of a lack of independent information available.<ref name="hrw-chn43081"/> The self-immolation victims were accessible only to reporters from China's state-run press; international media, and even the victims' family members were barred from contacting them.<ref name=ownbyfalungong218/> A wide variety of opinions and interpretations of what may have happened then emerged: the event may have been set up by the government to frame Falun Gong;<ref name="schechter1">Danny Schechter, "Falun Gong's Challenge to China" (Akashic Books, 2001)</ref> it may have been an authentic protest;<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.hum.leidenuniv.nl/chinees/organisatie/medewerkers-alfabetisch/haarbjter.html | title=Barend ter Haar, Chair of Chinese History at Leiden University (Sinological Institute) | access-date=29 September 2009 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091003100854/http://www.hum.leidenuniv.nl/chinees/organisatie/medewerkers-alfabetisch/haarbjter.html | archive-date=3 October 2009 }}</ref> the self-immolators could have been "new or unschooled" Falun Gong practitioners;<ref name="ownbyfalungong218"/> and other views.
By the end of 1999, Amnesty International expressed concern about claims of torture and deaths of Falun Gong adherents in police custody.<ref name="AI2000"/> Approximately 35,000 Falun Gong practitioners had been arrested in ]. Tiananmen Square became one of the prime locations where the practitioners were expected to routinely protest<ref>Ian Johnson, , 25 April 2000, ]
Page A21</ref>. On January 1, 2001, another 700 Falun Gong protesters were arrested in the square.<ref name="Perry" /> The size of protests had dwindled to zero due to the Government crackdown, despite a call to step up protests "especially in Tiananmen Square," according to ''Time''.<ref name=breakingpoint>Matthew Gornet, , ], June 25, 2001</ref>


The campaign of state propaganda that followed the event eroded public sympathy for Falun Gong. ''Time'' magazine noted that many Chinese had previously felt that Falun Gong posed no real threat, and that the state's crackdown against it had gone too far. After the self-immolation, however, the media campaign against the group gained significant traction.<ref name="breakingpoint"/> Posters, leaflets and videos were produced detailing the supposed detrimental effects of Falun Gong practice, and regular anti-Falun Gong classes were scheduled in schools.<ref name="oneway">{{cite news|first=Philip P. |last=Pan |title=One-Way Trip to the End in Beijing |work=International Herald Tribune |date=5 February 2001}}</ref><ref name="dangerous">{{cite book |first=Mickey |last=Spiegel |url=http://hrw.org/reports/2002/china/ |title=Dangerous Meditation: China's Campaign Against Falungong |publisher=Human Rights Watch |year=2002 |isbn=1-56432-270-X|access-date=28 September 2007}}</ref><ref name="chrandra">{{cite journal |first=Chrandra D. |last=Smith |url=http://org.law.rutgers.edu/publications/law-religion/new_devs/RJLR_ND_66.pdf |title=Chinese Persecution of Falun Gong |publisher=Rutgers School of Law |journal=Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion |date=October 2004 |access-date=28 September 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090327075424/http://org.law.rutgers.edu/publications/law-religion/new_devs/RJLR_ND_66.pdf |archive-date=27 March 2009 }}</ref> ] compared the government's propaganda initiative to past political movements such as the ] and the ].<ref name="tense"/> Later, as public opinion turned against the group, according to sources, the Chinese authorities began sanctioning the "systematic use of violence" to eliminate Falun Gong.<ref name="breaking">{{cite news|author1=Philip Pan |author2=John Pomfret |name-list-style=amp |title=Torture is Breaking Falun Gong|newspaper= The Washington Post|date= 5 August 2001| url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/2001/08/05/torture-is-breaking-falun-gong/ea6c5341-c7a7-47c9-9674-053049b7323d/ | access-date=26 November 2022 }}</ref> In the year following the incident, ] said that the imprisonment, torture, and deaths of Falun Gong practitioners in custody increased significantly.<ref name="Freedomhouse">Sarah Cook, Sarah (4 November 2013) {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140503002409/http://www.freedomhouse.org/blog/be-skeptical-official-story-tiananmen-car-crash |date=3 May 2014 }} Freedom House.</ref>
Amnesty International called on the Chinese government to stop "...mass arbitrary detentions, unfair trials and other human rights violations resulting from the crackdown on the Falun Gong..." in March 2000;<ref name="AI2000"/> Amnesty expressed concern that Falun Gong practitioners had been "...tortured or subjected to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment in detention."<ref name="AI2000" /> Another bulletin in December 2000 cited reports of torture, detention and ill-treatment, some ending in death, and condemned the authorities' "callous disregard for the lives of people detained solely for their peaceful activities."<ref name="AIdec2000">Amnesty International, , accessed September 11 2007</ref>


== Background ==
According to Human Rights organizations, an intense propaganda campaign has been used by the CCP to turn public opinion against Falun Gong.<ref name="unhchr"> Statement by United Nations Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, 53rd session, 14 August 2001</ref><ref name="AI2000">Amnesty International, , 23 March 2000, accessed 11 September 2007</ref>
{{See also|History of Falun Gong}}
] government compound in April 1999 to request an end to official ]. Soon thereafter, a nationwide persecution of the practice began.]]
Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a form of spiritual ] practice that involves meditative exercises, and a philosophy drawing on ] and ] tradition introduced by ] in Northeast China in the spring of 1992. By the late 1990s, it had attracted tens of millions of followers.<ref name=Ownby>David Ownby, '']''. ] (2008)</ref><ref> ''The New York Times'', 27 April 1999</ref> Falun Gong initially enjoyed official recognition and support during the early years of its development.<ref name=Ownby/> By the mid-1990s, however, Chinese authorities sought to rein in the growth of qigong practices, enacting more stringent requirements on the country's various qigong denominations.<ref name=Ownby/><ref name=Palmer>David Palmer, '']''. ] (2007).</ref> In 1996, Falun Gong came under increasing criticism and surveillance from the country's security apparatus.<ref name=Tong>James Tong, '']''. ] (2009).</ref>


On 25 April 1999, more than ten thousand practitioners congregated outside ] (CCP) headquarters in ] to request legal recognition.<ref name=Tong/><ref name=Fuyou>Ethan Gutmann, , National Review, 13 July 2009.</ref> That evening, then-] ] issued a decision to eradicate Falun Gong. At Jiang's direction, on 7 June 1999 a special leading group was established within the party's ] to manage the persecution.<ref name=Jamestown>Sarah Cook and Leeshai Lemish, , China Brief , Volume 11 Issue 17 (9 November 2011).</ref> The resulting organisation, called the ], assumed the role of coordinating the anti-Falun Gong media coverage in the state-run press, as well influencing other party and state entities such as the courts and security agencies.<ref name="Tong"/><ref name=Jamestown/> On 19 July, the Central Committee of the Communist Party issued a document effectively banning the practice of Falun Gong. The following day, hundreds of practitioners were detained by security forces.<ref name=Tong/><ref name=Amnesty/>
The '']'' in August 2001 wrote that the authorities adopted three strategies to "crush" Falun Gong: violence against practitioners who refuse to renounce their beliefs; 'brainwashing' to force all known practitioners to abandon Falun Gong and renounce it, and a media campaign to turn public opinion against the practice.<ref name=wposttorture>John Pomfret and Philip P. Pan, "Torture is Breaking Falun Gong", Washington Post, 5 August 2001.</ref>


The persecution that followed was characterised by a "massive propaganda campaign" intended to justify the persecution by portraying Falun Gong as superstitious, dangerous, and incompatible with the official ideology.<ref name=Ownby/><ref name=Amnesty>Amnesty International 23 March 2000</ref> Tens of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners were imprisoned, and by the end of 1999, reports began to emerge of torture in custody. According to ], authorities were given broad mandates to eliminate Falun Gong and pursue the coercive conversion of practitioners, but were not scrutinised for the methods they used. This resulted in the widespread use of torture, sometimes resulting in death.<ref>Ian Johnson, ''The Wall Street Journal'', 26 December 2000</ref>
Amnesty International refers to the ''Post'' article and says "The propaganda campaign capitalised on an incident on 23 January 2001 when five alleged practitioners, including a 12 year-old girl and her mother, set themselves on fire in Tiananmen Square."


] was one of the main venues where Falun Gong practitioners gathered to protest the persecution, usually by raising banners in defence of the group, or stage peaceful meditation sit-ins.<ref>Elisabeth Rosenthal, ''The New York Times''. 26 April 2001.</ref> Ian Johnson of the ''Wall Street Journal'' estimated that by 25 April 2000, more than 30,000 practitioners had been arrested for attempting to demonstrate in Beijing, most of them in or on the way to Tiananmen Square.<ref name=wsj-johnson>{{cite web |url=http://www.pulitzer.org/archives/6464 |title=Defiant Falun Dafa Members Converge on Tiananmen |first=Ian |last=Johnson |date=25 April 2000 |work=The Wall Street Journal |publisher=Pulitzer.org |page= A21}}</ref> Seven hundred Falun Gong followers were arrested during a demonstration in the Square on 1 January 2001.<ref name="Perry">{{cite book |first=Elizabeth J. |last=Selden |author2=Perry, Mark |title=Chinese Society: Change, Conflict and Resistance |publisher=Routledge |year=2003 |isbn=0-415-30170-X}}</ref>
] and ], who wrote a report on ] from Falun Gong practitioners, say implementation of these strategies meant staged attempts to make the Chinese population think that practitioneres "committed suicide by self-immolation." According to Kilgour and Matas, the campaign had the desired effect over time, and many Chinese came to accept the Party line on Falun Gong. They say "This incitement to hatred is most acute in China."<ref name="kilgourmatas"> Bloody Harvest: Kilgour Matas Report on Allegation of Organ Harvesting from Falun Gong Practitioners in China, 14 August 2001</ref>


Chinese authorities struggled throughout the early years of the persecution to turn public opinion against Falun Gong. Instead, the campaign garnered criticisms from across a wide spectrum of Chinese society, with some commentators drawing comparisons to the Cultural Revolution and Nazi Germany's treatment of the Jews.<ref>Pomfret, John.(12 October 1999) , ''The Washington Post''.</ref> According to Human Rights Watch, "the leadership's frustration with the failure of its efforts to quickly and thoroughly dismantle Falungong was also evident in its media campaign." The state-run press admitted in late 2000 that Falun Gong was continuing to stage protests in defiance of the ban, and proclaimed that "the 'broad masses' had to be made to understand the 'duration, complexity and ferocity of our battle with Falun Gong.'"<ref name=dangerous/> In January 2001, Chinese authorities launched a new wave of propaganda to discredit Falun Gong in which they urged state-run media organizations to vilify the group.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Pringle|first1=James|title=China lashes out at Falun Gong: Mainland officials order state media to vilify organization|work=Ottawa Citizen|date=15 January 2001}}</ref>
According to TIME, prior to the event, many Chinese had felt that Falun Gong posed no real threat, and that the crackdown had gone too far, but the immolations marked a turning point in its anti-Falun Gong campaign.<ref name=breakingpoint/> A paper from Falun Gong human rights group ''World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong'' (''WOIPFG'') suggests that ] considered that the public was not responding as desired a year after initiating the crackdown: China had failed to "annihilate Falun Gong within three months", the persecution had met with international condemnation, as well as resistance from highly ranked Party officials.<ref name="WOIPFGpaper">World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong, ''Investigation Reports on the Persecution of Falun Gong: Volume 1'', 2003-2004, p X</ref>


==The incident== == Incident ==


On 23 January 2001, the eve of ], five people in Tiananmen Square poured gasoline over their clothes and set themselves on fire.<ref name=dangerous/><ref name=missions/>
On ] ] (]'s eve) a group of men and women attempted to set themselves on fire in Tiananmen Square,<ref name="Sunderland" /> five succeeded at ignition.<ref name="Peerenboom">Randall P. Peerenboom, Asian Discourses of Rule of Law: Theories and Implementation of Rule of Law in Twelve Asian countries, France the US, 2004. ISBN 0415326125</ref><ref name="Sunderland" /> A man sat down on the pavement northeast of the ] at the center of the square, poured gasoline on his clothes and set himself on fire. Moments later four more people set themselves alight. A CNN camera crew were on hand to record the event. CNN producer Lisa Weaver said she could "smell burning flesh as the van slowly passed."<ref name=tense>Staff and wire reports, , CNN, January 24, 2001, accessed 2007-02-09</ref> As they were taping, military police stepped in, detained the crew, and confiscated their tapes. Nearby police with fire-extinguishers ran to the victims and put out the flames reportedly within the space of a minute.<ref name=mediachannel>Danny Schechter, , Mediachannel, February 22, 2001</ref>


A ] film crew, who were there on a routine check for a possible Falun Gong protest,<ref name=mulls/> observed a man sitting down on the pavement northeast of the ] at the centre of the square.<ref name=tense>{{cite news |author=Staff and wire reports |url=http://archives.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/east/01/24/asia.falun.03/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070222110517/http://archives.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/east/01/24/asia.falun.03/ |archive-date=22 February 2007 |title=Tiananmen tense after fiery protests |publisher=CNN |date=24 January 2001 |access-date=9 February 2007}}</ref> He proceeded to pour gasoline over himself and set himself ablaze.<ref name=tense /> Police officers quickly congregated on the scene and extinguished the flames.<ref name=tense /> Shortly afterwards, another four people on the square set themselves alight. One of the four, a man, was detained and driven away in a police van.<ref name=tense />
The self immolators and their apparent outcomes, as reported by state-controlled media:


CNN reported that at least two men and altogether five people set themselves on fire after pouring gasoline over themselves.<ref name=tense/> They did not see a child among the self-immolators.<ref name=mediachannel>{{cite web |first=Danny |last=Schechter |url=http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/falungong2.shtml |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021202162929/http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/falungong2.shtml |archive-date=2 December 2002 |title=The Fires This Time: Immolation or Deception In Beijing? |publisher=Mediachannel |date=22 February 2001}}</ref> The CNN crew began filming the events from a distance, but were quickly intercepted by military police, who detained the journalists and confiscated their equipment.<ref name=tense /><ref>] (2014), "The Slaughter," pp&nbsp;164–166.</ref> The authorities then put out the flames consuming the other four people's clothing.<ref name=tense /> A police van came to collect the badly burnt man, and two ambulances arrived almost 25 minutes later to collect the other four.<ref name=tense /> The square was completely closed,<ref name="dangerous" /> and security was tight the next day, the most important of the traditional Chinese holidays. Police monitored public access to the square for the New Year celebrations, had fire extinguishers ready, and prevented Falun Gong practitioners from opening banners.<ref name=tense/>
*Wang Jin-dong (王進東), male, hospitalised and later imprisoned for 15 years
*Liu Chun-ling (劉春玲), female, mother of Si-ying, died on the scene
*Liu Si-ying (劉思影), female, daughter of Chun-ling, died weeks later
*Chen Guo (陳果), female, daughter of Hao Hui-jun, suffered severe burn injuries
*Hao Hui-jun (郝惠君), female, mother of Chen Guo, suffered severe burn injuries
*Liu Bao-rong (劉葆榮), male, sentenced to life imprisonment
*Liu Yun-fang (劉雲芳), male, sentenced to life imprisonment


In later reports which appeared in state run media, the number of self-immolators rose from five to seven–two of whom apparently had failed to ignite themselves. According to these media reports, the people who attempted suicide were all from ] in ] Province. It was claimed that they agreed to light themselves in different parts of the square at 2:30 pm; they smuggled gasoline into the square using plastic ] bottles.<ref name=xinhua1>Xinhua story, , China.org.cn, January 31, 2001, accessed 2007-08-01</ref> Liu Chun-ling reportedly died on the scene. A few months later, state media announced the death of Liu Si-ying, who had been hospitalized with severe burns following the incident. The other three were reported to have been "severely disfigured". Beijing denied requests from western journalists to interview Liu Siying and the three other survivors; only China Central Television and the official New China News Agency were permitted to speak to their relatives or their colleagues. ] named seven individuals as having been involved: Wang Jindong ({{lang|zh-hans|王进东}}), Liu Chunling ({{lang|zh-hans|刘春玲}}), Liu Siying ({{lang|zh-hans|刘思影}}), Chen Guo ({{lang|zh-hans|陈果}}), Hao Huijun ({{lang|zh|郝惠君}}); Liu Baorong ({{lang|zh-hans|刘葆荣}}) and Liu Yunfang ({{lang|zh-hans|刘云芳}}).<ref name=xinhua1>{{cite web |agency=Xinhua News Agency |url=http://www.china.org.cn/english/7474.htm |title=The Tragedy of Falun Gong Practitioners- Rescue: Doctors, Nurses Rush to Save Life |publisher=China.org.cn |date=31 January 2001 |access-date=1 August 2007}}</ref> Liu Chunling reportedly died on the scene. A few months later, state media announced the death of her daughter Liu Siying, who, according to state-news, had been hospitalised with severe burns following the incident. The other three were reported to have been "severely disfigured". Beijing denied requests from western journalists to interview the survivors, and only China Central Television and the official New China News Agency were permitted to speak to their relatives or their colleagues.<ref name=Siying>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/1228576.stm |title= Tiananmen 'suicide' girl dies |access-date=10 October 2009 | date=18 March 2001 | work=BBC News}}</ref>


== Chinese media reports ==
==Reporting and analysis==


] released a story about the incident to foreign media two hours after the self-immolation occurred.<ref>{{cite book|first=David |last=Ownby |url=https://archive.org/details/falungongfutureo2008ownb |url-access=registration |quote=Xinhua offered a brief report of the events that very evening. |title=Falun Gong and the future of China|page= |publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2008|access-date=11 October 2009 |isbn=978-0-19-532905-6}}</ref> ] then distributed a fuller press release seven days later on Tuesday, 30 January,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.zhihui.com.cn/storydb/truth/0130.htm |title=zhihui.com.cn |publisher=zhihui.com.cn |access-date=11 October 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131014173129/http://www.zhihui.com.cn/storydb/truth/0130.htm |archive-date=14 October 2013}}</ref> in response to other media reports on the incident.<ref name=missions/> On 31 January, a 30-minute special edition of the current affairs programme ''Forum'' told the state's version of the events to the Chinese public.<ref name=ownbyfalungong>{{cite book |first=David |last=Ownby |title=Falun Gong and the future of China |url=https://archive.org/details/falungongfutureo2008ownb |url-access=registration |publisher= Oxford University Press |year=2008 |pages= |isbn=978-0-19-532905-6}}</ref> ] aired footage, said to be taken by nearby surveillance cameras, of five people in flames.<ref name=mediachannel/>
State-owned ] said that the self-immolators were "avid practitioners" of Falun Gong, allegedly having taken up the practice between 1995 and 1997. Xinhua also claimed that during the week preceding the event, they fantasised about "how wonderful it would be to enter heaven".<ref name=xinhua1/> Some western news organizations reported the Xinhua version that the immolators were practitioners, as, according to ], there were no sources to verify facts independently given the tight state censorship.<ref name=mediachannel />


The Chinese authorities stated that the seven people who had come to Tiananmen Square with the intention of self-immolating were all from the city of ] in ]. The state-run ] News Agency asserted that the self-immolators were "avid practitioners" of Falun Gong who had taken up the practice between 1994 and 1997, and that they fantasised during the preceding week about "how wonderful it would be to enter heaven".<ref name=xinhua1/> Six of them reportedly took the train on 16 January, meeting Chen Guo, the daughter of one of them, upon their arrival in Beijing. The seven agreed to light themselves in different parts of the Square at 2:30&nbsp;pm on the designated day with gasoline smuggled there in plastic soda bottles; each had been armed with two lighters in case one would fail.<ref name="xinhua1"/> According to the government-run China Association For Cultic Studies website, Wang Jindong stated afterwards that the group arrived in Tiananmen Square by two taxis, and were dropped off at the south of the ], from where they walked to the spot where they would ignite themselves. Wang said he was approached by police as he was splitting open the soda bottles, and ignited himself hurriedly without assuming the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.facts.org.cn/Words/200907/t95505.htm |title=Wang Jindong: Blindness, death and rebirth (Excerpt) |date=November 2007 |author=China Association For Cultic Studies |publisher=facts.org |access-date=5 October 2009 |archive-date=1 March 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110301020354/http://www.facts.org.cn/Words/200907/t95505.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> A press release from the Chinese government says that Liu Yunfang felt that the police were able to stop him burning himself because he had not attained the "required spiritual level."<ref name=missions>{{cite web |url=http://missions.itu.int/~china/pressrelease/archives/pressrelease01.htm |title=Press Release: Suicidal Blaze, Another Crime of Falun Gong |publisher=Government of the People's Republic of China |date=31 January 2001 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716071845/http://missions.itu.int/~china/pressrelease/archives/pressrelease01.htm |archive-date=16 July 2011 }}</ref>
Falun Gong expressed its concern of western media's giving Xinhua's reports so much credibility and airtime, given that Xinhua openly admits it "disseminate propaganda for the Chinese regime."<ref name="mhpressstate2001">Press Statement, , Falun Gong, February 1, 2001, Retrieved: September 11, 2007</ref> According to their press statement, "Much remains unclear and unknown about the circumstances surrounding the incident", including what took place in the week between the incident and when the "fully engineered news articles and television programs" were released.<ref name="mhpressstate2001"/>


Articles in the '']'' and the '']'' reported that police had evidence that a few foreign reporters had advance knowledge of the incident, and suggested that such reporters could be charged with "instigating and abetting a suicide."<ref name=mulls/><ref name=laogai>{{cite web
Schechter, however, doubted Falun Gong would deny being involved in the incident if it was a genuine protest.<ref name="Schechter2001">Danny Schechter, ''Falun Gong's Challenge to China'', Akashic Books, New York, 2001, pp 20-23</ref> <!--putting back in on grounds that Ownby in his book says this work is “excellent” and more --> Anthropologist Noah Porter opines that even if the participants considered themselves to be practitioners, they are no more representative of Falun Gong than Christianity is represented by people "who shoot and bomb abortion clinics."<ref name="Porter">Noah Porter (Masters thesis for the University of South Florida), ''Falun Gong in the United States: An Ethnographic Study''. . 2003. p 105</ref> In the '']'', the ] suggested that it was "hardly a far-fetched hypothesis" that the government allowed or staged the incident to discredit Falun Gong, as the government vowed to crush the practice before the eightieth anniversary celebrations of the Communist Party in July. The article concluded that while the "PRC's propaganda coup" against Falun Gong is within the context of popular understandings of other immolations in recent Asian history, "...this situation is not clear", and for the Communists, this was just "another lie."<ref name=noonan>Ann Noonan in the '']'', , accessed 21/5/08</ref>
|url = http://old.nationalreview.com/comment/commentprint021301a.html
|title = Beijing is Burning&nbsp;– More lies from the PRC
|work = National Review
|first = Ann
|last = Noonan
|date = 13 February 2001
|access-date = 24 October 2013
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131029202638/http://old.nationalreview.com/comment/commentprint021301a.html
|archive-date = 29 October 2013
}}</ref> State media claimed surveillance video showed six or seven reporters from CNN, the Associated Press and Agence France-Presse arriving just 10 minutes before the self-immolations took place; however, all three agencies denied advance knowledge of the incident{{mdash}}AP and AFP said they had no reporters in the square at the time, while CNN's chief news executive, ], said the CNN crew were there on a routine check for a possible Falun Gong protest.<ref name=mulls/>


== Falun Gong response ==
The '']'' stated that conflicting claims were difficult to assess "ith propaganda streaming in from seemingly opposite ends of the universe... especially since the remaining Falun Gong practitioners have been driven underground." It also noted one of the victims was able to "fluidly perform" Falun Gong's signature slow-motion exercises in front of Western media.<ref>Elisabeth Rosenthal, "Former Falun Gong Followers Enlisted in China's War on Sect", ], 5 April 2002.</ref> CNN had reported that four of the victims were seen in flames, with their hands held "in a classic Falun Gong meditation pose", causing Falun Gong to file a complaint to CNN.<ref name="gittings"/>
<div class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em; font-size: 85%; background:#fffffa; color:black; width:25em; max-width: 35%; padding: 1em 1.5em 1.5em">


'''Discrepancies pointed out by the ''False Fire'' documentary <ref name=FalseFire/>'''
Falun Gong denied any practitioners could have been involved in the incident, as "...The teachings of Falun Gong prohibit any form of killing. Mr. Li Hongzhi... has explicitly stated that suicide is a sin." It accused the ] of attempting to discredit the practice of Falun Gong.<ref>, Falun Dafa Information Center, January 23, 2001, accessed 2007-02-09</ref> Falun Gong related commentators also pointed out that the main participants' account of the incident and other aspects of the participants' behaviour were inconsistent with the teachings of Falun Dafa.<ref>, World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong, August 2003</ref>


<br /><span style="font-size:90%">According to the documentary ''False Fire'', Liu Chunling, the only self-immolator to have died on the scene, appears to collapse from being bludgeoned on the head by a man in military suit.</span>
One western diplomat commented that the public changed from sympathising with Falun Gong to siding with the Government after the event; human interest stories and accounts of rehabilitation efforts of former practitioners shifted popular consensus.<ref name=ansfield>Jonathan Ansfield, ], , ], July 23, 2001</ref>
<br />
''False Fire'', a ] attempt to deconstruct the event<ref>Susan V. Lawrence, "Falun Gong Adds Media Weapons in Struggle With China's Rulers", ''The Wall Street Journal''. (Eastern edition), 14 April 2004. p. B.2I.</ref> points out several inconsistencies in the Chinese Government's version of the story, including:<ref name=hrw-chn43081/><ref name="upholdjustice.org">
{{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071119085438/http://www.upholdjustice.org/English.2/S_I_second_report.htm |date=19 November 2007 }} , World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (WOIPFalun Gong), August 2003. Retrieved 6 February 2007
</ref>
* Liu Chunling, the only self-immolator who died on the spot appears to fall from being bludgeoned on the head by a man in military suit. The programme argues that Liu could have died from a severe blow to the head.
* The self immolators appear to be wearing several layers of, possibly fire-protective, clothing and masks. The hair and bottle of gasoline at the feet of an alleged self-immolator are intact, although this should have caught fire first.
* Police, who normally are not known to carry fire extinguishers on duty, appeared to have used almost 25 pieces of fire-fighting equipment on hand on the day of the self-immolations. The nearest building is 10 minutes away and footage shows that only two police vehicles were at the scene. The flames were put out in less than a minute's time.
* The camera of the CCTV footage zooms in on the scene as it unfolds; surveillance cameras in Tiananmen Square are usually fixed.
* Wang Jindong shouts comments that do not form part of Falun Dafa teachings; his posture, including hand position and sitting position, does not reflect the full or half lotus position required in Falun Dafa exercises.
* The hospital treatment of the victims, as recorded by Chinese state media, is inconsistent with proper care of severe burn victims: for instance, patients were not kept in sterile rooms.
* The girl who allegedly underwent a tracheotomy appeared to be able to speak and sing clearly mere days after the surgery.
</div>


Immediately following the self-immolation, the Falun Dafa Information Center denied that the self-immolators could have been Falun Gong practitioners, emphatically pointing out that Falun Gong's teachings do not sanction any form of violence, and that suicide is considered a sin.<ref name="FDI_PressRelease">{{cite web |url=http://www.clearwisdom.net/eng/2001/jan/23/vsf012301_3.html |title=Press Statement |publisher=Clearwisdom |date=23 January 2001 |access-date=9 February 2007}}</ref>
The Falun Gong group WOIPFG saw the incident as a major tool in the government's "global campaign to vilify Falun Gong practitioners to the Chinese people..."<ref name="WOIPFGpdf" /><ref name=woipfghighlights>WOIPFG, '''', accessed October 4, 2007.</ref> WOIPFG believed that hostility toward Falun Gong from the general public escalated, the campaign "clearly intensified," and that "hate crimes" targeting Falun Gong increased.<ref name="WOIPFGpaper" /> It further alleged the death toll during police arrests or in prisons, labor camps and "brainwashing centers" all sharply increased.<ref name="WOIPFGpdf">World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong, , accessed 16 September, 2007</ref>


Falun Gong sources overseas questioned the official Chinese government account of the event, and apparent inconsistencies in government's official narrative led to a hypothesis that the self-immolation was staged by the government to justify the persecution against Falun Gong by portraying its practitioners as irrational and suicidal. According to this hypothesis, the self-immolation participants were paid actors, and were presumably assured that the flames would be extinguished before doing real harm.
===''False Fire''===


Falun Gong-affiliated ] produced a programme called ''False Fire'',<ref name="FalseFire"/> which analyses the inconsistencies in the accounts of the event in the official Chinese media.
]
]
''False Fire'',<ref name="FalseFire">, DVD, NTDTV, 2001.</ref> a video programme, was produced by the Falun Gong-linked<ref>Susan V. Lawrence, "Falun Gong Adds Media Weapons In Struggle With China's Rulers",
Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition), April 14, 2004. pg. B.2I </ref> '']''. The programme attempted to deconstruct the event, alleging several apparent inconsistencies in the Chinese Government's version of the story:<ref>, World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (WOIPFalun Gong), August 2003. Accessed: 2007-02-06</ref><ref> Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. Accessed: 2007-02-06</ref>


Based on a review of CCTV footage, the programme purports to demonstrate that the self-immolators donned fire-proof clothing and masks, and raises the question of why the participants' hair and the apparently gasoline-filled bottles they carried did not catch fire.<ref name="FalseFire"/> Falun Gong sources also noted that the self-immolators' behaviour, the slogans they shouted, and their meditation postures were not consistent with the teachings or practices of Falun Gong.<ref name=WOIPFG2>{{cite web |url=http://www.upholdjustice.org/English.2/S_I_second_report.htm |title=Second Investigation Report on the 'Tiananmen Square Self-Immolation Incident |author=World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong |publisher=upholdjustice.org |date=August 2003 |access-date=6 February 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071119085438/http://www.upholdjustice.org/English.2/S_I_second_report.htm |archive-date=19 November 2007 }}</ref> Furthermore, the program's frame-by-frame analysis of the CCTV footage purportedly shows that Liu was actually killed by a deadly blow to the head from a man in a military overcoat.<ref name=clw39928>{{cite web |url=http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2003/9/5/39928.html |title=Report from the 'World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong' Reveals Chinese Government Lies&nbsp;– Official Government Media Seriously Violate Basic Reporting Principles and Professional Ethics |publisher=Clearwisdom |date=5 September 2003 |access-date=4 October 2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Yu|first=Haiqing|title=Media and Cultural Transformation in China|publisher=]|year=2009|pages=133–134|isbn=978-0-415-44755-3|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xUWC188UoVcC&q=%22false%20fire%22%20falun%20gong&pg=PA133}}</ref> The ''False Fire'' documentary described the death of 12-year-old Liu Siying as being under "unusual circumstances", saying that she was apparently recovering well before dying suddenly on 17 March.<ref name="FalseFire">{{cite web |title=Analysis and Insights about the "self-Immolation" |url=http://www.falsefire.com/ |access-date=12 December 2014 |website=falsefire.com |publisher=]}}</ref> Some Falun Gong sources argue that she may have been killed by the government as a way of guaranteeing her silence.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=Falun Dafa Minghui.org |url=http://en.minghui.org/html/articles/2011/10/1/128478.html |title=54 Facts That Reveal How the "Self-Immolation" on Tiananmen Square Was Actually Staged for Propaganda Purposes – Part 2|access-date= 13 October 2012}}</ref>
Liu Chunling appears to fall from being bludgeoned on the head by a man in military suit, and may have died instantaneously as a result; the self-immolators appear to be wearing fire-protective clothing. The hair and bottle of gasoline at the feet of one of them is intact, although this should have caught fire first; Police, who normally are not known to carry fire extinguishers on duty, appeared to have accessed almost 25 pieces of fire-fighting equipment immediately despite the nearest building being 10 minutes away and only two police vehicles being at the scene; surveillance cameras in Tiananmen Square are usually fixed, whereas the camera of the CCTV footage zooms in on the scene as it unfolds; Wang Jindong shouts comments that do not form part of Falun Dafa teachings, his posture, including hand position and sitting position, does not reflect the full or half lotus position as in the Falun Dafa teachings; the victims were not kept in sterile rooms, as recorded by Chinese state media - inconsistent with proper care of severe burn victims; the girl who allegedly underwent a tracheotomy appeared to be able to speak and sing clearly mere days after the surgery.


The program suggests that the reaction time of state-run television crews and police on Tiananmen Square demonstrates they had advance knowledge of the event. They observed that officers arrived almost immediately on the scene equipped with numerous fire extinguishers. Fire extinguishers are not standard equipment for police on Tiananmen Square; the nearest building that would house them was several minutes away from the scene.<ref name="FalseFire"/>
International Educational Development (IED), a human rights ], said, after viewing ''False Fire'', that it had "discovered that had in fact been staged".<ref name="unhchr"> Statement by United Nations Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, 53rd session, 14 August 2001</ref> Charles A. Radin of the '']'' stated "In the slowed version, it appears that Liu Chunling . . . collapsed not from the flames but from being bludgeoned by a man in a military overcoat.”<ref>, published on April 18, 2001, The Boston Globe cited in ''The Perfect Example of Political Propaganda: The Chinese Government’s Persecution against Falun Gong'' by Chin-Yunn Yang, Global media journal of Purdue University, accessed November 16, 2007</ref>


== Third-party findings ==
The Washington Post questioned why the Chinese government happened to have a camera crew in place to film the incident.<ref name=mulls>Philip Pan, The Washington Post, , February 8, 2001, publ by Friends of Falun Gong</ref> "The close-up shots shown on Chinese television appear to have been taken without any interference from police. In some, the camera is clearly behind police barricades and positioned directly above the apparent sect members. In addition, footage from overhead surveillance cameras in Tiananmen Square appears to show a man using a small hand-held video camera to film the scene, not a large TV news camera."<ref name=mulls/> Schechter noted that a CNN producer at the scene, "standing just fifty feet away" said she did not see any children. He doubted that the child, a ] patient, would have been able to "speak to the Chinese media so soon after the tragedy."<ref name="Schechter2001">p 20</ref>
]


The identities of some of the self-immolators, and their relationship to Falun Gong, was called into question by ] of the '']''. While state-run ] News Agency had reported that Liu Chunling's adoptive mother spoke of Liu's "obsession with Falun Gong", her "worshipping of Li Hongzhi", and that Liu would teach her daughter Falun Gong,<ref>{{cite web |agency=Xinhua News Agency |url=http://www.china.org.cn/english/7490.htm |title=Families of Falun Gong Victims After Tragedy |publisher=china.org.cn |date=1 February 2001}}</ref> Pan found most residents in Kaifeng felt disgraced by what Liu had done (i.e. the self-immolation), but none of Liu's neighbours had ever observed her practising Falun Gong. They said that Liu abused her mother, and the reporter heard that Liu "worked in a nightclub, took money to keep men company".<ref name=Pan/> According to David Ownby, a University of Montreal historian and expert on Falun Gong, Pan's portrayal of Liu Chunlin is highly inconsistent with the typical profile of a Falun Gong practitioner.<ref name=Ownby/>
According to a ] NGO ], all of the victims, except 12-year-old Liu Siying, had previously protested for Falun Gong in Tiananmen Square.<ref name=oneway/> ] described the immolation incident as the Communist Party's main piece of evidence in its campaign to portray Falun Gong as "dangerous and predatory," similar to ] or Jim Jones' cult in Guyana. It believes that this attempt has "fallen flat," and the "ready availability of fire-extinguishers and official TV teams and the lack of verification about the victims" raises questions about Falun Gong involvement, or whether the incident was staged.<ref name=hamish>Hamish Mcdonald, , The Age, October 16, 2004</ref>


Several observers have noted that foreign journalists were not allowed to interview the self-immolation victims recovering in hospitals. Even the victims' relatives were not permitted to speak with them, according to David Ownby.<ref>David Ownby, ''Falun Gong and the Future of China''. (Oxford University Press, 2008), p 217</ref> Pan wrote that "Beijing denied requests to interview Liu Siying and the three other survivors, who are all hospitalized&nbsp;... A Kaifeng official said only China Central Television and the official New China News Agency were permitted to speak to their relatives or their colleagues. A man who answered the door at the Liu home referred questions to the government."<ref name=Pan/> The survivors were interviewed by the state-run press, however. In one such interview, CCTV interviewed the 12-year-old Liu Siying. Government sources reported Liu Siying had undergone a ] shortly before the interview. Speaking through approved media outlets, she said that her own mother told her to set herself on fire to reach the "heavenly golden kingdom".<ref name=mediachannel/>
===''Beyond the Limits of Forbearance''===
On January 1, 2001, Li published an article called "''Beyond the Limits of Forbearance''", wherein, according to ''Time'', Li wrote that persecution of the Fa by "evil" (i.e. the Chinese authorities) could no longer be tolerated''. ]'' and '']'' said that Mr Li’s new scripture could have had something to do with the incident;<ref name="gittings">, ], January 29, 2001</ref> that it was implausible for it to have been staged; that the scripture appealed to "radical" practitioners and those feeling "desperate or out of touch with the exiled leadership”; and that "a Beijing arm of Falun Gong strongly suggested the protesters... were devotees".<ref name=breakingpoint/><ref>Hannah Beech, , ], January 29, 2001, accessed 2007-02-09</ref>


Ian Johnson observed the state media "reported death with unusual alacrity, implying that either the death took place earlier than reported or the usually cautious media had top-level approval to rush out electronic reports and a televised dispatch."<ref name=mediachannel/>
''The Guardian'''s John Gittings thought that Li had confused his supporters in his New Year message "that the 'forbearance' taught by Buddha 'does not mean tolerating evil beings'." According to Gittings, ten days later, Falun Gong in New York said that "certain disciples had some extreme interpretations we are going to resort to violence". Falun Gong said that Mr Li meant it was time to "bring the truth to light" about China's atrocities, using peaceful ways to expose and resist the persecution.<ref name="gittings" />


Questions were also raised over where the footage of the event came from, and the speed with which camera crews appeared on scene. Chinese government media reported that the close-up shots in its video footage came from confiscated CNN tapes.<ref name=mulls /> CNN representatives argued that this was impossible, however, as their reporters were detained shortly after the event began and were not allowed to film the rest. Pan was also suspicious of the positioning of the cameras, and the fact that the close-up shots shown on Chinese television were taken without police interference. "In some, the camera is clearly behind police barricades", the ''Washington Post'' article says.<ref name=mulls /> In addition, overhead surveillance camera footage seemed to show a man filming the scene using a small hand-held camera, rather than a large camera of the type used for TV news reporting.<ref name=mulls>{{cite news |first=Philip |last=Pan |url=http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2001/2/9/4692.html |title=China Mulls Murder Charges for Foreign Journalists |date=8 February 2001 |newspaper= The Washington Post}}</ref>
China scholar David Ownby refers to the same scripture, and said that he found no evidence of it being interpreted as a call to violence or retaliation: " assures his followers that they are right to want to eradicate the evil forces and that this evil will indeed be eradicated—although the form taken by such apparent militancy, beginning in the spring of 2001, was that of sitting in a meditative posture and 'emitting righteous thoughts.'"<ref name=ownbyfalungong>David Ownby, Falun Gong and the future of China, Oxford University Press, 2008. p. 215</ref>


'']'' commented that the "ready availability of fire-extinguishers and official TV teams and the lack of verification about the victims" raised questions about whether authorities had advanced knowledge of the self-immolation.<ref name=hamish>{{cite web |first=Hamish |last=Mcdonald |url=http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/10/15/1097784013251.html?oneclick=true |title=What's wrong with Falun Gong |work=The Age |date=16 October 2004}}</ref> Police were on the scene of the self-immolation within 90 seconds carrying numerous pieces of firefighting equipment. A European journalist was quoted as saying "I have never seen policemen patrolling on Tiananmen Square carrying fire extinguishers. How come they all showed up today? The location of the incident is at least 20 minutes roundtrip from the nearest building – the People's Great Hall."<ref name="Schechter2001">Danny Schechter, "Falun Gong's Challenge to China" (Akashic Books, 2001). pp 20 – 23</ref> John Gittings of '']'' stated, however, that it was common practice in many countries for police camera operators to be on hand when a public disturbance is anticipated; the police used small-scale fire-extinguishers of the type carried in public vehicles, many of which are routinely on the square.<ref name="gittings2"/>
The ''Asian ]'' wrote that the danger of putting Li's scripture as cause for the immolations "implies, insidiously, that the blame lies with the victims... the fundamental, human issue is the Chinese government's brutal campaign to wipe out Falun Dafa and the misery resulting from it."<ref name=awsjlimits>Asian Wall Street Journal, (requires registration), January 26, 2001.</ref> They write that in the face of the "brutalities" visited on practitioners, "it's not so difficult to imagine why a few persons would have succumbed to despair. And that makes them deserving of our pity rather than our cynicism."


James R. Lewis pointed out that it is highly unlikely that these victims were paid. He wrote that it was likely “a demonstration planned and executed by local practitioners—though directly inspired by a combination of Li Hongzhi’s violent apocalyptic vision, his call to non-specific action against the Chinese government, and examples of prior religious suicides and protest suicides”.<ref>Lewis, J. R. (2018). A Burning Faith in the Master. In Journal of Religion and Violence (Vol. 6, Issue 2, pp. 172–190). Philosophy Documentation Center. https://doi.org/10.5840/jrv201811957</ref>
===The participants===
]


According to the Hong Kong-based Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy, all self-immolators except Liu Siying previously participated in protests against China's actions on Falun Gong on Tiananmen.<ref name=Pan/>
After denying press access to the victims for a year after the incident, the government granted foreign press interviews in the presence of state officials in April 2002.<ref name=real>Jeremy Page, Reuters, , April 4, 2002, published Rickross.com, accessed 2007-02-09</ref> When asked why they set themselves on fire, Hao Huijun said that she had realised the futility of writing letters and demonstrating by waving banners, "so finally, we decided...to make a big event to show our will to the world.... We wanted to show the government that Falun Gong was good."<ref name=real/>


== Dispute ==
'']'' reported that Huo Xiuzhen, Liu Chunling's adoptive mother, spoke of her daughter's "obsession with Falun Gong", her "worshipping of Li Hongzhi", and how she would teach her daughter to practice Falun Gong.<ref>Xinhua General News Service. , 1 February 2001.</ref> However, Liu's neighbours, when interviewed by the '']'', stated that she was not a native of Kaicheng, was deeply troubled, and beat her mother and daughter. None of the interviewed had ever seen her practice Falun Gong.<ref name=oneway>Philip P. Pan, , International Herald Tribune, February 5, 2001|accessdate = 2007-02-09</ref> Falun Gong disputes that Liu was a practitioner because she "...was witnessed beating her stepmother and child... is not according to a Falun Gong practitioner's standard."<ref>, Clearwisdom.net, accessed September 11 2007</ref> Specifically, Zhuan Falun urges compassion, and specifically that practitioners should not lose their temper in disciplining children.<ref>, ]</ref>
]
Wang Jindong, who, according to state-run media, is serving a 15 year sentence in Henan Provincial Prison, denied that he had been bribed by the government to stage the incident, and said he "felt humiliated because of my stupidity and fanatical ideas."<ref name=real/>


Following the incident, the details of why the individuals were involved has been and remains the subject of dispute between representatives of Falun Gong, the Chinese government, and other observers.
However, WOIPFG stated that the analysis by of the broadcasts by Speech Processing Laboratory at ] , concludes that the first person named as Wang Jindong who appeared on CCTV was not the same person who appeared the second and third times.<ref name=woipfghighlights/> Falun Gong related sources insist that images of Wang Jindong that appeared in different state controlled media reports seem to be of different people .<ref name="FalseFire"/><ref> Clearwisdom.net, '''', accessed October 4, 2007</ref>


A significant challenge to arriving at a definitive assessment of the event is that independent corroboration of the government's claims has not been possible. According to ] (HRW), the lack of independent information made the incident one of the most difficult stories for reporters in Beijing to report.<!--does this mean "the reliability of the information?--><ref name=hrw-chn43081>{{cite web |url=http://www.irb-cisr.gc.ca/Eng/ResRec/RirRdi/Pages/index.aspx?doc=416268 |title=Responses To Information Requests "CHN43081.E" |author=Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada |publisher=UNHCR |access-date= 12 December 2014 |quote=In a 23 November 2004 telephone interview with the Research Directorate, the senior researcher on China for HRW asserted that it would not have been possible for independent organisations to conduct an independent investigation of the incident. According to the senior researcher, the incident was one of the most difficult stories for reporters in Beijing at the time to report on because of a lack of information and difficulties in ascertaining the extent of control of the information}}</ref> '']'' stated that conflicting claims were difficult to assess "ith propaganda streaming in from seemingly opposite ends of the universe&nbsp;... especially since the remaining Falun Gong practitioners have been driven underground."<ref>{{cite news |first=Elisabeth |last=Rosenthal |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/04/05/world/former-falun-gong-followers-enlisted-in-china-s-war-on-sect.html |title=Former Falun Gong Followers Enlisted in China's War on Sect |work=The New York Times |date=5 April 2002}}</ref>
==Government actions==


Philip Pan's investigation, and other inconsistencies highlighted by Falun Gong organisations, led some journalists and other observers to entertain the possibility that the self-immolation was not as straightforward as the Chinese official media accounts suggested. In the '']'', Ann Noonan of the ] suggested that it was "hardly a far-fetched hypothesis" that the government staged the incident or allowed it to proceed to discredit Falun Gong, as the government vowed to crush the practice before the eightieth anniversary celebrations of the Communist Party in July.<ref name=noonan>{{cite web |url=http://en.minghui.org/eng/2001/feb/14/nmr021401_2.html |author=Ann Noonan |title=Beijing is Burning: More lies from the PRC |access-date=12 December 2014}}</ref> Clive Ansley, a Vancouver-based rights lawyer who lived in China during the self-immolation, suggested that a dramatic response by Falun Gong would have been understandable, but ultimately concluded that the event was staged: "You've got Falun Gong people in this country, they've been oppressed over and over again, they are not allowed to speak, they are not allowed to assert any of their rights as citizens, the level of frustration must be terribly, terribly high.. I can understand people doing that.. but ironically, we ultimately found out that it was staged anyway, it was not real. It was completely staged by the government."<ref>Quoted in Peter Rowe (2007), "Beyond the Red Wall: The Persecution of Falun Gong" ] Documentary.</ref>
Following the incident, Tiananmen Square was shut down. Seven days after the event, China Central TV aired their footage of five people in flames, said to be taken by nearby surveillance cameras.<ref name=mediachannel/>


Reviewing the divergent narratives on the identity of the self-immolation victims, historian David Ownby concluded that "although the arguments of Falun Gong practitioners seem cogent, it is very difficult to arrive at a final judgment about the self-immolation.&nbsp;... there are desperate people in China (and elsewhere) who will do anything for money (which would go to their families in this case, one supposes, unless the authorities had promised to rescue them before the flames could do harm). Or the entire event could have been staged. But it seems just as possible that those who set themselves on fire might have been new or unschooled Falun Gong practitioners, had discovered and practised Falun Gong on their own (and badly) in the post-suppression period, and, for whatever reason, decided to make the ultimate sacrifice."<ref name=ownbyfalungong218>{{cite book |first=David |last=Ownby |title=Falun Gong and the future of China |url=https://archive.org/details/falungongfutureo2008ownb |url-access=registration |publisher= Oxford University Press |year=2008 |page= |isbn=978-0-19-532905-6}}</ref>
The government immediately used the twelve-year-old Liu Siying as an example that Falun Gong was harmful to children. After having had a tracheotomy, according to Government sources, she was able to speak through "approved media outlets", saying that her own mother told her to set herself on fire to reach the "heavenly golden kingdom".<ref name=mediachannel/> The media parade incited 8 million students to join the ''"Anti-Cult action by the Youth Civilised Communities Across the Nation"''.<ref name="Sunderland" /> Posters, leaflets, videos and lectures began in the class rooms nation wide about the supposed detrimental effects of the practice. Regular anti-Falun Gong classes were scheduled in schools on the orders of the authorities,<ref name=oneway/> with 12 million children submitting writings disapproving of the practice.<ref name="Sunderland" /><ref name=dangerous>Mickey Spiegel, , Human Rights Watch, 2002, accessed Sept 28, 2007</ref>


Other human rights activists speculated that the five who set themselves on fire did so to protest the government's crackdown on Falun Gong.<ref name=oneway/> Barend ter Haar was open to the idea that the self-immolators were Falun Gong practitioners, and postulated that former Buddhists may have brought with them the "respectable Buddhist tradition of self-immolation as a sacrifice to the Buddha".<ref name="Haar"/> He sought to account for the inconsistencies by suggesting that the government may have fabricated a video of their own when they realised the mediatic potential of the suicides.<ref name="Haar">{{cite web |last=Haar |first=Barend ter |url=http://faculty.orinst.ox.ac.uk/terhaar/falun.htm |title=Part One: Introductory remarks (click on "Introductory remarks on left of page) |publisher=Barend ter Haar, Leiden University |year=2001 |access-date=12 December 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150216015939/http://faculty.orinst.ox.ac.uk/terhaar/falun.htm |archive-date=16 February 2015 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
Within a month, authorities issued a glossy pamphlet entitled ''The Whole Story of the Self Immolation Incident Created by Falun Gong Addicts in Tiananmen Square'' featuring color photographs of charred bodies.<ref name="Sunderland" /> The ]'s "Office for the Prevention and Handling of Evil Cults", declared after the event that it was now ready to form a united front with the global anti-cult struggle.<ref name="Sunderland" /> The IHT reported state controlled media attacked Falun Gong and Li Hongzhi morning and night, on a daily basis. Meetings took place in factories, offices and universities; schools were ordered to "educate" pupils about Falun Gong. The Government announced that religious leaders from across the country had delivered denunciations. In Kaifeng, the post office issued an anti-Falun Gong postmark, and 10,000 people signed a petition denouncing the group.<ref name=oneway/>


], Asia editor of '']'', supported the possibility that the self-immolators were Falun Gong practitioners, writing in the '']'' that "no one believed that the government could have paid a mother to torch herself and her daughter, or that she was so loyal to the Communist Party that she pretended to be a Falungong member and kill herself and her only daughter, even if Falungong master Li Hongzhi forbade suicide&nbsp;..."<ref name=sisci>{{cite web |url=http://www.atimes.com/china/DD10Ad01.html |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130117195556/http://www.atimes.com/china/DD10Ad01.html |url-status=unfit |archive-date=17 January 2013 |title=The burning issue of Falungong |work=Asia Times |first=Francesco |last=Sisci |year=2002}}</ref> In Sisci's view, Chinese officials made a mistake by arresting foreign journalists on Tiananmen —"independently filmed news footage of the proceedings could have been the best proof of Falungong madness. Instead, when the government reported the episode, it looked like propaganda."<ref name=sisci/>
By March 2001, before the ], ] ] and former Premier ] made it clear that the elimination of the group was top priority.<ref name="Sunderland" /> An anti-cult exhibition targeting Falun Gong was held in July 2001 at the ] in Beijing;<ref>, ], July 27, 2001</ref> Beijing newspapers have run exhibits of "former practitioners" thanking the Communist Party of China for "rescuing" them;<ref name="Sunderland" /> in the form of a cartoon of Li Hongzhi covered in ]s, the Chinese government compared Li to ].<ref name=ansfield/>


'']'' noted some of the confusion surrounding the conflicting views on the self-immolation; one Beijing Falun Gong practitioner interviewed appeared to accept that the self-immolators were practitioners engaged in protest, while Falun Gong organisations overseas denied any involvement.<ref name=time20010129>{{cite magazine |first=Hannah |last=Beech |url=http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,97124,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070217183709/http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,97124,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=17 February 2007 |title=Too Hot to Handle |magazine=] |date=29 January 2001 |access-date=9 February 2007}}</ref> ''Time'' also speculated that the "lack of solidarity" in Falun Gong was contributing to the sense of desperation of Mainland Chinese practitioners who may feel out of touch with the exiled leadership.<ref name=time20010129/> Guardian reporter John Gittings reported that some observers believed it was possible that the self-immolators acted in desperation and confusion.<ref name="gittings">{{cite news |first=John |last=Gittings |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/jan/29/china.johngittings |title=China prepares for new offensive against 'dangerous' sect |work=] |date=29 January 2001 | location=London}}</ref>
According to Amnesty International: " important part of the government’s propaganda campaign has been publicizing statements from people claiming to be former Falun Gong practitioners who denounce Falun Gong, speak of the damage the practice has brought to Chinese society, praise the government for its firm action against the movement, and eventually show their deepest gratitude towards the government’s saving them from being brainwashed by the “evil” cult."<ref>Amnesty International. (2000). People’s republic of China: The Crackdown on Falun Gong and other so-called “heretical organizations.” New York: Amnesty International USA Publications. Referenced in , Global Media Journal, Purdue University</ref>


Some observers have speculated that if the participants were Falun Gong practitioners, they may have resorted to self-immolation in response to the publication of a new scripture by Li Hongzhi released on 1 January 2001, "Beyond the Limits of Forbearance." An article authored by a collection of Mainland Chinese Falun Gong practitioners and published on the main Chinese-language Falun Gong website noted that the scripture had caused confusion both among Falun Gong practitioners and "in society," and that some people wondered whether Falun Gong would resort to violence to resist persecution. The authors wrote that this would not occur, as violence would be both counterproductive and contrary to the core teachings of the practice.<ref>Minghui, , 10 January 2001.</ref> A Falun Gong spokesperson clarified that the new scripture simply meant it was time to "bring truth to light" about human rights abuses committed by the Chinese government.<ref name="gittings"/> Nonetheless, Gittings posited that the scripture may have confused Falun Gong followers, particularly in Mainland China.<ref name="gittings"/> Matthew Forney wrote in ''Time'' magazine that Li's message had spread into China via the internet and informal networks of followers, and speculated that it may have galvanised more radical practitioners there.<ref name=breakingpoint>{{cite magazine |first=Matthew |last=Forney |url=http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,165163,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070217201518/http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,165163,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=17 February 2007 |title=The Breaking Point |magazine=] |date=25 June 2001}}</ref> David Ownby wrote that he found the brief message to be "difficult to interpret": on its surface, the scripture resembled a "call to arms" against what Li described as "evil beings who no longer have any human nature or righteous thoughts." Yet Ownby said no practitioners he talked to had seen the scripture as a "green light" for violent action. Instead, practitioners had interpreted it to mean exactly the opposite, that they could non-violently resist suppression without guilt; they could stop "simply surrendering to the police at the first moment of a confrontation. They could run away, they could organize, they were, in a word, free of whatever constraints the necessity to "forbear" had previously placed upon them."<ref name="ownbyfalungong"/> In an interview with the ''Washington Post'', Ownby noted that Li does not endorse suicide in any of his recent statements, "But a practitioner at the end of his or her rope in China could certainly see as an endorsement for martyrdom, and perhaps choose his or her own means to achieve that."<ref>{{cite news |title=A Foe Rattles Beijing From Abroad (scroll down for article) |url=http://www.cesnur.org/2001/falun_march04.htm#Anchor-11481 | first=John |last=Pomfret |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=9 March 2001}}</ref>
''The New York Times''' Erick Eckholm opined that the Chinese government's propaganda was "as wooden and anachronistic as ever. First, suppress the news. Then, days later, orchestrate a crescendo of extreme television, radio and newspaper reports and editorials. Finally, marshall relatives of the duped victims to utter condemnations of the evil Master Li, then ask major groups -- from leaders of Catholic, Buddhist and Muslim churches to the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce -- to issue shrill denunciations." <ref>Erick Eckholm, , New York Times, Feb 4 2001, pg 4.5</ref>


== Aftermath ==
According to ], in February, state media accused CNN, the Associated Press, and Agence France-Presse news agencies of having "encouraged" the immolation at Tiananmen Square. The authorities also threatened journalists with legal action for "homicide." A CNN official confirms that one of his teams was arrested that day near Tiananmen Square and that police confiscated their videotapes. <ref name=RSF></ref> The agency accused the Chinese government of trying to discredit foreign coverage of the country's repression against the Falun Gong movement.


===Media campaign and public opinion===
===Later reports===
The state media coverage of the event resulted in increased support for the Party's persecution efforts against Falun Gong, and eroded public sympathy for the group. ''Time'' reported that prior to the self-immolation incident, many Chinese had felt that Falun Gong posed no real threat, and that the state's persecution had gone too far. After the event, however, China's media campaign against Falun Gong gained significant traction.<ref name="breakingpoint" /> The World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong reported that hostility toward Falun Gong from the general public escalated, the government had stepped up its campaign, and charged that "hate crimes" targeting Falun Gong increased.<ref name="WOIPFGpaper">{{cite web |author=WOIPFG |url=http://www.upholdjustice.org/node/200 |title=Investigation Reports on the Persecution of Falun Gong: Volume 1 |year=2003–2004 |publisher=World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong |access-date=4 October 2007}}</ref> One western diplomat commented that the public changed from sympathising with Falun Gong to siding with the Government, popular consensus seemingly shifted by human-interest stories and accounts of rehabilitation efforts of former practitioners.<ref name="ansfield">{{cite news |first=Jonathan |last=Ansfield |agency=Reuters |title=After Olympic win, China takes new aim at Falun Gong |date=23 July 2001}}</ref> Østergaard believes that, in retrospect, the New Year scripture was Li's greatest gift to the state, as the self-immolations marked a turning point which ended domestic support for the movement.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H80YZqSj7EEC&pg=PA208 |title=Governance in China |editor=Jude Howell |first=Clemens Stubbe |last=Østergaard |pages=220 (Governance and the Political Challenge of Falun Gong) |year=2003 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=0-7425-1988-0}}</ref>
According to state media, Liu Yunfang was sentenced to life imprisonment, Wang Jindong received a fifteen-year sentence, and a Beijing resident, who allegedly provided them lodging and helped in the preparation, received a seven-year sentence.


The self-immolation incident was given prominent coverage in the official Chinese media, which analysts say took a propagandistic line. According to ], the Communist Party "launched an all-out campaign to use the incident to prove its claim that Falun Gong is a dangerous cult, and to turn public opinion in China and abroad against the group&nbsp;... Every morning and night, the state-controlled media carry fresh attacks against Falun Gong and its U.S.-based leader, Li Hongzhi."<ref name=Pan/> Posters, leaflets and videos were produced, detailing the supposed detrimental effects of Falun Gong practice. The New York Times reported that the public was "bombarded with graphic images of the act on television and in newspapers."<ref>Erik Eckholm, "Beijing Judge Jails 4 for Promoting Falun Gong's Public Suicides", ''The New York Times'', 18 August 2001.</ref> In China's schools, regular anti-Falun Gong classes were scheduled.<ref name=oneway/> Eight million students joined the ''"Anti-Cult Action by the Youth Civilized Communities Across the Nation"''.<ref name=dangerous/> Twelve million children were made to submit writings disapproving of the practice.<ref name=dangerous/>
In April 2002, after denying press access to the victims for over a year, the government suddenly granted the first meeting of the victims with foreign press, in the presence of government officials. At the time of meeting with the press, Chen Guo and her mother were still in the hospital. Chen had a face of blotchy grafted skin with no nose and no ears and one eye covered by a flap of skin; she apparently had lost both her hands.<ref name=real/> Her mother had also lost her hands, ears and nose; both eyes were covered with skin grafts. Wang Jindong had scarred, leathery cheeks and blackened fingers.<ref name=real/> The survivors admitted to setting themselves on fire to "strengthen the force of Falun Gong", and denied that the government was involved in staging the immolation incident <ref name=real/>.


Within a month of the Tiananmen Square incident, authorities issued a document entitled ''The whole story of the self-immolation incident created by Falun Gong addicts in Tiananmen Square'', containing colour photographs of charred bodies.<ref name=dangerous/> The ]'s "Office for the Prevention and Handling of Evil Cults" declared after the event that it was now ready to form a united front with the "global anti-cult struggle".<ref name=dangerous/> Meetings took place in factories, offices, universities and schools, and approved religious leaders across the country had delivered denunciations of Falun Gong. In Kaifeng, the post office issued an anti-Falun Gong postmark, and 10,000 people signed a petition denouncing the group.<ref name=oneway/>
In 2005, the authorities announced Liu Yunfang's prison term was reduced to 19 years for good behavior. Liu said he stopped believing in Falun Gong on 27 September 2003. Wang Jindong said. "I have totally woken up and I think I should persuade people still addicted to Falun Gong to wake up, too. Wang's 15-year term was cut by 2½ years because he was "active in rehabilitation,".<ref>Audra Ang, , ], January 21, 2005 (as archived by CESNUR)</ref>


===Violence and re-education===
==See also==
''The Washington Post'' reported that Chinese authorities benefited from the turn in public opinion against Falun Gong that followed the self-immolation, seizing on the opportunity to sanction "the systematic use of violence against the group." According to ''the Post'', authorities "established a network of brainwashing classes and embarked on a painstaking effort to weed out followers neighbourhood by neighbourhood and workplace by workplace." According to sources, "reeducation" tactics employed included beatings, shocks with electric truncheons, and intensive anti-Falun Gong study classes.<ref name=breaking/>
* ]
* ]


According to a report published in the Wall Street Journal, in February 2001 the ] "stepped up pressure on local governments" to implement the anti-Falun Gong campaign. In particular, it issued new, detailed instructions requiring that all who continued to actively practice Falun Gong were to be sent to prison or labour camps, and individuals who refused to renounce the practice were to be socially isolated and monitored by their families and workplaces. This was a shift from the past, when local officials sometimes tolerated Falun Gong on the condition that it was practised privately.<ref>Charles Hutzler, "Falun Gong Feels Effect of China's Tighter Grip – Shift Means Even Private Practice Is Banned," Asian Wall Street Journal, 26 April 2001.</ref> According to Freedom House, In the year following the incident, the scale of imprisonment, torture, and deaths of Falun Gong practitioners in custody increased significantly. According to Freedom House, "months of relentless propaganda succeeded in turning public opinion against the group. Over the next year, the scale of imprisonment, torture, and even deaths of Falun Gong practitioners from abuse in custody increased dramatically."<ref name=Freedomhouse/>
==References==
{{reflist|2}}


] ===Impact on Falun Gong's resistance===
The self-immolation necessitated a change in tactics for Falun Gong. Tiananmen Square had been "permanently contaminated" as a venue for protest, according to journalist ], and Falun Gong's daily demonstrations in Beijing nearly ceased altogether.<ref name=dangerous/><ref name=ThinAir>Gutmann, Ethan. (6 December 2010) . '']''</ref> According to Human Rights Watch, practitioners may have concluded "the protests had outlived their usefulness for demonstrating Chinese abuses or for informing an overseas audience of Falungong's harmlessness."<ref name=dangerous/> Diaspora practitioners living overseas focused their attentions on getting the word out about the treatment of practitioners by the Chinese government, issuing reports to the United Nations and human rights organisations, staging public marches and hunger strikes outside of China, and documenting human rights abuses on websites.<ref name=dangerous/> Within China, practitioners used mass mailings and handed out literature to "spread the truth" and counter the government's allegations against them.<ref name=dangerous/> In an August 2001 press release, the US-based Falun Dafa Information Center noted this shift in strategy, and said that Chinese practitioners "sometimes also manage to post large posters and banners in major thoroughfares. They even set up loudspeakers on rooftops or trees around labour camps and in densely populated areas to broadcast news about the human rights abuses."<ref name=dangerous/>
]
]
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In 2002, Falun Gong practitioners in ] successfully broadcast the two film on Chinese state television, accusing the authorities of staging the self-immolation, interrupting scheduled programming for 50 minutes.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/1860159.stm |date=7 March 2002 |title=Falun Gong breaks onto China's airwaves |work=BBC News}}</ref> Liu Chengjun, a Falun Gong practitioner who hacked into the satellite feed, was arrested and sentenced to prison, where he died 21 months later, allegedly tortured to death.<ref name=USDOS2003-2005>{{cite web|url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2003/27768.htm|title=2003 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: China (includes Tibet, Hong Kong, and Macau)|last=Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor|publisher=US Department of State|access-date=3 October 2009}}<br />{{cite web|url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2005/51509.htm|title=International Religious Freedom Report 2005: China (includes Tibet, Hong Kong, and Macau)|last=Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor|publisher=US Department of State|access-date=3 October 2009}}<br />The United States Department of State said Liu Chengjun had reportedly been "abused in custody" and "beaten to death by police in Jilin City Prison".</ref> The remaining five individuals behind the television hijacking were also imprisoned, and all have reportedly died or been tortured to death in custody.<ref name=ThinAir/>
]

===Fate of the self-immolators===
Five of the people involved in the incident were sentenced in mid-2001. Although the official ] news agency had described the proceedings as a "public trial," only the final day in the month-long trial was public, and consisted mainly of the reading of verdicts.<ref name="gittings2"/> ''The Guardian'' reported that on the last day of the one-month trial, ] had, by mid-morning, issued a full report of the verdicts; the '']'' had produced its own editorial by the afternoon.<ref name="gittings2"/>

Liu Yunfang, named as the mastermind, was given a life sentence; Wang Jindong was given 15 years. Two other accomplices – a 49-year-old man named Xue Hongjun, and a 34-year-old Beijing woman named Liu Xiuqin who apparently provided the group with lodging and helped in the preparation of the incident – were sentenced to 10 and 7 years in prison respectively.<ref name="gittings2"/><ref name=real/> Liu Baorong, who had "acknowledged her crime", escaped punishment because her role in planning the event was minor. Wang Jindong went an hunger strike and his wife and daughter were taken to a reform camp.<ref name="gittings2">{{cite web |first=John |last=Gittings |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/aug/21/worlddispatch.china |title=Chinese whispers surround Falun Gong trial |work=The Guardian |date=21 August 2001}}</ref>

After having denied foreign media access to the self-immolation victims for the previous year, in April 2002 the government arranged for foreign press to interview the purported survivors of the self-immolation in the presence of state officials.<ref name=real/> The interviewees refuted claims that the self-immolation was staged, showing their burn injuries as evidence, and denounced Falun Gong while expressing support for the authorities' handling of the group.<ref name=real>{{cite web |first=Jeremy |last=Page |url=http://www.facts.org.cn/Reports/World/200708/t60322.htm |title=Reuters: Survivors say China Falun Gong immolations real |date=4 April 2002 |publisher=Facts.org |access-date=24 October 2013 |archive-date=21 September 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130921060146/http://www.facts.org.cn/Reports/World/200708/t60322.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> When asked why they set themselves on fire, Hao Huijun replied that she had realized the futility of writing letters and demonstrating by waving banners, "so finally, we decided&nbsp;... to make a big event to show our will to the world.&nbsp;... We wanted to show the government that Falun Gong was good."<ref name=real/> At the time of the interview, Chen Guo and her mother were said to still be in the hospital, both having lost their hands, ears and noses.<ref name=real/> Both her mother's eyes were covered with skin grafts. Wang Jindong, showing burns to his face, said he felt "humiliated because of my stupidity and fanatical ideas."<ref name=real/>

== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}

== External links ==
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Latest revision as of 16:55, 24 November 2024

2001 incident in China

2001 Tiananmen Square self-immolation incident
Simplified Chinese天安门自焚事件
Traditional Chinese天安門自焚事件
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTiān'ānmén Zìfén Shìjiàn

The 2001 Tiananmen Square self-immolation incident took place in Tiananmen Square in central Beijing, on the eve of Chinese New Year on 23 January 2001. There is controversy over the incident; Chinese government sources say that five members of Falun Gong, a new religious movement that is banned in mainland China, set themselves on fire in the square. Falun Gong sources disputed the accuracy of these portrayals, and claimed that their teachings explicitly forbid violence or suicide. Some journalists have claimed that the self-immolations were staged.

According to Chinese state media, a group of seven people had travelled to Beijing from Henan province, and five set themselves on fire on Tiananmen Square. In the Chinese press, the event was used as proof of the dangers of Falun Gong, and was used to legitimise the government's campaign against the group.

The official account of events soon came under scrutiny, however. Two weeks after the self-immolation event, The Washington Post published an investigation into the identity of the two self-immolation victims who were killed, and found that "no one ever saw practice Falun Gong".

Human Rights Watch (HRW) wrote that "the incident was among one of the most difficult stories for reporters in Beijing at the time to report on" because of a lack of independent information available. The self-immolation victims were accessible only to reporters from China's state-run press; international media, and even the victims' family members were barred from contacting them. A wide variety of opinions and interpretations of what may have happened then emerged: the event may have been set up by the government to frame Falun Gong; it may have been an authentic protest; the self-immolators could have been "new or unschooled" Falun Gong practitioners; and other views.

The campaign of state propaganda that followed the event eroded public sympathy for Falun Gong. Time magazine noted that many Chinese had previously felt that Falun Gong posed no real threat, and that the state's crackdown against it had gone too far. After the self-immolation, however, the media campaign against the group gained significant traction. Posters, leaflets and videos were produced detailing the supposed detrimental effects of Falun Gong practice, and regular anti-Falun Gong classes were scheduled in schools. CNN compared the government's propaganda initiative to past political movements such as the Korean War and the Cultural Revolution. Later, as public opinion turned against the group, according to sources, the Chinese authorities began sanctioning the "systematic use of violence" to eliminate Falun Gong. In the year following the incident, Freedom House said that the imprisonment, torture, and deaths of Falun Gong practitioners in custody increased significantly.

Background

See also: History of Falun Gong
Falun Gong practitioners demonstrating outside the Zhongnanhai government compound in April 1999 to request an end to official harassment of Falun Gong practitioners. Soon thereafter, a nationwide persecution of the practice began.

Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a form of spiritual qigong practice that involves meditative exercises, and a philosophy drawing on Buddhist and Taoist tradition introduced by Li Hongzhi in Northeast China in the spring of 1992. By the late 1990s, it had attracted tens of millions of followers. Falun Gong initially enjoyed official recognition and support during the early years of its development. By the mid-1990s, however, Chinese authorities sought to rein in the growth of qigong practices, enacting more stringent requirements on the country's various qigong denominations. In 1996, Falun Gong came under increasing criticism and surveillance from the country's security apparatus.

On 25 April 1999, more than ten thousand practitioners congregated outside Chinese Communist Party (CCP) headquarters in Zhongnanhai to request legal recognition. That evening, then-CCP general secretary Jiang Zemin issued a decision to eradicate Falun Gong. At Jiang's direction, on 7 June 1999 a special leading group was established within the party's Central Committee to manage the persecution. The resulting organisation, called the 6-10 Office, assumed the role of coordinating the anti-Falun Gong media coverage in the state-run press, as well influencing other party and state entities such as the courts and security agencies. On 19 July, the Central Committee of the Communist Party issued a document effectively banning the practice of Falun Gong. The following day, hundreds of practitioners were detained by security forces.

The persecution that followed was characterised by a "massive propaganda campaign" intended to justify the persecution by portraying Falun Gong as superstitious, dangerous, and incompatible with the official ideology. Tens of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners were imprisoned, and by the end of 1999, reports began to emerge of torture in custody. According to Ian Johnson, authorities were given broad mandates to eliminate Falun Gong and pursue the coercive conversion of practitioners, but were not scrutinised for the methods they used. This resulted in the widespread use of torture, sometimes resulting in death.

Tiananmen Square was one of the main venues where Falun Gong practitioners gathered to protest the persecution, usually by raising banners in defence of the group, or stage peaceful meditation sit-ins. Ian Johnson of the Wall Street Journal estimated that by 25 April 2000, more than 30,000 practitioners had been arrested for attempting to demonstrate in Beijing, most of them in or on the way to Tiananmen Square. Seven hundred Falun Gong followers were arrested during a demonstration in the Square on 1 January 2001.

Chinese authorities struggled throughout the early years of the persecution to turn public opinion against Falun Gong. Instead, the campaign garnered criticisms from across a wide spectrum of Chinese society, with some commentators drawing comparisons to the Cultural Revolution and Nazi Germany's treatment of the Jews. According to Human Rights Watch, "the leadership's frustration with the failure of its efforts to quickly and thoroughly dismantle Falungong was also evident in its media campaign." The state-run press admitted in late 2000 that Falun Gong was continuing to stage protests in defiance of the ban, and proclaimed that "the 'broad masses' had to be made to understand the 'duration, complexity and ferocity of our battle with Falun Gong.'" In January 2001, Chinese authorities launched a new wave of propaganda to discredit Falun Gong in which they urged state-run media organizations to vilify the group.

Incident

On 23 January 2001, the eve of Chinese New Year, five people in Tiananmen Square poured gasoline over their clothes and set themselves on fire.

A CNN film crew, who were there on a routine check for a possible Falun Gong protest, observed a man sitting down on the pavement northeast of the Monument to the People's Heroes at the centre of the square. He proceeded to pour gasoline over himself and set himself ablaze. Police officers quickly congregated on the scene and extinguished the flames. Shortly afterwards, another four people on the square set themselves alight. One of the four, a man, was detained and driven away in a police van.

CNN reported that at least two men and altogether five people set themselves on fire after pouring gasoline over themselves. They did not see a child among the self-immolators. The CNN crew began filming the events from a distance, but were quickly intercepted by military police, who detained the journalists and confiscated their equipment. The authorities then put out the flames consuming the other four people's clothing. A police van came to collect the badly burnt man, and two ambulances arrived almost 25 minutes later to collect the other four. The square was completely closed, and security was tight the next day, the most important of the traditional Chinese holidays. Police monitored public access to the square for the New Year celebrations, had fire extinguishers ready, and prevented Falun Gong practitioners from opening banners.

Xinhua named seven individuals as having been involved: Wang Jindong (王进东), Liu Chunling (刘春玲), Liu Siying (刘思影), Chen Guo (陈果), Hao Huijun (郝惠君); Liu Baorong (刘葆荣) and Liu Yunfang (刘云芳). Liu Chunling reportedly died on the scene. A few months later, state media announced the death of her daughter Liu Siying, who, according to state-news, had been hospitalised with severe burns following the incident. The other three were reported to have been "severely disfigured". Beijing denied requests from western journalists to interview the survivors, and only China Central Television and the official New China News Agency were permitted to speak to their relatives or their colleagues.

Chinese media reports

Xinhua released a story about the incident to foreign media two hours after the self-immolation occurred. Xinhua then distributed a fuller press release seven days later on Tuesday, 30 January, in response to other media reports on the incident. On 31 January, a 30-minute special edition of the current affairs programme Forum told the state's version of the events to the Chinese public. China Central Television aired footage, said to be taken by nearby surveillance cameras, of five people in flames.

The Chinese authorities stated that the seven people who had come to Tiananmen Square with the intention of self-immolating were all from the city of Kaifeng in Henan province. The state-run Xinhua News Agency asserted that the self-immolators were "avid practitioners" of Falun Gong who had taken up the practice between 1994 and 1997, and that they fantasised during the preceding week about "how wonderful it would be to enter heaven". Six of them reportedly took the train on 16 January, meeting Chen Guo, the daughter of one of them, upon their arrival in Beijing. The seven agreed to light themselves in different parts of the Square at 2:30 pm on the designated day with gasoline smuggled there in plastic soda bottles; each had been armed with two lighters in case one would fail. According to the government-run China Association For Cultic Studies website, Wang Jindong stated afterwards that the group arrived in Tiananmen Square by two taxis, and were dropped off at the south of the Great Hall of the People, from where they walked to the spot where they would ignite themselves. Wang said he was approached by police as he was splitting open the soda bottles, and ignited himself hurriedly without assuming the lotus position. A press release from the Chinese government says that Liu Yunfang felt that the police were able to stop him burning himself because he had not attained the "required spiritual level."

Articles in the Yangcheng Evening News and the Southern Daily reported that police had evidence that a few foreign reporters had advance knowledge of the incident, and suggested that such reporters could be charged with "instigating and abetting a suicide." State media claimed surveillance video showed six or seven reporters from CNN, the Associated Press and Agence France-Presse arriving just 10 minutes before the self-immolations took place; however, all three agencies denied advance knowledge of the incident—AP and AFP said they had no reporters in the square at the time, while CNN's chief news executive, Eason Jordan, said the CNN crew were there on a routine check for a possible Falun Gong protest.

Falun Gong response

Discrepancies pointed out by the False Fire documentary


According to the documentary False Fire, Liu Chunling, the only self-immolator to have died on the scene, appears to collapse from being bludgeoned on the head by a man in military suit.
False Fire, a NTDTV attempt to deconstruct the event points out several inconsistencies in the Chinese Government's version of the story, including:

  • Liu Chunling, the only self-immolator who died on the spot appears to fall from being bludgeoned on the head by a man in military suit. The programme argues that Liu could have died from a severe blow to the head.
  • The self immolators appear to be wearing several layers of, possibly fire-protective, clothing and masks. The hair and bottle of gasoline at the feet of an alleged self-immolator are intact, although this should have caught fire first.
  • Police, who normally are not known to carry fire extinguishers on duty, appeared to have used almost 25 pieces of fire-fighting equipment on hand on the day of the self-immolations. The nearest building is 10 minutes away and footage shows that only two police vehicles were at the scene. The flames were put out in less than a minute's time.
  • The camera of the CCTV footage zooms in on the scene as it unfolds; surveillance cameras in Tiananmen Square are usually fixed.
  • Wang Jindong shouts comments that do not form part of Falun Dafa teachings; his posture, including hand position and sitting position, does not reflect the full or half lotus position required in Falun Dafa exercises.
  • The hospital treatment of the victims, as recorded by Chinese state media, is inconsistent with proper care of severe burn victims: for instance, patients were not kept in sterile rooms.
  • The girl who allegedly underwent a tracheotomy appeared to be able to speak and sing clearly mere days after the surgery.

Immediately following the self-immolation, the Falun Dafa Information Center denied that the self-immolators could have been Falun Gong practitioners, emphatically pointing out that Falun Gong's teachings do not sanction any form of violence, and that suicide is considered a sin.

Falun Gong sources overseas questioned the official Chinese government account of the event, and apparent inconsistencies in government's official narrative led to a hypothesis that the self-immolation was staged by the government to justify the persecution against Falun Gong by portraying its practitioners as irrational and suicidal. According to this hypothesis, the self-immolation participants were paid actors, and were presumably assured that the flames would be extinguished before doing real harm.

Falun Gong-affiliated New Tang Dynasty Television produced a programme called False Fire, which analyses the inconsistencies in the accounts of the event in the official Chinese media.

Based on a review of CCTV footage, the programme purports to demonstrate that the self-immolators donned fire-proof clothing and masks, and raises the question of why the participants' hair and the apparently gasoline-filled bottles they carried did not catch fire. Falun Gong sources also noted that the self-immolators' behaviour, the slogans they shouted, and their meditation postures were not consistent with the teachings or practices of Falun Gong. Furthermore, the program's frame-by-frame analysis of the CCTV footage purportedly shows that Liu was actually killed by a deadly blow to the head from a man in a military overcoat. The False Fire documentary described the death of 12-year-old Liu Siying as being under "unusual circumstances", saying that she was apparently recovering well before dying suddenly on 17 March. Some Falun Gong sources argue that she may have been killed by the government as a way of guaranteeing her silence.

The program suggests that the reaction time of state-run television crews and police on Tiananmen Square demonstrates they had advance knowledge of the event. They observed that officers arrived almost immediately on the scene equipped with numerous fire extinguishers. Fire extinguishers are not standard equipment for police on Tiananmen Square; the nearest building that would house them was several minutes away from the scene.

Third-party findings

composite image of three portraits and a table comparing them
Three pictures broadcast by state-media, presented by Falun Gong as evidence that Wang Jindong "was played by different people".

The identities of some of the self-immolators, and their relationship to Falun Gong, was called into question by Philip Pan of the Washington Post. While state-run Xinhua News Agency had reported that Liu Chunling's adoptive mother spoke of Liu's "obsession with Falun Gong", her "worshipping of Li Hongzhi", and that Liu would teach her daughter Falun Gong, Pan found most residents in Kaifeng felt disgraced by what Liu had done (i.e. the self-immolation), but none of Liu's neighbours had ever observed her practising Falun Gong. They said that Liu abused her mother, and the reporter heard that Liu "worked in a nightclub, took money to keep men company". According to David Ownby, a University of Montreal historian and expert on Falun Gong, Pan's portrayal of Liu Chunlin is highly inconsistent with the typical profile of a Falun Gong practitioner.

Several observers have noted that foreign journalists were not allowed to interview the self-immolation victims recovering in hospitals. Even the victims' relatives were not permitted to speak with them, according to David Ownby. Pan wrote that "Beijing denied requests to interview Liu Siying and the three other survivors, who are all hospitalized ... A Kaifeng official said only China Central Television and the official New China News Agency were permitted to speak to their relatives or their colleagues. A man who answered the door at the Liu home referred questions to the government." The survivors were interviewed by the state-run press, however. In one such interview, CCTV interviewed the 12-year-old Liu Siying. Government sources reported Liu Siying had undergone a tracheotomy shortly before the interview. Speaking through approved media outlets, she said that her own mother told her to set herself on fire to reach the "heavenly golden kingdom".

Ian Johnson observed the state media "reported death with unusual alacrity, implying that either the death took place earlier than reported or the usually cautious media had top-level approval to rush out electronic reports and a televised dispatch."

Questions were also raised over where the footage of the event came from, and the speed with which camera crews appeared on scene. Chinese government media reported that the close-up shots in its video footage came from confiscated CNN tapes. CNN representatives argued that this was impossible, however, as their reporters were detained shortly after the event began and were not allowed to film the rest. Pan was also suspicious of the positioning of the cameras, and the fact that the close-up shots shown on Chinese television were taken without police interference. "In some, the camera is clearly behind police barricades", the Washington Post article says. In addition, overhead surveillance camera footage seemed to show a man filming the scene using a small hand-held camera, rather than a large camera of the type used for TV news reporting.

The Age commented that the "ready availability of fire-extinguishers and official TV teams and the lack of verification about the victims" raised questions about whether authorities had advanced knowledge of the self-immolation. Police were on the scene of the self-immolation within 90 seconds carrying numerous pieces of firefighting equipment. A European journalist was quoted as saying "I have never seen policemen patrolling on Tiananmen Square carrying fire extinguishers. How come they all showed up today? The location of the incident is at least 20 minutes roundtrip from the nearest building – the People's Great Hall." John Gittings of The Guardian stated, however, that it was common practice in many countries for police camera operators to be on hand when a public disturbance is anticipated; the police used small-scale fire-extinguishers of the type carried in public vehicles, many of which are routinely on the square.

James R. Lewis pointed out that it is highly unlikely that these victims were paid. He wrote that it was likely “a demonstration planned and executed by local practitioners—though directly inspired by a combination of Li Hongzhi’s violent apocalyptic vision, his call to non-specific action against the Chinese government, and examples of prior religious suicides and protest suicides”.

According to the Hong Kong-based Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy, all self-immolators except Liu Siying previously participated in protests against China's actions on Falun Gong on Tiananmen.

Dispute

Following the incident, the details of why the individuals were involved has been and remains the subject of dispute between representatives of Falun Gong, the Chinese government, and other observers.

A significant challenge to arriving at a definitive assessment of the event is that independent corroboration of the government's claims has not been possible. According to Human Rights Watch (HRW), the lack of independent information made the incident one of the most difficult stories for reporters in Beijing to report. The New York Times stated that conflicting claims were difficult to assess "ith propaganda streaming in from seemingly opposite ends of the universe ... especially since the remaining Falun Gong practitioners have been driven underground."

Philip Pan's investigation, and other inconsistencies highlighted by Falun Gong organisations, led some journalists and other observers to entertain the possibility that the self-immolation was not as straightforward as the Chinese official media accounts suggested. In the National Review, Ann Noonan of the Laogai Research Foundation suggested that it was "hardly a far-fetched hypothesis" that the government staged the incident or allowed it to proceed to discredit Falun Gong, as the government vowed to crush the practice before the eightieth anniversary celebrations of the Communist Party in July. Clive Ansley, a Vancouver-based rights lawyer who lived in China during the self-immolation, suggested that a dramatic response by Falun Gong would have been understandable, but ultimately concluded that the event was staged: "You've got Falun Gong people in this country, they've been oppressed over and over again, they are not allowed to speak, they are not allowed to assert any of their rights as citizens, the level of frustration must be terribly, terribly high.. I can understand people doing that.. but ironically, we ultimately found out that it was staged anyway, it was not real. It was completely staged by the government."

Reviewing the divergent narratives on the identity of the self-immolation victims, historian David Ownby concluded that "although the arguments of Falun Gong practitioners seem cogent, it is very difficult to arrive at a final judgment about the self-immolation. ... there are desperate people in China (and elsewhere) who will do anything for money (which would go to their families in this case, one supposes, unless the authorities had promised to rescue them before the flames could do harm). Or the entire event could have been staged. But it seems just as possible that those who set themselves on fire might have been new or unschooled Falun Gong practitioners, had discovered and practised Falun Gong on their own (and badly) in the post-suppression period, and, for whatever reason, decided to make the ultimate sacrifice."

Other human rights activists speculated that the five who set themselves on fire did so to protest the government's crackdown on Falun Gong. Barend ter Haar was open to the idea that the self-immolators were Falun Gong practitioners, and postulated that former Buddhists may have brought with them the "respectable Buddhist tradition of self-immolation as a sacrifice to the Buddha". He sought to account for the inconsistencies by suggesting that the government may have fabricated a video of their own when they realised the mediatic potential of the suicides.

Francesco Sisci, Asia editor of La Stampa, supported the possibility that the self-immolators were Falun Gong practitioners, writing in the Asia Times that "no one believed that the government could have paid a mother to torch herself and her daughter, or that she was so loyal to the Communist Party that she pretended to be a Falungong member and kill herself and her only daughter, even if Falungong master Li Hongzhi forbade suicide ..." In Sisci's view, Chinese officials made a mistake by arresting foreign journalists on Tiananmen —"independently filmed news footage of the proceedings could have been the best proof of Falungong madness. Instead, when the government reported the episode, it looked like propaganda."

Time noted some of the confusion surrounding the conflicting views on the self-immolation; one Beijing Falun Gong practitioner interviewed appeared to accept that the self-immolators were practitioners engaged in protest, while Falun Gong organisations overseas denied any involvement. Time also speculated that the "lack of solidarity" in Falun Gong was contributing to the sense of desperation of Mainland Chinese practitioners who may feel out of touch with the exiled leadership. Guardian reporter John Gittings reported that some observers believed it was possible that the self-immolators acted in desperation and confusion.

Some observers have speculated that if the participants were Falun Gong practitioners, they may have resorted to self-immolation in response to the publication of a new scripture by Li Hongzhi released on 1 January 2001, "Beyond the Limits of Forbearance." An article authored by a collection of Mainland Chinese Falun Gong practitioners and published on the main Chinese-language Falun Gong website noted that the scripture had caused confusion both among Falun Gong practitioners and "in society," and that some people wondered whether Falun Gong would resort to violence to resist persecution. The authors wrote that this would not occur, as violence would be both counterproductive and contrary to the core teachings of the practice. A Falun Gong spokesperson clarified that the new scripture simply meant it was time to "bring truth to light" about human rights abuses committed by the Chinese government. Nonetheless, Gittings posited that the scripture may have confused Falun Gong followers, particularly in Mainland China. Matthew Forney wrote in Time magazine that Li's message had spread into China via the internet and informal networks of followers, and speculated that it may have galvanised more radical practitioners there. David Ownby wrote that he found the brief message to be "difficult to interpret": on its surface, the scripture resembled a "call to arms" against what Li described as "evil beings who no longer have any human nature or righteous thoughts." Yet Ownby said no practitioners he talked to had seen the scripture as a "green light" for violent action. Instead, practitioners had interpreted it to mean exactly the opposite, that they could non-violently resist suppression without guilt; they could stop "simply surrendering to the police at the first moment of a confrontation. They could run away, they could organize, they were, in a word, free of whatever constraints the necessity to "forbear" had previously placed upon them." In an interview with the Washington Post, Ownby noted that Li does not endorse suicide in any of his recent statements, "But a practitioner at the end of his or her rope in China could certainly see as an endorsement for martyrdom, and perhaps choose his or her own means to achieve that."

Aftermath

Media campaign and public opinion

The state media coverage of the event resulted in increased support for the Party's persecution efforts against Falun Gong, and eroded public sympathy for the group. Time reported that prior to the self-immolation incident, many Chinese had felt that Falun Gong posed no real threat, and that the state's persecution had gone too far. After the event, however, China's media campaign against Falun Gong gained significant traction. The World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong reported that hostility toward Falun Gong from the general public escalated, the government had stepped up its campaign, and charged that "hate crimes" targeting Falun Gong increased. One western diplomat commented that the public changed from sympathising with Falun Gong to siding with the Government, popular consensus seemingly shifted by human-interest stories and accounts of rehabilitation efforts of former practitioners. Østergaard believes that, in retrospect, the New Year scripture was Li's greatest gift to the state, as the self-immolations marked a turning point which ended domestic support for the movement.

The self-immolation incident was given prominent coverage in the official Chinese media, which analysts say took a propagandistic line. According to Philip Pan, the Communist Party "launched an all-out campaign to use the incident to prove its claim that Falun Gong is a dangerous cult, and to turn public opinion in China and abroad against the group ... Every morning and night, the state-controlled media carry fresh attacks against Falun Gong and its U.S.-based leader, Li Hongzhi." Posters, leaflets and videos were produced, detailing the supposed detrimental effects of Falun Gong practice. The New York Times reported that the public was "bombarded with graphic images of the act on television and in newspapers." In China's schools, regular anti-Falun Gong classes were scheduled. Eight million students joined the "Anti-Cult Action by the Youth Civilized Communities Across the Nation". Twelve million children were made to submit writings disapproving of the practice.

Within a month of the Tiananmen Square incident, authorities issued a document entitled The whole story of the self-immolation incident created by Falun Gong addicts in Tiananmen Square, containing colour photographs of charred bodies. The State Council's "Office for the Prevention and Handling of Evil Cults" declared after the event that it was now ready to form a united front with the "global anti-cult struggle". Meetings took place in factories, offices, universities and schools, and approved religious leaders across the country had delivered denunciations of Falun Gong. In Kaifeng, the post office issued an anti-Falun Gong postmark, and 10,000 people signed a petition denouncing the group.

Violence and re-education

The Washington Post reported that Chinese authorities benefited from the turn in public opinion against Falun Gong that followed the self-immolation, seizing on the opportunity to sanction "the systematic use of violence against the group." According to the Post, authorities "established a network of brainwashing classes and embarked on a painstaking effort to weed out followers neighbourhood by neighbourhood and workplace by workplace." According to sources, "reeducation" tactics employed included beatings, shocks with electric truncheons, and intensive anti-Falun Gong study classes.

According to a report published in the Wall Street Journal, in February 2001 the 6-10 Office "stepped up pressure on local governments" to implement the anti-Falun Gong campaign. In particular, it issued new, detailed instructions requiring that all who continued to actively practice Falun Gong were to be sent to prison or labour camps, and individuals who refused to renounce the practice were to be socially isolated and monitored by their families and workplaces. This was a shift from the past, when local officials sometimes tolerated Falun Gong on the condition that it was practised privately. According to Freedom House, In the year following the incident, the scale of imprisonment, torture, and deaths of Falun Gong practitioners in custody increased significantly. According to Freedom House, "months of relentless propaganda succeeded in turning public opinion against the group. Over the next year, the scale of imprisonment, torture, and even deaths of Falun Gong practitioners from abuse in custody increased dramatically."

Impact on Falun Gong's resistance

The self-immolation necessitated a change in tactics for Falun Gong. Tiananmen Square had been "permanently contaminated" as a venue for protest, according to journalist Ethan Gutmann, and Falun Gong's daily demonstrations in Beijing nearly ceased altogether. According to Human Rights Watch, practitioners may have concluded "the protests had outlived their usefulness for demonstrating Chinese abuses or for informing an overseas audience of Falungong's harmlessness." Diaspora practitioners living overseas focused their attentions on getting the word out about the treatment of practitioners by the Chinese government, issuing reports to the United Nations and human rights organisations, staging public marches and hunger strikes outside of China, and documenting human rights abuses on websites. Within China, practitioners used mass mailings and handed out literature to "spread the truth" and counter the government's allegations against them. In an August 2001 press release, the US-based Falun Dafa Information Center noted this shift in strategy, and said that Chinese practitioners "sometimes also manage to post large posters and banners in major thoroughfares. They even set up loudspeakers on rooftops or trees around labour camps and in densely populated areas to broadcast news about the human rights abuses."

In 2002, Falun Gong practitioners in Changchun successfully broadcast the two film on Chinese state television, accusing the authorities of staging the self-immolation, interrupting scheduled programming for 50 minutes. Liu Chengjun, a Falun Gong practitioner who hacked into the satellite feed, was arrested and sentenced to prison, where he died 21 months later, allegedly tortured to death. The remaining five individuals behind the television hijacking were also imprisoned, and all have reportedly died or been tortured to death in custody.

Fate of the self-immolators

Five of the people involved in the incident were sentenced in mid-2001. Although the official Xinhua news agency had described the proceedings as a "public trial," only the final day in the month-long trial was public, and consisted mainly of the reading of verdicts. The Guardian reported that on the last day of the one-month trial, Xinhua had, by mid-morning, issued a full report of the verdicts; the People's Daily had produced its own editorial by the afternoon.

Liu Yunfang, named as the mastermind, was given a life sentence; Wang Jindong was given 15 years. Two other accomplices – a 49-year-old man named Xue Hongjun, and a 34-year-old Beijing woman named Liu Xiuqin who apparently provided the group with lodging and helped in the preparation of the incident – were sentenced to 10 and 7 years in prison respectively. Liu Baorong, who had "acknowledged her crime", escaped punishment because her role in planning the event was minor. Wang Jindong went an hunger strike and his wife and daughter were taken to a reform camp.

After having denied foreign media access to the self-immolation victims for the previous year, in April 2002 the government arranged for foreign press to interview the purported survivors of the self-immolation in the presence of state officials. The interviewees refuted claims that the self-immolation was staged, showing their burn injuries as evidence, and denounced Falun Gong while expressing support for the authorities' handling of the group. When asked why they set themselves on fire, Hao Huijun replied that she had realized the futility of writing letters and demonstrating by waving banners, "so finally, we decided ... to make a big event to show our will to the world. ... We wanted to show the government that Falun Gong was good." At the time of the interview, Chen Guo and her mother were said to still be in the hospital, both having lost their hands, ears and noses. Both her mother's eyes were covered with skin grafts. Wang Jindong, showing burns to his face, said he felt "humiliated because of my stupidity and fanatical ideas."

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