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{{Falun Gong}}
] Gong adherents practice the fifth exercise, a meditation, in ]]]
''']''' was introduced to the general public by ](李洪志) in ], ], in 1992. For the next few years, Falun Gong was the fastest growing '']'' practice in Chinese history and, by 1999, there were between 70 and 100 million people practicing Falun Gong in China.<ref name=Stats> Source of Statistical Information, , accessed 01/01/08</ref> Following the seven years of wide-spread popularity, on ], ], the government of the ] began a nationwide persecution campaign against Falun Gong practitioners, except in the special administrative regions of ] and ].<ref>Faison, Seth (April 27, 1999) ''New York Times'', retrieved June 10, 2006</ref><ref>Kahn, Joseph (April 27, 1999) ''New York Times'', retrieved June 14, 2006</ref> In late 1999, legislation was created to outlaw "heterodox religions" and retroactively applied to Falun Gong.<ref name="Leung"> Leung, Beatrice (2002) 'China and Falun Gong: Party and society relations in the modern era', Journal of Contemporary China, 11:33, 761 – 784</ref>] states that the persecution is politically motivated with "legislation being used retroactively to convict people on politically-driven charges, and new regulations introduced to further restrict fundamental freedoms."<ref name="Leung"> Leung, Beatrice (2002) 'China and Falun Gong: Party and society relations in the modern era', Journal of Contemporary China, 11:33, 761 – 784</ref><ref name=Amnesty1>, The Amnesty International</ref>
], also called Falun Dafa, is a spiritual practice and ] that combines the practice of meditation with the moral philosophy articulated by its leader and founder, ]. It emerged on the public radar in the Spring of 1992 in the northeastern Chinese city of ], and was classified as a system of ] identifying with the Buddhist tradition. Li claimed to have both supernatural powers like the ability to prevent illness, as well having eternal youth and promised that others can attain supernatural powers and eternal youth by following his teachings.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Yoffe |first=Emily |date=2001-08-10 |title=The Gong Show |language=en-US |work=Slate |url=https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2001/08/the-gong-show.html |access-date=2023-02-13 |issn=1091-2339}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2019-04-25 |title=Were human organs stolen in 20-year conflict between Beijing and Falun Gong? |url=https://www.rfi.fr/en/asia-pacific/20190418-were-human-organs-stolen-20-year-conflict-between-beijing-and-falun-gong |access-date=2023-02-13 |website=RFI |language=en}}</ref> Falun Gong initially enjoyed official sanction and support from Chinese government agencies, and the practice grew quickly on account of the simplicity of its exercise movements, impact on health, the absence of fees or formal membership, and moral and philosophical teachings.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>


In the mid-1990s, however, Falun Gong became estranged from the state-run qigong associations, leading to a gradual escalation of tensions with ] (CCP) authorities that culminated in the Spring of 1999. Following a protest of 10,000 Falun Gong practitioners near the ] government compound on 25 April 1999 to request official recognition, then-] ] ordered Falun Gong be crushed. A campaign of propaganda, large-scale extrajudicial imprisonment, torture and coercive reeducation ensued. {{Citation needed|date=May 2024}}
The nature of Chinese Communist Party rule is considered a central cause of the persecution. According to David Ownby, Falun Gong's popularity,<ref name="Ownbyworld">David Ownby, "The Falun Gong in the New World," European Journal of East Asian Studies, Sep2003, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p 306</ref> traditional roots,<ref name="Ownbyming">Ownby, David, "A History for Falun Gong: Popular Religion and the Chinese State Since the Ming Dynasty", Nova Religio, Vol. ,pp. 223-243</ref><ref>Barend ter Haar, '''' </ref> and distinction from marxist-atheist ideology were perceived as a challenge by the Chinese government.<ref name=lestz>Michael Lestz, , Religion in the News, Fall 1999, Vol. 2, No. 3, Trinity College, Massachusetts</ref> Reports suggest that certain high-level Communist Party officials had wanted to crackdown on the practice for some years,<ref name=XIX /> but lacked pretext or support--until a number of appeals and petitions to the authorities in 1999, in particular, a 10,000 person silent protest at Zhongnanhai on April 25th.<ref name=XIX>Julia Ching, "The Falun Gong: Religious and Political Implications," ''American Asian Review'', Vol. XIX, no. 4, Winter 2001, p. 12</ref><ref name="Amnesty1">, Amnesty International</ref> Reportedly many high-ranking members of the politburo were opposed to the persecution, and some analysts consider ] personally responsible for the final decision and the ensuing "Mao-style political campaign."<ref name=lamsupp /><ref name=Saich>Tony Saich, ''Governance and Politics in China,'' Palgrave Macmillan; 2nd Ed edition (27 Feb 2004)</ref> Suspected motives include personal jealousy of ]'s popularity,<ref name=Peerman>Dean Peerman, , Christian Century, August 10, 2004</ref> and a manufactured ideological struggle to enforce allegiance of both the populace and the party members to himself and the leadership.<ref name=XIX /><ref name=Peerman />


Falun Gong practitioners have responded to the campaign with protests on ], the creation of their own media companies overseas, international lawsuits targeting Chinese officials, and the establishment of a network of underground publishing sites to produce literature on the practice within China. Falun Gong has emerged as a prominent voice for an end to one-party rule in China.
The persecution is considered a major violation of human rights, and international human rights groups have called on the Chinese government to end the persecution<ref name="HRW1">, Human Rights Watch</ref> and release practitioners sentenced to detention for peaceful activities.<ref name="HRW2">, Human Rights Watch</ref> Reports state that every aspect of society was used by the Party to persecute Falun Gong, including the media apparatus, police force, army, education system, families, and workplaces.<ref name=wildgrass>Johnson, Ian, ''Wild Grass: three portraits of change in modern china'', Vintage (March 8, 2005)</ref> An extra-constitutional body, the ] was created to "oversee the terror campaign,"<ref name=morais>Morais, Richard C., ''Forbes'', February 9, 2006, retrieved ] ]</ref> driven by a large-scale propaganda through television, newspaper, radio and internet.<ref name=Leung/> Propaganda urged families and workplaces to actively assist in the campaign, and practitioners were subject to severe torture to have them recant.<ref name=dangerous>Mickey Spiegel, , Human Rights Watch, 2002, accessed Sept 28, 2007</ref> There are acute concerns over reports of torture,<ref name=heretical> (23 March 2000) , Amnesty International</ref> illegal imprisonment, forced labour, and psychiatric abuses.<ref>United Nations (], ]) , retrieved ], ]</ref> Falun Gong practitioners comprise 66% of all reported torture cases in China,<ref name=nowak66>, Manfred Nowak, United Nations, Table 1: Victims of alleged torture, p. 13, 2006, accessed October 12 2007</ref> and at least half of the labour camp population, according to the United Nations and US State Department respectively.<ref name=USstate> , ], Sept 14, 2007, accessed 28th Sept 2007</ref> In July 2006, an investigative report by Canadian ex-Secretary of State ] and Human Rights Lawyer ] concluded that there exists an ongoing practice of systematic ].<ref name=KMRR></ref> This has been met with concern from the United Nations Committee on Torture, who called for China to schedule an independent investigation and prosecute those guilty of such crimes.<ref name=AmnestyFactSheet >Amnesty International,, </ref><ref name=marketwireun2>MARKET WIRE via COMTEX, , May 8, 2008, accessed 16/6/08</ref>


==Timeline of major events==
Falun Gong practitioners around the world continue to protest against the persecution, and have initiated lawsuits against Chinese officials alleged to be chiefly responsible, in particular Jiang Zemin and Luo Gan.<ref name="HRW1" />


==Background== ===Before 1992===
Falun Gong has been classified variously as a form of spiritual cultivation practice in the tradition of Chinese antiquity, as a ] discipline, or as a religion or new religious movement.<ref name=Penny2012>], '']'', (], 2012.</ref> Qigong refers to a broad set of exercises, meditation and breathing methods that have long been part of the spiritual practices of select Buddhist sects, of ] alchemists, martial artists, and some ] scholars.<ref name=Palmer/><ref>Kenneth S. Cohen, "The Way of Qigong: The Art and Science of Chinese Energy Healing" (Random House, Inc., 1999)</ref>
''See further: ]''
]
] introduced the Falun Gong to the public in May 1992. He received several awards by Chinese governmental organizations to encourage him to continue teaching the practice. From 1992 to the end of 1994 he traveled to most major Chinese cities to teach, at the invitation of ''qigong'' organizations. Li's lectures were organised by the China Qigong Science Research Society (CQSRS), an official government body which profited most from the lecture fees.<ref name=schechter>Danny Schechter, ''Falun Gong's Challenge to China: Spiritual Practice or Evil Cult?'', Akashic books: New York, 2001, p. 66</ref> Li later began offering free lectures. After refusing a request to raise his tuition due to complaints from other ''qigong'' masters, Li withdrew from the CQSRS, saying that it only tried to make money off qigong masters without doing any research on qigong.<ref name=schechter>p. 66</ref> ], a journalist and author, states that shortly following this, some individuals from the CQSRS began spreading rumours about Li to the government in an attempt to curtail Falun Gong's growth.<ref name=schechter>p. 67</ref> David Ownby contends that opposition to Falun Gong from within the Party began in around 1994, and increased over the following years, but that there is no conclusive evidence on the motivation of the Party's initial resistance.<ref name="ownbycanada">David Ownby, "Falun Gong and Canada's Foreign Policy," ''International Journal'', Vol. 51, Spring 2001, pp. 181-204</ref>


Although qigong-like practices have a long history, the modern qigong movement traces its origins only to the late 1940s and 1950s. At that time, CCP ] began pursuing qigong as a means of improving health, and regarded it as a category of traditional ].<ref name=Palmer/> With official support from the party-state, qigong grew steadily in popularity, particularly in the period following the ]. The state-run China Qigong Scientific Research Society was established in 1985 to administer and oversee qigong practice across the country. Thousands of qigong disciplines emerged, some of them headed by "grandmasters" with millions of adherents<ref name=Palmer>David Palmer. '']''. New York: ], 2007</ref><ref>Zhu Xiaoyang and ] (ed.), "The Qigong Boom," Chinese Sociology and Anthropology, Vol. 27, No. 1 (1994)</ref>
On ], ], the "Guangming Daily", one of the government's official newspapers, <ref name="ownbycanada"/> published an editorial entitled, "''A Loud and Long Alarm Must Be Sounded Against Pseudo-Science''", which criticized qigong in general and claimed Falun Gong promoted "superstition."<ref name=ChronicleOfMajorEvents>, Clearwisdom.net, accessed 2007-10-12</ref> Falun Gong related sources say that this was the beginning of a concerted, state controlled media campaign that attempted to curtail Falun Gong's popularity.<ref name="flghrwintro">Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group, , accessed October 7, 2007</ref>


From his youth, Li Hongzhi claims to have been tutored by a variety of Buddhist and Daoist masters, who, according to his spiritual biography, imparted to him the practice methods and moral philosophy that would come to be known as Falun Gong.<ref name=Penny2003/>
Six months later, police agencies launched a nationwide investigation into Falun Gong at the behest of highly-ranked Party officials—among them Luo Gan—with the purpose of finding fault with Falun Gong, according to David Ownby.<ref name="ownbycanada"/> It was closed with no evidence of wrongdoing. Another official investigation, under the same pretext, was launched in 1998. Its official report stated that Falun Gong "only benefits, and does no harm to .. the nation."<ref name=schechter>p. 28</ref> But, shortly following this, a circular was distributed to police offices throughout the country which labeled Falun Gong as a "sect."<ref name="ownbycanada"/> Falun Gong materials could no longer be published through official channels,<ref name="falunautimeline">, accessed October 7, 2007</ref> and faced confiscation.<ref name="ownbycanada"/> Falun Gong related sources document that many of the agents involved in the investigations later started practicing Falun Gong.<ref name="flghrwintro" />


*1951 or 1952 – Falun Gong asserts that ], founder of Falun Gong, was born on 13 May 1951 in Gongzhuling, ] Province.<ref name=Penny2003>], "," '']'', Vol. 175 (2003), pp. 643–661. Hosted by the ]. Cambridge University Databases. ].</ref> Official Chinese birth dates for Li have been given as 7 or 27 July 1952.
On ], ], ], a physicist from the ], atheist-marxist, and "crusader" against supernatural and "unscientific thinking,"<ref name=WA1> International Religious Freedom Report, Vol. 3, issue 1, International Coalition for Religious Freedom, April 2001</ref> denounced Falun Gong in an interview on Beijing Television. Zhonghu Yan of University of Toronto pointed out that He Zuoxiu is the brother-in-law of ], one of the chief taskmasters of the persecution, and that he had quickly "become a national hero" for opposing Falun Gong.<ref name=SP1>, Zhonghu Yan, Center for the Study of Religion, University of Toronto, December 13, 2001</ref>. In response to the program in which Falun Gong was criticized and called "feudalistic superstition", the station received letters of protest from Falun Gong practitioners, and some 2000 conducted peaceful protests in front of its offices.<ref name=schechter>Danny Schechter, ''Falun Gong's Challenge to China: Spiritual practice or Evil Cult?", Akashic Books: New York, 2001, p. 68-69</ref><ref name=blind>Ian Johnson, , Page A1, The Wall Street Journal, 13 December 2000</ref> Under pressure from the central government to end the protest at the station "at any cost",<ref name=blind/> the reporter was dismissed and a favorable report telecast a few days later.<ref>Craig S. Smith, Revered by Millions, a Potent Mystic Rattles China's Communist Leaders, Page 1, Wall Street Journal, April 26, 1999 </ref> <!-- what is the meaning of this?? Considering the negative report as inaccurate and a violation of the government's "Three No's Policy" (“no beating, no argument, no reporting”) on qigong, Falun Gong practitioners assembled in front of the magazine editorial office in Tianjin for an apology.<ref name=SP1 /> According to Maria Hsia Chang's research, this resulted in about a hundred Chinese Communist Party (CCP), government and military retirees, who were practitioners of Falun Gong, petitioning Jiang unsuccessfully to legalize it.<ref name=KM>, David Kilgour and David Matas</ref> -->
*1955 – According to his spiritual biography, Li begins learning under the tutelage of master Quan Je, a tenth-generation master of Buddhist cultivation who imparts to Li the principles of Zhen, Shan, Ren (truth, compassion, forbearance). The instruction lasts eight years.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1963 – According to his spiritual biography, Daoist master Baji Zhenren begins training Li in Daoist martial arts disciplines and physical skills training.<ref name=Penny2003/>
*1970 – Li begins working at a military horse farm in northeast China, and in 1972 works as a trumpet player with a division of the provincial forestry police.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1972 – Li continues his spiritual training under the instruction of a master Zhen Daozhi, who imparts methods of ]. According to Li's spiritual biography, his training in this period mostly took place under cover of night, possibly due to the political environment of the ].<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1974 – Li's biography states that he begins studying the instruction of a female Buddhist master. Throughout the next several years, Li continued his studies and observations of spiritual cultivation systems.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*Early 1980s – Having had his middle and high school education interrupted by the Cultural Revolution, Li completes his high school education via correspondence courses.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1984 – According to his spiritual biography, to Li creates Falun Gong with his masters as a more accessible version of Falun Fofa, based on other qigong.<ref name=Penny2003/>
*Mid-1980s – Li begins studying and observing a variety of other qigong disciplines, apparently in preparation for establishing and publicizing his own qigong system.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1985 – Chinese authorities create a national organization to oversee the great variety of qigong disciplines that were proliferating across the country. The China Qigong Scientific Research Society was established in 1985, and convened its first meeting in Beijing in 1986. The organization counted among its leadership several eminent members and former members of the Politburo and National People's Congress, as well as former ministers of health and education.<ref>Benjamin Penny, Qigong boom, pp. 13–20.</ref>
*1989 – Li begins private instruction of Falun Gong to select students.<ref name=Penny2012/><ref name=zeng>Zeng, Jennifer. ''Witnessing history: one Chinese woman's fight for freedom'', Soho Press, 2006, pp. 329–335</ref>


===1992–1995===
On ], ], He Zuoxiu published an article in Tianjin College of Education’s<ref name=atimes/> ''Youth Reader'' magazine, entitled ''"I Do Not Agree with Youth Practicing Qigong,"'' disparaging Falun Gong and ] in general. Practitioners considered the article an "inaccurate, even slanderous attack, unfairly maligning the practice," according to Schechter.<ref name=schechter/> Noah Porter suggests that He's critiques may have been an intentional provocation aimed at Falun Gong practitioners.<ref name="Porter">Noah Porter (Masters thesis for the University of South Florida), '''', 2003, p 98</ref> However, the publication refused a right of reply to He's claims in this case, and practitioners went to Tianjin College of Education and related governmental agencies to hold appeals from April 18 to April 24.<ref name="Porter">p 99</ref> In response to the peaceful protests, riot police were dispatched,<ref name=schechter>p 69</ref> people beaten, and 45 arrested.<ref name="Porter">p 85</ref><ref name="ReidG">Reid, Graham (April 29-May 5, 2006) , ''New Zealand Listener'', retrieved July 6, 2006</ref>


Falun Gong was publicly founded in the Spring of 1992, toward the end of China's "qigong boom," a period which saw the proliferation of thousands of disciplines. Li Hongzhi and his Falun Gong became an "instant star" of the qigong movement, and were welcomed into the government-administered China Qigong Scientific Research Society (CQRS).<ref name="Ownbyworld">David Ownby, "," '']'', Sep 2003, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p. 306</ref> From 1992 to 1994, Li traveled throughout China giving 54 lecture seminars on the practice and beliefs of Falun Gong.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/> Seminars typically lasted 8–10 days, and attracted as many as 6,000 participants per class.<ref name=Schechter>Danny Schechter, Falun Gong's Challenge to China: Spiritual Practice of "Evil Cult"? (New York: Akashic Books, 2000), pp. 42.</ref> The practice grew rapidly based on its purported efficacy in improving health and its moral and philosophical elements, which were more developed than those of other qigong schools.<ref>Scott Lowe, Chinese and InternationalContexts for the Rise of Falun Gong. Nova Religio 6 (2 April 2003)</ref>
According to Schechter, practitioners were "shocked" at the unfair treatment and complained to local authorities, who told them that the imprisoned would only be released with central government approval,<ref name=schechter /> directing them to Beijing if they wanted to petition.<ref name=timeline> Falun Dafa Information Centre</ref> Sinologist Benjamin Penny says "the response of Falun Gong was to seek redress from the leadership of the country by going to them and, albeit very quietly and politely, making it clear that they would not be treated so shabbily."<ref>Benjamin Penny, , 2001, accessed 17/6/08</ref>


*1992 – On 13 May, Li begins public teaching of Falun Gong at the No. 5 Middle School in Changchun, Jilin Province, lecturing to a crowd of several hundred.<ref name=Porter>Noah Porter, "Falun Gong in the United States: An Ethnographic Study," 2003, p. 70</ref> The seminar ran for nine days at a cost of 30 Yuan per person.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
===The Zhongnanhai Incident===
*1992 – June, Li is invited by the China Qigong Scientific Research Society to lecture in ].
] compound]]
*1992 – In September, Falun Gong is recognized as a qigong branch under the administration of the state-run China Qigong Scientific Research Society (CQRS).<ref name="Ownby (2003)">David Ownby, "The Falun Gong in the New World," European Journal of East Asian Studies, Sep 2003, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p. 306.</ref>
*1992 – Li is formally declared a "Master of Qigong" by the CQRS, and received a permit to teach nationwide.<ref name=faluninfotime>Falun Dafa Information Center, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170502142634/http://faluninfo.net/topic/22/ |date=2 May 2017 }} accessed 24 November 2010</ref>
*1992 – Li and several Falun Gong students participate in the 1992 Asian Health Expo in Beijing from 12 to 21 December. The organizer of the health fair remarked that Falun Gong and Li "received the most praise at the fair, and achieved very good therapeutic results."<ref name=Ownbyfuture/> The event helped cement Li's popularity in the qigong world, and journalistic reports of Falun Gong's healing powers spread.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1992 – By the end of the year, Li had given five week-long lecture seminars in Beijing, four in Changchun, one in Tayuan, and one in Shandong.<ref name=Penny2012/>
*1993 – China Falun Gong (中国法轮功), the first major instructional text by Li Hongzhi, is published by Military Yiwen Press in April. The book sets forth an explanation of Falun Gong's basic cosmology, moral system, and exercises. A revised edition is released in December of the same year.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/><ref name=zeng />
*1993 – In the spring and summer of 1993, a series of glowing article appear in Qigong magazines nationwide lauding the benefits of Falun Gong. Several feature images of Li Hongzhi on the cover, and asserting the superiority of the Falun Gong system.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/><ref name=Penny2012/>
*1993 – The Falun Xiulian Dafa Research Society is established as a branch of the CQRS on 30 July.<ref>James Tong (2002), p. 670.</ref>
*1993 – In August, an organization under ] sends a letter to the CQRS thanking Li Hongzhi for providing his teachings to police officers injured in the line of duty. The letter claimed that of the 100 officers treated by Li, only one failed to experience "obvious improvement" to their health.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/><ref name=Penny2012/>
*1993 – On Sept 21, The People's Public Security Daily, a publication of the Ministry of Public Security, commends Falun Gong for "promoting the traditional crime-fighting virtues of the Chinese people, in safeguarding social order and security, and in promoting rectitude in society."<ref name=faluninfotime />
*1993 – Li again participates in the Asian Health Expo in Beijing from 11 to 20 Dec, this time as a member of the organizing committee. He wins several awards at the event,<ref name=Ownbyfuture/> and is proclaimed the "Most Acclaimed Qigong Master." Falun Gong also received the "Special Gold Award" and award for "Advancing Frontier Science."<ref name=Penny2012/>
*1994 – The Jilin Province Qigong Science Research Association proclaims Li Hongzhi a "Grandmaster of Qigong" on 6 May.<ref name=zeng />
*1994 – Li gives two lectures on Falun Gong at the ] in Beijing, and contributes profits from the seminars to a foundation for injured police officers.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1994 – On 3 August, the City of Houston, Texas, declares Li Hongzhi an honorary citizen for his "unselfish public service for the benefit and welfare of mankind."<ref name=faluninfotime />
*1994 – As revenues from the sale of his publications grew, Li ceased to charge fees for his classes, and thereafter insists that Falun Gong must be taught free of charge.<ref name=Ownbyfuture />
*1994 – The last full seminar on Falun Gong practice and philosophy takes place from 21 to 29 December in the southern city of Guangzhou.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1995 – ''Zhuan Falun'' (转法轮), the complete teachings of Falun Gong, is published in January by the China Television Broadcasting Agency Publishing Company. A publication ceremony is held in the Ministry of Public Security auditorium on 4 January.<ref name=Ownbyfuture>David Ownby, '']'' (2008) ], p. 89.</ref>
*1995 – In February, Li is approached by the Chinese National Sports Committee, Ministry of Public Health, and China Qigong Science Research Association to jointly establish a Falun Gong association. Li declines the offer.<ref name=Palmer />
*1995 – Official attitudes towards the Qigong movement within some segments of the government begin to change, as criticisms of qigong begin appearing in the state-run press.<ref name=Palmer/>
*1995 – Li leaves China and begins spreading his practice overseas.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/>
*1995 – At the invitation of the Chinese embassy in Paris, Li begins teaching Falun Gong abroad. On 13 March, he gives a seven-day class in Paris, followed by another lecture series in Sweden in April (Gothenburg, Stockholm and Uddevalla).<ref name=Ownbyfuture /><ref name=Penny2012/>


===1996–June 1999===
Amnesty International states that the persecution appears to have been triggered by "a large-scale demonstration in Beijing on ], ], when an estimated 10,000 practitioners and sympathizers from various places in China stood quietly from dawn until late into the night outside the ], the compound of the Communist Party leadership in Beijing."<ref name="Amnesty1"/> The demonstration was in protest of the ill-treatment and detainment of practitioners by police over the previous months, especially the incident in Tianjin.<ref name="Amnesty1"/>Amnesty states the demonstrators' purpose "was to demand official status for Falun Gong and to request dialogue with the government."<ref name="Amnesty1"/> The practitioners stayed in silence for 12 hours, reading and meditating.
Having announced that he was finished teaching his practice in China, Li Hongzhi begins teaching his practice in Europe, Oceania, North America and Southeast Asia. In 1998, Li relocates permanently to the United States.<ref name=Ownbyfuture />


As the practice continues to grow within China, tensions emerge between Falun Gong and Chinese authorities. In 1996, Falun Gong withdraws from the China Qigong Scientific Research Society, and thereafter finds itself the subject of growing scrutiny and criticism in the state-run press.<ref name=Palmer/><ref name=Porter/> The practice becomes a subject of high-level debates within the government and CCP, with some ministries and government authorities expressing continued support for the practice, and others becoming increasingly wary of the group.<ref name=Palmer/><ref name=Tong/> This tension also played out in the media, as some outlets continued to laud the effects of Falun Gong, while others criticized it as pseudoscience.<ref name=Penny2012/>
Kilgour and Matas note that "The participants included intellectuals, government officials and party members. The protest was silent; there were no posters and not a single political slogan or defiant thought was voiced."<ref name=KM>, David Kilgour and David Matas</ref> Falun Gong related sources say that a few practitioners, representing Falun Gong, presented three requests to the authorities: release of practitioners who were arrested in Tianjin, permission for Falun Gong books to be published, and to allow a loose and relaxed environment.<ref name=FDI425> , Falun Dafa Information Center</ref>


Tensions continue to escalate over this period, culminating in a demonstration on 25 April 1999 near the ] government compound, where over ten thousand Falun Gong practitioners gather to request official recognition. Following the event, ], then-CCP general secretary, quietly prepares for the launch of a nationwide campaign to persecute the practice.
Premier ] met with representatives and the crowd dispersed after the arrested practitioners were released.<ref name=natreview>Jay Nordlinger, , ], Vol. 51 Issue 18, p. 26, Sept 27, 1999 </ref> The Chinese Communist Party later declared the gathering on April 25 to be "the most serious political incident" since ].<ref name="HRW1"/> According to some analysts, the government was alarmed after the gathering of April 25 at the possibility of such a large number of people amassing so close to the seat of power without the security forces being aware.<ref name="Amnesty1"/><ref name=atimes>Francesco Sisci,Asia Times, January 27, 2001</ref> According to some estimates there were more than 100,000 Falun Gong practitioners in Beijing at the time, and the scale of the protest pointed to the Communist Party losing its tight control on the people while it tinkered with political and economic reforms.<ref name="ReidG"/>


*1996 – The book Zhuan Falun is listed as a bestseller by Beijing Youth Daily (北京青年报) in January, March, and April.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/><ref name=faluninfotime />
The onset of the persecution may be directly related to political suspicions and a generalized intolerance on the part of the Communist state to any group which shows dissent, according to journalists.<ref name=atimes/> Falun Gong's large body of supporters, increasing popularity, and concepts in the teachings directly related to Buddhas, heavens, virtue, reincarnation, karma, and other ideas diametrical to Communism, fit the profile of a challenge to the Party. In response, the Government embarked on a ]/] drive to "neutralize" the perceived threat, according to Lestz.<ref name=lestz/> The ] wrote that Beijing's "hysterical reaction" to a harmless religious movement exposes two things about the regime: that "it is still by instinct a totalitarian regime, incapable of tolerating any competing loyalty... every group, from chess club to army command, must come under the control of the Party, and any group that does not is a threat," and secondly that the Party suffers insecurity over its rule, and since the ] the leaders have lived in "mortal fear" of the Chinese people. Only a "deeply fearful" regime would go into such a panic, says the Globe, over middle-aged people doing exercises in parks.<ref>The Globe and Mail, Beijing v. falun gong, Metro A14, 01/26/2001</ref>
*1996 – Falun Gong files for withdrawal from the China Qigong Scientific Research Society in March. Li later explains that he had found the state-run CQRS to be more concerned with profiting from qigong than engaging in genuine research.<ref name=Porter/> Li had also apparently rejected a new CQRS policy that mandated that all qigong practices create CCP branches within their organizations.<ref name=Palmer/><ref name=Tong/> Falun Gong is left entirely without government oversight or sanction.<ref>Danny Schechter, Falun Gong's Challenge to China, p. 66.</ref>
*1996 – At Li's direction, administrators of the Falun Gong Research Association of China apply for registration with three other government organizations, including the ] and ]. All applications are ultimately denied.<ref>Palmer 2007, p. 248</ref>
*1996 – The first major state-run media article criticizing Falun Gong appears in the '']'' newspaper on 17 June. The article writes that Falun Gong represents a manifestation of feudal superstition, and that its core text Zhuan Falun is a work of "pseudo-science" that swindles the masses.<ref>Palmer 2007, p. 249</ref> Falun Gong practitioners responded to the article's publication with a letter-writing campaign to the newspaper and national qigong association.<ref name=Penny2012/>
*1996 – Several Buddhist journals and magazines start to write articles criticizing Falun Gong as a "heretical sect".<ref>Palmer 2007, p. 262</ref>
*1996 – On 24 July, Falun Gong books are banned from further publication by the China News Publishing Bureau, a branch of the CCP ]. The reason cited for the ban is that Falun Gong is "spreading superstition." Pirated and copied versions of Falun Gong books proliferate, with Li Hongzhi's approval.<ref>Palmer 2007, p. 180</ref>
*1996 – Li begins another international lecture tour in the summer of 1996, traveling to Hong Kong, Sydney, Bangkok, Houston, New York, and Beijing.<ref name=Ownbyfuture />
*1996 – The China Qigong Scientific Research Society issues a resolution on the cancellation of Falun Gong's membership with the society. The resolution stated that although practitioners of Falun Gong had "attained unparalleled results in terms of fitness and disease prevention," Li Hongzhi "propagated theology and superstition," failed to attend association meetings, and departed from the association's procedures.<ref name=Penny2012/>
*1997 – The Ministry of Public Security launches an investigation into whether Falun Gong should be deemed xie jiao ("heretical religion"). The report concludes that "no evidence has appeared thus far."<ref name="Palmer 2007, p. 265">Palmer 2007, p. 265</ref>
*1997–1999 – Criticism of Falun Gong escalates in state-run media. With the encouragement of Li, Falun Gong practitioners respond to criticisms by peacefully petitioning outside media offices seeking redress against perceived unfair reporting. The tactic succeeds frequently, often resulting in the retraction of critical articles and apologies from the news organizations.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/> Not all media coverage was negative in this period, however, and articles continued to appear highlighting Falun Gong's health benefits.<ref name=Penny2012/>
*1998 - On 13 January, the China Buddhist Association held a meeting on how to react to Falun Gong.<ref name=Palmer/>
*1998 – On 21 July, the Ministry of Public Security issues Document No. 555, "Notice of the Investigation of Falun Gong." The document asserts that Falun Gong is an "evil religion," and mandates that another investigation be launched to seek evidence of the conclusion. The faction hostile toward Falun Gong within the ministry was reportedly led by ].<ref name=Palmer/> Security agencies began monitoring and collecting personal information on practitioners;<ref name=Tong/> Falun Gong sources reported authorities were tapping phone lines, harassing and tailing practitioners, ransacking homes, and closing down Falun Gong meditation sessions.<ref name=Penny2012/>
*1998 – According to Falun Gong sources, ], the former Chairman of the ], lead his own investigation into Falun Gong and concluded that "Falun Gong has hundreds of benefits for the Chinese people and China, and does not have one single bad effect."<ref name=Penny2012/><ref name="Palmer 2007, p. 265"/>
*1998 – China's National Sports Commission launches its own investigation in May, and commissions medical professionals to conduct interviews of over 12,000 Falun Gong practitioners in Guangdong province. 97.9 percent of respondents say Falun Gong improved their health.<ref name="Palmer"/> By October the investigation concludes, noting "We're convinced the exercises and effects of Falun Gong are excellent. It has done an extraordinary amount to improve society's stability and ethics. This should be duly affirmed."<ref name=faluninfotime />
*1998 – Estimates provided by the State Sports Commission suggest there are upwards of 60 to 70 million Falun Gong practitioners in China.<ref>Seth Faison, "," New York Times, 27 April 1999; Joseph Kahn, "," New York Times, 27 April 1999; Renee Schoff, "Growing group poses a dilemma for China," Associated Press, 26 April 1999.</ref>
*1999 – Li Hongzhi continues to teach Falun Gong internationally, with occasional stops in China. By early 1999, Li had lectured in Sydney, Bangkok, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Taipei, Frankfurt, Toronto, Singapore, Geneva, Houston and New York, as well as in Changchun and Beijing.<ref name=Penny2012/>
*1999 – Wu Shaozu, An official from China's National Sports Commission, says in an interview with U.S. News & World Report on 14 February that as many as 100 million may have taken up Falun Gong and other forms of qigong. Wu notes that the popularity of Falun Gong dramatically reduces health care costs, and "Premier Zhu Rongji is very happy about that."<ref>"An opiate of the masses?," U.S. News & World Report, 22 February 1999.</ref><ref name=rn>Phillip Adams, , Late Night Live, Radio National Australia</ref>
*1999 – In April, physicist He Zuoxiu from the Chinese Academy of Sciences publishes an article in Tianjin Normal University's Youth Reader magazine criticizing Falun Gong as superstitious and potentially harmful for youth and stating that he knew someone who died because of it.<ref>Palmer 2007, p. 266</ref> At that time, some countries near China had people practicing, like Vietnam.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://moitruongphapluancongvn.org|title=Trang chủ {{!}} Việt Nam {{!}} Sự thật môi trường Pháp Luân Công|website=Trang chủ {{!}} Việt Nam {{!}} Sự thật môi trường Pháp Luân Công|language=en|access-date=2018-08-30}}</ref>
*1999 – Tianjin Falun Gong practitioners respond to the article by peacefully petitioning in front of the editorial offices. Editors initially agree to publish a retraction of the He Zuoxiu article, then renege.<ref>Palmer 2007, pp. 266-267</ref>
*1999 – On 23 April, some 300 security forces are called in to break up ongoing Falun Gong demonstration. Forty-five Falun Gong practitioners are beaten and detained.<ref name=gutmannfuyou>Ethan Gutmann, An Occurrence on Fuyou Street, ''National Review'' 13 July 2009</ref><ref name="Schechter 2000, p.69">Schechter (2000), p.69</ref>
*1999 – Falun Gong practitioners petition Tianjin City Hall for the release of the detained practitioners. They are reportedly told that the order to break up the crowd and detain protesters came from central authorities in Beijing, and that further appeals should be directed at Beijing.<ref name=gutmannfuyou /><ref name="Schechter 2000, p.69"/>


] government compound in April 1999 to request official recognition.]]
A ] article contends that the Zhongnanhai demonstrations might have been organized in part by the government to "trump up charges against Falun Gong which it had observed and monitored for years through its infiltrators."<ref>World Journal, American edition, June 20, 1999</ref> Luo Gan had allegedly wanted the practice banned since 1996 but lacked the legal basis. Credited as the chief communist organizer of the Zhongnanhai gathering, Luo is alleged to have had the police direct them there in order to create an incident that could later be held against Falun Gong.<ref name=XIX>American Asian Review, Vol. XIX, no. 4, Winter 2001, p. 12</ref> The practitioners are said by Schechter to have wanted to make a peaceful appeal at the citizens' appeal office, located at Fuyou street, near Zhongnanhai.<ref name=schechter>p. 28</ref>


*1999 – On 25 April 10,000–20,000 Falun Gong practitioners quietly assemble outside the Central Appeals Office, adjacent to the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing. Five Falun Gong representatives meet with Premier ] to request official recognition and an end to escalating harassment against the group. Zhu agrees to release the Tianjin practitioners, and assures the representatives that the government does not oppose Falun Gong. The same day, however, at the urging of Luo Gan, CCP general secretary Jiang Zemin issues a letter stating his intention to suppress the practice.<ref>Tong (2009), pp. 3–10</ref>
==Onset of the persecution ==
*1999 – On 26 April, Jiang Zemin convenes a meeting of the Politburo Standing Committee to discuss the Falun Gong demonstration. Some Politburo members reportedly favored a conciliatory position towards Falun Gong, while others – such as Jiang and security czar Luo Gan – favored a decisive suppression of the group.<ref name=Zong>Zong Hairen, Zhu Rongji in 1999, (Ming Jing, 2001), pp. 60–61.</ref>
]
*1999 – Authorities increased surveillance on Falun Gong, tapping telephones of practitioners and monitoring practitioners in several cities.<ref name=Penny2012/>
<div class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em; font-size: 95%; background:#ffffgc; color:black; width:45em; max-width: 58%; padding: 1em 1.5em 1.5em">
*1999 – On 2 May, Li Hongzhi gives a press conference to journalists in Sydney, Australia. When asked by a reporter whether he believed the government would kill or imprison his disciples to maintain social order, Li responded that " practitioners will never go against the law. In terms of the scenario you describe, I don't think it will happen. since the economic reform and opening up, the Chinese government has been quite tolerant in this respect."<ref name=Penny2012/>
===Jiang Zemin's role===
*1999 – In May and June, just as preparations are quietly underway for a crackdown, Falun Gong practitioners continue their public meditation sessions.<ref name=Penny2012/> The Far Eastern Economic Review wrote "in a park in western Beijing, 100 or so Falun Gong practitioners exercised under a bold yellow banner proclaiming their affiliation... far from running scared."<ref>Susan V. Lawrence, "Religion: Pilgrim's Protest," Far Eastern Economic Review, 13 May 1999.</ref>
Julia Ching from the ] suggests that it was the Zhongnanhai incident which led to "fear, animosity and suppression."<ref name=XIX/> Jiang Zemin had allegedly received a letter from the former director of the ], "a doctor with considerable standing among the political elite," endorsing Falun Gong and advising high-level cadres to start practicing it.<ref name=XIX /> Jiang also found out that Li's book, ''Zhuan Falun'', had been published by ] press, and that possibly seven hundred thousand Communist Party members were practitioners. "Jiang accepts the threat of Falun Gong as an ideological one: spiritual beliefs against militant atheism and historical materialism. He wishes to purge the government and the military of such beliefs."<ref name=XIX/>
*1999 – On 2 June, Li purchases space in several Hong Kong newspapers to publish an article defending Falun Gong, and urging Chinese leaders not to "risk universal condemnation" and "waste manpower and capital" by antagonizing the group.<ref name=Penny2012/><ref>Li Hongzhi, , 2 June 1999.</ref>
*1999 – On 3 June, 70,000 practitioners from Jilin and ] travel to Beijing in an attempt to appeal to authorities. They were intercepted by security forces, sent home, and placed under surveillance.<ref name=Penny2012/><ref>Sing Tao Jih Pao, "Police Break Up Falun Gong Gathering of 70,000 in Beijing," 7 June 1999.</ref>
*1999 – On 7 June 1999, Jiang Zemin convened a meeting of the ] to address the Falun Gong issue. In the meeting, Jiang described Falun Gong as a grave threat to CCP authority – "something unprecedented in the country since its founding 50 years ago"<ref name=Jamestown>Sarah Cook and Leeshai Lemish, , China Brief, Volume 11 Issue 17 (9 November 2011).</ref> – and ordered the creation of a special leading group within the party's ] to "get fully prepared for the work of disintegrating ."<ref name=Jamestown/>
*1999 – On 10 June, the ] was formed to handle day-to-day coordination of the anti-Falun Gong campaign. Luo Gan was selected to helm of the office, whose mission at the time was described as studying, investigating, and developing a "unified approach...to resolve the Falun Gong problem"<ref name=Tong>James Tong, '']'', ] (2009).</ref> The office was not created with any legislation, and there are no provisions describing its precise mandate.<ref name=Jamestown/>
*1999 – On 17 June 1999, On 17 June, Jiang Zemin declared in a Politburo meeting that Falun Gong is "the most serious political incident since the '4 June' political disturbance in 1989."<ref name=Zong/> The 610 Office came under the newly created Central Leading Group for Dealing with Falun Gong, headed by ]. Both Li and Luo were members of the ], and the four other deputy directors of the Central Leading Group also held high-level positions in the CCP, including minister of the propaganda department.<ref name=Tong/>
*1999 – On 26 June, thirteen Falun Gong exercise sites in public parks are shut down by Beijing security officials.<ref name=Penny2012/>


===July 1999–2001 ===
], Buddhism scholar at ], said the regime was frightened by Falun Gong and "went nuts, revealing its weakness and self-doubt for all the world to see." Thurman claims that Jiang "became obsessed and drove around Zhongnanhai to observe the protesters through the smoked glass of his limousine. That night, seemingly in the grip of a spiritual crisis, he wrote to the Politburo: 'I believe Marxism can triumph over Falun Gong.' He mutters incessantly to Western envoys about the troublesome movement."<ref name=natreview/>
] following the ban]]


In July 1999, a nationwide campaign is rolled out to "eradicate" Falun Gong. The persecution campaign is characterized by a "massive propaganda campaign" against the group, public burnings of Falun Gong books, and imprisonment of tens of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners in prisons, reeducation through labor camps, psychiatric hospitals and other detention facilities. Authorities are given the broad mandate of 'transforming' practitioners, resulting in the widespread use of torture against Falun Gong practitioners, sometimes resulting in death.
The ] reported sources saying that not all of the ] shared Jiang's view that Falun Gong should be eradicated.<ref name="ReidG"/> Through a ]-style purge of Falun Gong, Jiang forced senior cadres "to pledge allegiance to his line," thus boosting his authority to enable him to dictate events at the pivotal ], a Communist Party veteran later told ]'s Willy Lam. "As with campaigns dating from the 1960s, the standard ritual of ideological sessions held in party units, factories, and colleges the past few years is that participants make public declarations of support for the Beijing line—and for the top leader."<ref name=lamsupp />


From late 1999 to early 2001, hundreds of Falun Gong practitioners per day travel to Tiananmen Square to stage peaceful protests against the persecution. The protests take the form of performing Falun Gong exercises or meditation, or holding banner proclaiming Falun Gong's innocence. The protests are broken up, often violently, by security forces.
Jiang's campaign has been criticized for its Maoist-style approach. Lam reports a mid-level official saying that "The leadership is obsessed with the Falun Gong and have put its eradication as a top priority this year."<ref name=lamendgame>CNN.com, , August 21, 2001</ref> Tony Saich agrees that the campaign was used by Jiang to serve as a loyalty test to his individual leadership.<ref name="Saich"/> The size and reach of Jiang's anti-Falun Gong campaign surpassed that of many previous mass-movements.<ref name=lamsupp>Willy Wo-Lap Lam, , CNN.com, February 9, 2001</ref>
</div>


*1999 – During a 19 July meeting of senior CCP cadres, Jiang Zemin's decision to eradicate Falun Gong was announced. The campaign was originally intended to have begun on 21 July, but as the document was apparently leaked, the crackdown started on 20 July.<ref name=Penny2012/> A nationwide propaganda campaign is launched to discredit Falun Gong.<ref>Tong 2009, p. 44</ref>
On ], ] the Party established an extra-constitutional body charged with overseeing the persecution, referred to as the "6-10 Office." Agents were sent to every province, city, county, university, government department and state-owned business in China, according to Reid.<ref name="ReidG"/> In the Kilgour-Matas report, a Party official is quoted saying that in 1999, more than 3,000 officials of the 6-10 Office united at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing to discuss the campaign,<ref name=bloodyharvest>David Kilgour & David Matas, , accessed 26th of September</ref> where Li Lanqing, then head of the 6-10 Office, is said to have verbally announced the Party's policy on Falun Gong, passed on by Jiang: "defaming their reputations, bankrupting them financially and destroying them physically".<ref name=bloodyharvest/>
*1999 – Just after midnight on 20 July, Falun Gong practitioners and "assistants" are abducted and detained across numerous cities in China.<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> In response, tens of thousands of practitioners petition local, provincial and central appeals offices.<ref name=Penny2012/> In Beijing and other cities, protesters are detained in sports stadiums.<ref name=dangerous/>
*1999 – On 22 July, The Ministry of Civil Affairs declared the "Research Society of Falun Dafa and the Falun Gong organization under its control" to be unregistered, and therefore illegal, organizations.<ref name=Tong/> The same day, the Ministry of Public Security issues a notice prohibiting 1) the display of Falun Gong images or symbols; 2) the public distribution of Falun Gong books or literature; 3) assembling to perform group Falun Gong exercises; 4)using sit-ins, petitions, and other demonstrations in defense of Falun Gong; 5) the spreading of rumors meant to disturb social order; and 6) taking part in activities opposing the government's decision.<ref name=Penny2012/>
*1999 – The 19 July circular is released publicly on 23 July.<ref name=Tong/> In it, Falun Gong is declared the "most serious political incident" since 1989. The ] forbids party members from practicing Falun Gong, and launches study sessions to ensure cadres understand that Falun Gong is incompatible with the belief system of ].<ref name=dangerous/>
*1999 – on 26 July, the authorities begin the process of confiscating and destroying all publications related to Falun Gong, including "books, pictures, audio-video products, and electronic publications."<ref name=dangerous/> Within one week, two million copies of Falun Gong literature are confiscated and destroyed by steam-rollers and public ].<ref name=Schechter/><ref name=dangerous/>
*1999 – In late July, overseas Falun Gong websites are hacked or subject to ].<ref name=dangerous/> According to Chinese internet expert Ethan Gutmann, the attacks originated from servers in Beijing and Shenzhen, and was among the first serious attempts at network disruption by China.<ref name=HackerNation>Ethan Gutmann, {{usurped|}}, World Affairs Journal, May/June 2010.</ref>
*1999 – 29 July, Chinese authorities ask ] to seek the arrest of Li Hongzhi. Interpol declines. The following week, Chinese authorities offer a substantial cash reward for the extradition of Li from the United States. The U.S. government similarly declines to follow up.<ref name=dangerous/>
*1999 – On 29 July, the Beijing Bureau of Justice issues a notice requiring all lawyers and law firms to obtain approval before providing consultation or representation to Falun Gong practitioners. According to Human Rights Watch, the notice was "inconsistent with international standards which call on governments to ensure that lawyers are able to perform their professional functions without intimidating hindrance, harassment, or improper interference."<ref name=dangerous/>
*1999 – In October, 30 Falun Gong practitioners hold a secret press conference for foreign media in Beijing to tell of the violence and persecution they are suffering. At the end of the press briefing, participants are arrested, and some of the foreign reporters present are questioned and briefly detained. Ten of the organizers were detained almost immediately afterwards, and one of them, a 31-year-old hairdresser names Ding Yan, is later tortured to death in custody, according to Falun Gong sources.<ref>Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group, , accessed 04-05-2012</ref> During the press conference, some of the first allegations of Falun Gong torture deaths in custody are made.<ref>Erik Eckholm, "China Sect Members Covertly Meet Press and Ask World's Help," New York Times, 29 October 1999</ref>
*1999 – On 30 October, the ] issues a resolution on article 300 of the criminal code. The resolution elaborates on the identification and punishments for individuals who use "heretical religions" to undermine the implementation of the law.<ref name=AI>Amnesty International, "China: The crackdown on Falun Gong and other so-called 'heretical organizations,'" 23 March 2000</ref>
*1999 – On 5 November 1999, the ] issues a circular giving instruction to the people's courts that Falun Gong should be prosecuted as a 'heretical religion' under article 300.<ref name=dangerous/><ref name=AI/> The notice, sent to all local courts in China, stressed that it was their ''political duty'' to ''severely'' punish Falun Gong, and to handle these cases ''under the leadership of the Party committees.''<ref name=AI/>
*1999 – On 27 December, four high-profile Falun Gong practitioners are put on trial for "undermining the implementation of the law" and illegally obtaining state secrets. They include Beijing engineer and prominent Falun Gong organizer Zhiwen Wang, sentenced to 16 years in prison, and Li Chang, an official of the Ministry of Public Security, sentenced to 18 years.<ref name=AI/> According to ], in these prosecutions and others, "the judicial process was biased against the defendants at the outset and the trials were a mere formality."<ref name=AI/>
*2000 – During Lunar New Year celebrations in early February, at least 2,000 Falun Gong practitioners are detained on Tiananmen Square while attempting to peacefully protest the ban against the group.
*2000 – On 20 April, '']'' reporter ] publishes the first article in a series on Falun Gong. The article details the torture death of 58-year-old grandmother in ] city, who was beaten, shocked, and forced to run barefoot through the snow because she refused to denounce Falun Gong. Johnson went on to win the 2001 ] for the series.<ref>Ian Johnson, , Wall Street Journal, 20 April 2000.</ref>
*2000 – On 21 April, ] admits for the first time the difficulty the Central authorities have had in stamping out Falun Gong, noting that since "22 July 1999, Falun Gong members have been causing trouble on and around Tiananmen Square in Central Beijing nearly every day."<ref>"China Admits Banned Sect Is Continuing Its Protest" Elisabeth Rosenthal. New York Times, 21 April 2000</ref>
*2000 – Zhao Ming, a graduate student at Ireland's Trinity College, is sent to the Tuanhe ] in Beijing in May. He spends two years in the camp amidst international pressure for his release, and is reportedly tortured with electric batons.<ref>Irish Times, 3 March 2002</ref>
*2000 – On 1 October, thousands of Falun Gong practitioners travel to Tiananmen Square to stage protests against the persecution. Foreign media correspondents witness security officers beating and practitioners on the square.<ref>Washington Post Foreign Service, "Falun Gong Protests Mar Chinese Holiday," 1 October 2000</ref>
*2000 – In November, Zhang Kunlun, a Canadian citizen and professor of art, is detained while visiting his mother in China and held in a forced labor camp where he reported being beaten and shocked with electric batons. Canadian politicians intervene on his behalf, eventually winning his release to Canada.<ref>Human Rights Watch, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071101022047/http://china.hrw.org/book/export/html/50332 |date=1 November 2007 }}, accessed 18 March 2011</ref>
*2001 – On 23 January, five individuals ] on Tiananmen Square. State-run media claim they are Falun Gong practitioners, driven to suicide by the practice. Falun Gong sources deny involvement, saying that Falun Gong forbids suicide and violence, and arguing that the event was staged by the government to turn public opinion against the practice.<ref name=Ownbyfuture/><ref name=Schechter/> Authorities seize on the event to escalate a media campaign against the group, and support for Falun Gong wanes.<ref name=Pomfret/>
*2001 – As sympathy for Falun Gong erodes in Mainland China, authorities for the first time openly sanction the "systematic use of violence" against the group, establishing a network of brainwashing classes and rooting out Falun Gong practitioners "neighborhood by neighborhood and workplace by workplace."<ref name=Pomfret>John Pomfret and Philip P. Pan. "Torture is Breaking Falun Gong." Washington Post, 5 August 2001.</ref>
*2001 – By February, international concern grows over psychiatric abuses committed against Falun Gong practitioners, several hundred of whom had reportedly been held and tortured in psychiatric facilities for refusing to denounce the practice.<ref>Khabir Ahmad, "International concern grows over psychiatric abuses in China", The Lancet, Volume 356, Issue 9233, Page 920, 9 September 2000</ref>
*2001 – On 20 November, a group of 35 Falun Gong practitioners from 12 different countries gathers on Tiananmen Square to meditate under a banner that reads: "Truth, Compassion, Tolerance" – Falun Gong's core moral tenets. They are arrested within minutes, and some are beaten while resisting arrest.<ref>Vancouver Falun Dafa Practitioners' Protest Site, , accessed 19 March 2011</ref>
*2001 – On 23 December, a New York District Court hands down a default judgement against Zhao Zhifei, Public Security Bureau chief for Hubei Province, for his role in the wrongful death and torture of Falun Gong practitioners.<ref name="Direct Litigation">Human Rights Law Foundation, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111111144251/http://www.hrlf.net/direct.html |date=11 November 2011 }}, accessed 19 March 2011</ref>


===2002–2004 ===
By ], ], the persecution campaign had begun. Under orders from the ], churches, temples, mosques, newspapers, media, courts and police were all mobilized to follow the Party line to "crush" Falun Gong, "no measures too excessive."<ref name=wildgrass/> Falun Gong was “condemned” in the media, with books shredded and videotapes bulldozed for TV cameras.<ref name="Leung"/> Within days a “wave of arrests” swept across China. The arrest of other Falun Gong practitioners across the country also began, with police breaking into the homes of hundreds and taking them to prison in the middle of the night.<ref name="Porter"/> By the end of 1999, practitioners were dying in custody,<ref name=wildgrass> ibid., Ian Johnson, ''Wildgrass'' (2005) p 283</ref> and by February 2000, 5,000 were detained across China.<ref name="Leung"/>
By 2002, Falun Gong practitioners had all but completely abandoned the approach of protesting on Tiananmen Square, and coverage in Western news outlets declined precipitously.<ref name=lemish>Leeshai Lemish, Media and New Religious Movements: The Case of Falun Gong, A paper presented at The 2009 CESNUR Conference, Salt Lake City, Utah, 11–13 June 2009</ref>{{better source needed|date=December 2019}}


Falun Gong practitioners continued adopting more novel approaches to protesting, including the establishment of a vast network of underground 'material sites' that create and distribute literature,<ref name=dangerous/> and tapping into television broadcasts to replace them with Falun Gong content.<ref>Ethan Gutmann: "The Chinese Internet: A dream deferred?" Tiananmen 20 years on Laogai Research Foundation/NED Panel 1: Refinement of Repression, 9:15 am, 2 June 2009</ref> Practitioners outside China established a television station to broadcast into China, designed censorship-circumvention tools to break through Internet censorship and surveillance, and filed dozens of largely symbolic lawsuits against Jiang Zemin and other Chinese officials alleging genocide and crimes against humanity.<ref name="Direct Litigation"/>
On ], ] the Chinese Ministry of Civil Affairs issued an official statement banning Falun Gong. Charges imposed ranged from "organizing illegal gatherings" to "threatening political stability."<ref name=Amnesty1/> On the same day, Human Rights Watch in New York issued a statement that "strongly condemned the Chinese government's nationwide ban on the practice of Falun Gong" and urged the release of practitioners "arbitrarily detained in a nationwide sweep aimed at suppressing the group." Human Rights Watch called on the international community to protest the ban, and urged Mary Robinson, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, to intervene with Chinese officials at the highest levels.<ref name="HRW2">, Human Rights Watch, New York</ref>


From 2002 to 2004, the ] of power in China were transferred from Jiang Zemin to ]. Annual Falun Gong deaths in custody continued to grow through 2004, according to reports published by Falun Gong sources, but coverage of Falun Gong declined over the period.<ref name=lemish/>{{better source needed|date=December 2019}}
Amnesty International states that despite the persecution, many Falun Gong practitioners continued to hold exercise sessions in public, usually as a form of silent protest against the persecution and imprisonment. Some of these silent protests were held outside important seats of government or in places of political significance, such as Tiananmen Square in Beijing. Amnesty says that they were attended by large numbers of people, including significant numbers of elderly people and women, and that they were entirely peaceful.<ref name=Amnesty1>, The Amnesty International</ref> The Party declared the sessions to be "illegal assemblies" and the practitioners were put under detention or sent to forced labor.<ref name="HRW1"/> Amnesty states that among the thousands detained were ordinary workers, farmers, teachers, academics, university students, publishers, accountants, police officers, engineers, people from a variety of other professions, and government officials.<ref name=Amnesty1/> Ian Johnson cites information stating that over 35,000 Falun Gong practitioners had been arrested in ] alone.<ref>Ian Johnson, , 25 April 2000, ] Page A21</ref>.
The Falun Dafa Information Center has documented details of over 3000 confirmed cases of deaths of Falun Gong practitioners, caused by torture and violence in police custody.<ref>Minghui/Clearwisdom, , Falun Gong, retrieved ] ]</ref> Falun Gong related human rights organizations state that realistic estimates of deaths could be above 30,000.<ref>, The Falun Dafa Information Center </ref>


]
==Mechanics of the persecution campaign==
*2002 – On 14 February, 53 Falun Gong practitioners from North America, Europe and Australia attempt to stage a demonstration on Tiananmen Square. They are detained, and several reportedly assaulted by security forces before being expelled from China.<ref>CNN, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121007090314/http://articles.cnn.com/2002-02-14/world/china.falungong_1_falun-gong-chinese-police-tiananmen-square?_s=PM:asiapcf |date=7 October 2012 }}, 14 February 2002</ref>
]]]
*2002 – On 5 March, a group of six Falun Gong practitioners in Changchun city intercept television broadcasts, replacing them with content about Falun Gong and the persecution. Apparently believing that it to be a signal that the ban on Falun Gong had been lifted, citizens gather in public squares to celebrate.<ref name=airwaves/> The Falun Gong broadcasts run for 50 minutes before the city goes black. Over the next three days, security forces arrest some 5,000 Falun Gong practitioners in Changchun. Amnesty International reports that "police 'stop-and-search' checkpoints have reportedly been established across the city." All six individuals involved in the television hijacking are later tortured to death.<ref name=airwaves>Ethan Gutmann, "", Weekly Standard 6 DEC 2010, VOL. 16, NO. 12</ref>
*2002 – In June, Jiang Zemin visits ]. Dozens of Falun Gong practitioners from around the world attempt to travel to the country to protest, but find their names on an international blacklist organized at the behest of Chinese authorities, suggesting extensive espionage against foreign Falun Gong practitioners.<ref>Philip Shenon. "Iceland Bars American Falun Gong Followers." New York Times, 15 June 2002. pg. A.7</ref>
*2002 – Falun Gong practitioners in New York establish ], a Chinese-language station created to present an alternative to state-run Chinese media.<ref>Chen, Kathy, , The Wall Street Journal, 15 November 2007</ref>
*2002 – On 24 July, U.S. House of Representatives passes a unanimous resolution (House Concurrent Resolution 188) condemning the persecution of Falun Gong in China.<ref>Clearwisdom.net, "", 19 March 2011</ref>
*2002 – On 21 October, Falun Gong practitioners from North America, Europe and Australia file a legal case against Jiang Zemin, ], and ] to the United Nations Human Rights Committee and the International Criminal Court for their involvement in the persecution of Falun Gong.<ref>Clearwisdom.net, "", accessed 19 March 2011</ref>
*2002 – In November, ] begins the process of taking over China's leadership from Jiang Zemin, assuming the position General Secretary of the CCP.
*2003 – On 22 January, Falun Gong practitioner and American citizen Dr. Charles Lee is arrested by security forces in Nanjing immediately upon his arrival in China. Lee is sentenced to three years in prison.<ref>, 22 July 2004</ref>
*2003 – On 1 May, Pan Xinchun, Deputy Consul General at the Chinese consulate in Toronto, published a letter in the Toronto Star in which he said that local Falun Gong practitioner Joel Chipkar is a member of a "sinister cult." In February 2004, the Ontario Superior Court found Pan liable for libel, and demanded he pay $10,000 in compensation to Chipkar. Pan refused to pay, and left Canada.<ref>John Turley-Ewart, "Falun Gong persecution spreads to Canada," The National Post, 20 March 2004.</ref>
*2003 – June, A San Francisco District Court issues a default ruling against Beijing Party Secretary and former Beijing Mayor Liu Qi and Deputy Governor of Liaoning Province Xia Deren, who had been accused of overseeing the torture of Falun Gong practitioners.<ref>Falun Dafa Information Center, "", 20 June 2003</ref>
*2003 – On 26 December, Liu Chengjun, one of the leaders behind the Changchun television broadcasts, is tortured to death while serving out a 19-year prison sentence.<ref name=airwaves />
*2004 – In October, U.S. House of Representatives passed a unanimous resolution detailing and condemning the Chinese government's attempts to interfere with and intimidate Falun Gong practitioners in the United States.<ref>United States Congressional Resolution, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100704174143/http://old.faluninfo.net/displayAnArticle.asp?ID=8960 |date=4 July 2010 }}, 10-6-2004</ref>
*2004 – In December, prominent ] lawyer ] writes to the National People's Congress detailing torture and sexual abuse against Falun Gong practitioners in custody. In response to his letter, Gao's law firm is shut down, his legal license is revoked, and he is put under house arrest.<ref>Gao Zhisheng, "A China More Just: My Fight As a Rights Lawyer in the World's Largest Communist State," Broad Pr U.S.A, 2007</ref>


===2005–2007 ===
According to Human Rights reports, a variety of techniques have been employed by the Chinese government in its persecution of Falun Gong practitioners. These include physical and psychiatric abuses; "re-education" through forced labor, where detained practitioners are forced to renounce the practice; and a widespread media campaign to turn public opinion against practitioners.<ref name=KMRR/> Every aspect of society was turned against Falun Gong practitioners, according to ], including the media apparatus, police force, army, education system, families, and workplaces.<ref name=wildgrass/> An extra-constitutional body, the ] was created to "oversee the terror campaign,"<ref name=morais/> driven by a large-scale propaganda through television, newspaper, radio and internet.<ref name=Leung/> Propaganda urged families and workplaces to actively assist in the campaign, while practitioners themselves were subject to severe torture to have them recant.<ref name=dangerous/> Kilgour and Matas state that the "6-10 office" established itself every province, city, county, university, government department and government-owned business to spearhead the crackdown. Local governments were given unlimited authority to implement Beijing's orders in 1999 and afterwards.<ref name=KMRR />
<div class="toccolours" style="float: left; margin-right: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em; font-size: 95%; background:#ffffgc; color:black; width:35em; max-width: 35%; padding: 1em 1.5em 1.5em">
''Immeasurable capital and police resources are being poured into this campaign for no reason, turning society in chaos, all just to suppress Falun Gong practitioners—people who peacefully do their practice in order to cultivate their hearts and minds, and improve their health. What is being done to them is an absolute crime and a violation of basic human rights. There is no excuse for you not to take immediate action to change the situation.'' -- Prominent human rights lawyer ] in an open letter to ] and ].<ref>Gao Zhisheng, A China More Just, Broad Press USA, 2007</ref>
</div>
Human Rights organizations also point to retroactive use of legislation to legitimatize the persecution.<ref name =Amnesty1/>. The campaign's first emphasis on rule by law was a statute legislation outlawing "heterodox religions," which was then retroactively applied to Falun Gong,<ref name=lum/> thus granting the persecution of Falun Gong, and that of other spiritual groups, an air of legitimacy.<ref name=Leung/> Beatrice Leung states that Falun Gong had "obtained legal status as one of China's many qigong groups," since it had been registered with the China Qigong Science Research Society in 1992; its literature had been approved by the Ministry of Culture and its books were printed through a state-license. She suggests that this retroactive application of law, which saw the press which printed Falun Gong's books punished and bookshop-owners arrested for acts which were not illegal at that time, "defies normal concepts of legality."


As Falun Gong becomes more overt in its rhetorical charges against CCP rule, allegations emerge that Chinese security agencies engage in large-scale overseas spying operations against Falun Gong practitioners, and that Falun Gong prisoners in China are killed to supply China's organ transplant industry.
Amnesty states the official directives and legal documents issued for the purge "undermine rights set out in the Chinese constitution as well as international standards."<ref name=Leung/><ref name=heretical/> Kilgour and Matas point out that only "later in 1999 did the National People's Congress pass new laws targeting Falun Gong retroactively and purporting to legalize a long list of illegal acts" against practitioners.<ref name=KMRR/>


*2005 – On 15 February, Li Hongzhi issues a statement renouncing his earlier membership in the Communist Youth League.
Analysts opine that officials grew impatient with the constant flow of protesters into Beijing, and decided that “drastic measures were needed.” Johnson, in his work ''Wild Grass'', described the framework set up by Beijing that led to killings.<ref name=wildgrass/> This was a cascading responsibility system to push the responsibility for meeting central orders down onto those enforcing them: central authorities would hold local officials personally responsible for stemming the flow of protesters. A typical “study session” of police and government officials was held in Weifang; the central government's directive to limit protesters was read aloud, no questions were asked as to how it was to be achieved—“success was all that mattered.”<ref name=wildgrass> ibid., Ian Johnson, ''Wildgrass'' (2005) p 285</ref><!-- Commented out because image was deleted: ] -->
*2005 – On 4 June, Chinese diplomat Chen Yonglin, a political consul at the Chinese consulate in Sydney, defects to Australia. He reports that a large part of his job was to monitor and harass Falun Gong practitioners in Australia. Days later, on 8 June, Hao Fengjun, a former member of the Tianjin city 610 office, goes public with his story of defection, and tells of abuse against Falun Gong in China.<ref name="cyber assault">Gutmann, Ethan. "Hacker Nation: China's Cyber Assault," World Affairs MAY/JUNE 2010</ref>
*2005 – On 16 June, ] is reported tortured to death in Shenyang at the age of 37.<ref>Amnesty International, 27 June 2005</ref>
*2005 – In June, the number of Falun Gong practitioners allegedly killed as a result or torture and abuse in custody exceeds 2,500.<ref>Falun Dafa Information Center, " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501233445/http://faluninfo.net/topic/4/ |date=1 May 2011 }}", 17 May 2008</ref>
*2006 – UN special rapporteur on torture ] releases the findings of his 2005 investigation on torture in China. He reports that two-thirds of reported torture cases are against Falun Gong practitioners.<ref>Manfred Nowak (2006). "Report of the Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment: MISSION TO CHINA". United Nations. p. 13.</ref>
*2006 – In July 2006, former Canadian Member of Parliament ] and international human rights attorney ] release the findings of their investigation into ]. Although their evidence was largely circumstantial, they conclude that involuntary organ extractions from Falun Gong practitioners are widespread and ongoing. Chinese officials deny the allegations.<ref>David Kilgour and David Kilgour (2007) (in 22 languages)</ref>
*2006 – Falun Gong practitioners in the United States establish ], a classical Chinese dance company that begins touring internationally in 2007.<ref></ref>
*2007 – Falun Gong sources report that the number of persecution deaths exceeds 3,000.<ref name=faluninfotime />
*2007 – August, practitioners of Falun Gong launch the ], which toured to over 35 of countries in 2007 and 2008 ahead of the ].<ref name=Eriksen>Alanah May Eriksen, New Zealand Herald. . 17 December 2007.</ref><ref>The Calgary Herald, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107003127/http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/news/city/story.html?id=4b4fd555-3455-40ba-b594-3cd16aa28624 |date=7 November 2012 }}. 20 May 2008.</ref> The relay was intended to draw attention to a range of human rights issues in China in connection with the Olympics, especially those related to Falun Gong and ], and received support from hundreds of elected officials, past Olympic medallists, human rights groups and other concerned organizations.<ref name=Eriksen/>


=== 2008–2014 ===
The Party has also used a variety of extra-legal mechanisms to stamp out public practice and protest, according to Human Rights Watch.<ref name=dangerous/> Work units would summarily fire people identified as practitioners. Job loss often meant lost housing, schooling, pensions, and a report to the police. If brought to the attention of police or Party officials, even doing the Falun Gong exercises at home proved dangerous.<ref name=dangerous/> Local officials would detain active practitioners and those unwilling to recant, and were expected to "make certain" that families and employers keep them isolated.<ref name=dangerous/>
Top-level Chinese authorities continue to launch strike-hard campaigns against Falun Gong surrounding sensitive events and anniversaries, and step up efforts to coercively "transform" Falun Gong practitioners in detention facilities and reeducation centers. ] who seek to represent Falun Gong defendants continue to face punishment from Chinese authorities, including harassment, disbarment, and imprisonment.


*2008 – On 6 February, ] 11 days after being taken into custody in Beijing. His wife, artist Xu Na, is sentenced to 3 years in prison for possessing Falun Gong literature.<ref>New York Times, , accessed 19 March 2011</ref>
===Propaganda and media control===
]


]
Anti-Falun Gong propaganda from state controlled media has played a central role in the persecution, according to scholars and journalists. Kilgour and Matas state that by inciting the population to hate Falun Gong practitioners, it justifies the policy of persecution, recruites participants in the persecution, and forestalls opposition.<ref name=KMRR/>


] scenes in ]]]
Elizabeth J. Perry describes media reports inundating the evening news at the early stages of the crackdown: "For weeks... each night, pictures were broadcast of huge piles of Falun Gong materials that had been... confiscated in police raids on bookstores and publishing houses," including the People’s Liberation Army Press. "Some were disposed of in gigantic bonfires, others were recycled..." Media reports would focus on the testimonies of relatives of Falun Gong "victims", who would talk about the "terrible tragedies" that had befallen their loved ones; former practitioners would confess being "hoodwinked by Li Hongzhi and... expressing regret at their gullibility"; "happy pictures of those who had kicked the Falun Gong habit" and were now pursuing other pass-times were broadcast; physical education instructors suggested "healthy alternatives" to Falun Gong practice, including badminton, ballroom dancing, bowling. Perry writes that the basic pattern of the offensive was similar to "the anti-rightist campaign of the 1950s the anti-spiritual pollution campaigns of the 1980s."<ref>Elizabeth J. Perry, Critical Asian Studies 33:2 (2001), p. 173</ref>


*2008 – In the first six months of the year, over 8,000 Falun Gong practitioners are abducted by security forces under the pretext of preventing protests during the Beijing Olympics.<ref>Congressional-Executive Commission on China, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121212041846/http://www.cecc.gov/pages/annualRpt/annualRpt08/CECCannRpt2008.pdf |date=12 December 2012 }}, 31 October 2008.</ref>
Falun Gong was branded by state-media as part of an "anti-China international movement," according to CNN's Willy Lam.<ref name=lamsupp /> In a throw-back to the Cultural Revolution, the Party organised rallies in the streets and stop-work meetings in remote western provinces by irrelevant government agencies such as the weather bureau to denounce the practice. Xinhua published editorials on ] officers declaring Falun Gong "an effort by hostile Western forces to subvert China," and vowing to do their utmost to defend the central leadership and "maintain national security and social stability."<ref name=lamsupp />
*2009 – CCP heir apparent ] is put in charge of ], a strike hard effort to crack down on Tibetans, democracy activists and Falun Gong practitioners around sensitive anniversaries. ] heads a parallel effort to crack down on Falun Gong practitioners, ethnic separatism, and protests.<ref>Ching Cheong. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320124326/http://www.hkej.com/template/blog/php/blog_details.php?blog_posts_id=2277 |date=20 March 2012 }}. Singapore Straits Times. 3 March 2009</ref>
*2009 – In March, U.S. House of Representatives passes a resolution on recognizing and condemning the ongoing persecution of Falun Gong in China.<ref>Einhorn, Bruce. "Congress Challenges China on Falun Gong & Yuan", Business Week, 17 March 2010</ref>
*2009 – On 13 May, ] Zhang Kai(张凯) and Li Chunfu(李春富) are violently beaten and detained in ] for investigating the death of Jiang Xiqing(江锡清), a 66-year-old Falun Gong practitioner killed in a labor camp.<ref>Human Rights in China, , 13 May 2009.</ref>
*2009 – On 4 July, Dalian city lawyer Wang Yonghang(王永航) is taken from his home by security agents, interrogated, and beaten for defending Falun Gong practitioners.<ref>Amnesty International. . 28 July 2009</ref> In November 2009, Wang was sentenced in a closed court to seven years in prison for his advocacy on behalf of Falun Gong practitioners. When his lawyers were permitted to see him in January 2010, they reported that he had been tortured.<ref>Congressional Executive Commission on China. , 10 October 2010, p. 104.</ref>
*2009 – In November, Jiang Zemin and other high-ranking Chinese officials are indicted by a Spanish court on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity for their involvement in the persecution of Falun Gong.<ref>, 14 November 2009</ref> A month later, an Argentine judge concludes that top Chinese officials Jiang Zemin and Luo Gan had adopted a "genocidal strategy" in pursuing the eradication of Falun Gong, and asks Interpol to seek their arrest<ref>Luis Andres Henao, "," 22 December 2009</ref>
*2010 – Over 100 Falun Gong practitioners in Shanghai are abducted and detained in connection with the Shanghai World Expo. Some reportedly face torture for their refusal to disavow Falun Gong.<ref name=CECC>Congressional Executive Commission on China, , 2010.</ref>
*2010 – In the Spring of 2010, Chinese authorities launch a new, three-year campaign whose goal is to coercively transform large portions of the known Falun Gong population through attendance in reeducation classes.<ref>CECC, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111202130133/http://www.cecc.gov/pages/virtualAcad/index.phpd?showsingle=154369 |date=2 December 2011 }}, 22 March 2011, accessed 19 March 2011</ref>
*2010 – On 22 April 2010, Beijing lawyers ] and ] were permanently disbarred for defending Falun Gong practitioners.<ref>Amnesty International, 05-10-2010</ref>
*2011 – In February, a Falun Gong practitioner named Qin Yueming dies in custody at the Jiamusi Prison. His family state that his body was covered with extensive bruising, with blood in his nose, though authorities said the cause of death was heart attack. A petition seeking redress for his death garners over 15,000 signatures. Qin's wife and daughter are subsequently imprisoned and reportedly tortured for their efforts to draw attention to the case.<ref name=AmnestyQin>Amnesty International, , 22 August 2012.</ref>
*2011 – In May, a lawsuit is filed on behalf of Falun Gong practitioners against ]. The suit alleges, based mainly on internal Cisco documents, that the technology company "designed and implemented a surveillance system for the Chinese Communist Party, knowing it would be used to root out members of the Falun Gong religion and subject them to detention, forced labor and torture."<ref>Terry Baynes, , Reuters, 20 May 2011.</ref>
*2011 – In Hebei province, 3,000 Chinese citizens sign a petition calling for the release of detained Falungong practitioners Zhou Xiangyang and Li Shanshan, who were being held at the Gangbei Prison and Tangshan reeducation center, respectively.<ref>Amnesty International, , 14 November 2011.</ref>
*2012 – In June 2012, 15,000 people in Heilongjiang Province signed and affixed their fingerprints to a petition requesting that the government investigate the death of Qin Yueming, a Falun Gong practitioner who died in custody.<ref name=AmnestyQin/>
*2012 – In early June, Falun Gong practitioner Li Lankui was detained and sent to a reeducation-through-labour camp in Hebei province. Hundreds of villagers mobilized to call for Li's release, including by signing petitions calling for an end to the persecution of Falun Gong. This prompted further crackdowns by security agents, leading to the arrest of at least 16 villagers. Some reported that they were tortured for expressing their support for Li Lankui.<ref>Amnesty International, , 22 October 2012.</ref><ref></ref>
*2012 – in December, a woman in ] finds a letter written in both Chinese and English in a box of Halloween decorations purchased from Kmart. The letter said that the decorations were assembled in Unit 8, Department 2 of ]. It went on to describe forced labor conditions in the camp, and noted that many of the detainees were Falun Gong practitioners being held without trial. The letter's author, a Falun Gong practitioner from Beijing, was later identified by ''The New York Times''.<ref name=NYT61113>{{cite news|title=Behind Cry for Help From China Labor Camp|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/12/world/asia/man-details-risks-in-exposing-chinas-forced-labor.html|access-date=12 June 2013|newspaper=The New York Times|date=11 June 2013|author=]}}</ref>
*2013 – Central 610 Office authorities launch a new three-year campaign calling for the ideological "transformation" of Falun Gong practitioners. Local governments issue quotas and targets for the number of Falun Gong practitioners to reeducate, and prescribe the appropriate means for doing so.<ref name=Amnesty2013/>
*2013 – A photojournalism magazine in China publishes an exposé detailing human rights abuses committed by female detainees at the ] in ], where Falun Gong practitioners were estimated to comprise approximately half the detainees. The article was promptly removed from the magazine's website, but not before galvanizing nationwide opposition to and condemnation of the labor camp system. Soon thereafter, New York Times photographer ] releases a documentary on the Masanjia labor camp.<ref name=Amnesty2013/>
*2013 – Chinese officials begin dismantling the nationwide network of reeducation-through-labour camps, in which Falun Gong practitioners comprised a significant portion of detainees. Human rights groups expressed skepticism at the scope of reforms, however, noting that other forms of extralegal detention were still being used to detain Falun Gong practitioners and political dissidents.<ref name=Amnesty2013>{{cite book|publisher=Amnesty International|title=Changing the soup but not the medicine: Abolishing re-education through labor in China|date=Dec 2013|location=London, UK|url=https://www.amnesty.org/es/documents/asa17/042/2013/es/}}</ref><ref>Freedom House, , January 2015. Quote: "...for Falun Gong practitioners, the abolition of the RTL camp system coincided with an increased use of prison sentences on the one hand, and detention in extra-legal "legal education centers" for forced conversion on the other."</ref>
*2013 – On 12 December, European Parliament adopts a resolution on organ harvesting in China, where it "Calls for the EU and its Member States to raise the issue of organ harvesting in China"<ref>European Parliament, . Quote: "Expresses its deep concern over the persistent and credible reports of systematic, state‑sanctioned organ harvesting from non-consenting prisoners of conscience in the People's Republic of China, including from large numbers of Falun Gong practitioners imprisoned for their religious beliefs, as well as from members of other religious and ethnic minority groups"</ref>
*2014 – In August, investigative journalist ] publishes his book "The Slaughter: Mass Killings, Organ Harvesting, and China's Secret Solution to Its Dissident Problem," in which he writes that ].<ref>Barbara Turnbull, , Toronto Star, 21 October 2014.</ref><ref>Thomas Nelson, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150206213828/http://iar-gwu.org/content/slaughter-mass-killings-organ-harvestings-and-china%E2%80%99s-secret-solution-its-dissident-problem |date=6 February 2015 }}, International Affairs Review.</ref>
*2014 – Four lawyers in ] are detained and reportedly tortured by the police while investigating abuses against Falun Gong practitioners held at the Qinglongshan farm reeducation centre.<ref>Amnesty International, , 4 April 2014.</ref>


==References==
Circulars were issued to women's and youth organisations encouraging support for the crackdown. Both the Youth League and the All-China Women's Federation trumpeted the "greater use of science education" to combat "feudalistic superstition." Xinhua would report speeches of ] officials: "This reminds us of the importance and urgency of strengthening our political and ideological work among the younger generation, educating them with Marxist materialism and atheism, and making greater efforts to popularize scientific knowledge."<ref name=xinhuamass>People's Daily Online, , July 25, 1999, accessed October 12, 2007</ref> The Women's Federation stated the need to "arm our sisters with scientific knowledge and help improve their capability to recognize and resist feudal superstition."<ref name=xinhuamass /> After having "earnestly studied" Jiang's speeches on Falun Gong, the PLA also recognised that "Only Marxism can save China and only the Chinese Communist Party can lead us to accomplish the great cause of reinvigorating the Chinese nation."<ref>People's Daily Online, , July 25, 1999, accessed October 12, 2007</ref>
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{{Reflist}}
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==Further reading==
The campaign entered educational institutions, with anti-Falun Gong propaganda incorporated into high-school and primary school textbooks.<ref name=woipfgedu>WOIPFG, , 2004, accessed October 12, 2007</ref> WOIPFG claimed that students who practiced Falun Gong were barred from schools and universities and from sitting exams; a policy of "guilt by association" was adopted, such that direct family members of known practitioners were also denied entry; schoolchildren were taught anti-Falun Gong poems;<ref name=wsjwhatif>Hugo Restall , The Asian Wall Street Journal, February 14, 2001</ref> anti-Falun Gong petitions were organised on a mass scale;<ref name=dangerous /> university professors, lecturers and students who refused to renounce Falun Gong were expelled and faced consequences such as arrest, forced labour, rape, and torture, sometimes resulting in death; students were forced to watch videos or attend seminars attacking Falun Gong;<ref name=dangerous /> defaming banners and posters were placed around schools and universities, reminiscent of the Cultural Revolution;<ref name=dangerous /><ref name=woipfgedulet>WOIPFG, , accessed October 12 2007</ref> viewing Falun Gong websites could result in arrest; examinations contained questions with anti-Falun Gong contents—incorrect answers could result in reportedly violent repercussions.<ref name=woipfgedu />
* {{cite journal|last=Li|first=Junpeng|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/politics-and-religion/article/abs/religion-of-the-nonreligious-and-the-politics-of-the-apolitical-the-transformation-of-falun-gong-from-healing-practice-to-political-movement/721645CB0ED458B1540460F1D99F0B89|title=The Religion of the Nonreligious and the Politics of the Apolitical: The Transformation of Falun Gong from Healing Practice to Political Movement|journal=]|publisher=]|date=2013-11-01|volume=7|issue=1|pages=177–208|doi=10.1017/S1755048313000576|s2cid=145591972 }}
* {{cite journal|last=Ownby|first=David|url=https://online.ucpress.edu/nr/article-abstract/6/2/223/71159/A-History-for-Falun-Gong-Popular-Religion-and-the?redirectedFrom=fulltext|title=A History for Falun Gong: Popular Religion and the Chinese State Since the Ming Dynasty|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=6|issue=2|date=April 2003|pages=223–243|doi=10.1525/nr.2003.6.2.223|jstor=10.1525/nr.2003.6.2.223}}


==External links==
According to ''The Washington Post'', neighborhood officials compelled the elderly, people with disabilities, and the ill to attend the classes denouncing Falun Gong; universities sent staff to find students who had dropped out or been expelled for practicing Falun Gong and brought them back for the brainwashing sessions.<ref name=torturebreak> John Pomfret and Philip P. Pan, “Torture Is Breaking Falun Gong, China Systematically Eradicating Group”, ] Foreign Service, Sunday, August 5, 2001; Page A01</ref>


{{commons category|Falun Gong}}
The ''Post'' reported the story of a Beijing university student, Alex Hsu, who was kidnapped on his way to a computer lab. It was reported that they drove him to a hotel near a labour camp, where 20 other practitioners were detained, including students, teachers, university staff and retired professors. At the hotel three former practitioners still detained at the camp tried to persuade him to abandon Falun Gong for 12 hours a day.<ref name=torturebreak/> The ''Post'' reports Hsu saying "It was mental torture... The pressure just kept growing ... And the threat was always there. You could see these people all had suffered, and you knew what would happen to you if you didn't give in too."<ref name=torturebreak/> The ''Post'' reported that practitioners are forced to remain in the classes until they renounce their beliefs, in writing, and then on videotape. They report Hsu saying, "It was very painful. They forced us to lie. We knew Falun Gong is good, but they forced us to say it was evil."<ref name=torturebreak/> Hsu wept after giving in, and later dropped out of school and went into hiding. “Those who refuse to submit in the classes are sent to the labor camps, where members face a more systematic regime of violence than in the past, according to practitioners and government sources. On average, the government adviser said, most people abandon Falun Gong after 10 to 12 days of classes, but some resist for as long as 20,” The ''Post'' reported.<ref name=torturebreak/>
*


{{Falun Gong}}
Anne-Marie Brady of the University of Canterbury gives Falun Gong as an example of the CCP's use of new technologies as propaganda tools. "If you do a web search in China using Chinese Google on Falun Gong, all that you'll get is all the government sites." She says that relevant western companies doing business in China are made to participate in this censoring system.<ref>Antony Funnell, , Radio National Australia, accessed 2/6/08</ref> According to James Mulvenon of the Rand Corporation, the Chinese Ministry of Public Security uses cyber-warfare to attack Falun Gong websites in the United States,<ref>Eric Lichtblau, , ], April 25, 2002</ref> Australia, Canada and England.<ref name=morais/><ref>Associated Press, , accessed September 19, 2007</ref>

In July 2001, as part of House Concurrent Resolution 188, the ] denounced the "notorious" ] which oversees the persecution through "organized brainwashing, torture and murder," and stated that propaganda from state-controlled media "inundated the public in an attempt to breed hatred and discrimination." The Resolution was passed by a 420:0 vote, calling on China to "cease its persecution and harassment of Falun Gong practitioners in the United States; to release from detention all Falun Gong practitioners and put an end to the practices of torture and other cruel, inhumane treatment against them and to abide by the ] and the ]."<ref> U.S. Congress (] ]) , ''Library of Congress'', retrieved ] ]</ref>

====Intimidation of foreign correspondents====
Amnesty International has documented intimidation and harassment of foreign correspondents reporting on the crackdown on Falun Gong. Many foreign journalists attending a news conference organized covertly in Beijing on 28 October, 1999, by practitioners, were accused by the Chinese authorities of "illegal reporting." Later on, journalists from a number of news organizations, including ''Reuters'', the ''New York Times'' and the ''Associated Press'', were questioned at length by police, obliged to sign a "confession of wrongdoing," and had their work and residence papers temporarily confiscated. Several of the reporters were put under police surveillance.

Foreign correspondents also complain that television satellite transmissions were interfered with while being routed through China Central Television.<ref name=Amnesty1/> Amnesty states that "a number of people have received prison sentences or long terms of administrative detention for speaking out about the repression or giving information over the Internet. Others have been punished for communicating with the foreign press or for organising press conferences."<ref name=Amnesty1/>

The 2002 ]' report on China states that "Since Falungong was banned in July 1999, Chinese authorities have harassed foreign journalists investigating this issue. Photographers and cameramen working with foreign media are prevented from working on and around Tiananmen Square where hundreds of Falungong followers have demonstrated in recent years. Reporters Without Borders estimates that at least 50 representatives of the international press have been arrested since July 1999, and some of them were beaten by police. Finally, several Falungong followers have been imprisoned for talking with foreign journalists."

Zhang Xueling, whose name was cited in a series of articles by Ian Johnson, Wall Street Journal's correspondent in Beijing, was arrested on 24 April 2001. Johnson had reported Zhang Xueling, a Falun Gong practitioner's account of her mother, who was also a practitioner, being tortured to death by the police. She was sentenced to a few weeks and later to three years in a labour camp. Ian Johnson left Beijing after writing his articles about the persecution, stating that after he received the Pulitzer Prize for his articles "the Chinese police would have made my life in Beijing impossible."<ref>, Reporters Without Borders</ref>

On November 10, 1999, the Foreign Correspondents Club (FCC) of China sent a letter of protest to the Chinese Foreign Ministry about official "intimidation and harassment" of foreign correspondents trying to report the persecution of Falun Gong. The letter said that "members have been followed, detained, interrogated and threatened."<ref name=Amnesty1/><ref name=schechter/> Amnesty also noted that "several of the reporters were put under police surveillance."<ref name=Amnesty1/>

====Use of the cult label as a tool of repression====

The 'cult' label was first used against Falun Gong by the Party three months after the onset of the persecution, according to the ]. A November 1999 report by the ''Post'' states, “It was Mr. Jiang who ordered that Falun Gong be branded a ‘cult,’ and then demanded that a law be passed banning cults.”<ref>John Pomfret, Sect Is Dividing China's Leadership, Washington Post Service, Paris, Tuesday, November 9, 1999</ref>


] of the ], and ] ] for his writing on the plight of Falun Gong practitioners, writes that declaring Falun Gong a cult was the most "brilliant" move, cloaking the crackdown with the "legitimacy of the West's anti-cult movement," forcing practitioners to prove their innocence.<ref name=wildgrass>Johnson, Ian. ''Wild Grass: three stories of change in modern China''. Pantheon books. 2004. pp 23-229</ref> Julia Ching opines that calling Falun Gong a "cult" after the crackdown had already begun attempted to make previous illegal arrests and imprisonments constitutional. She states that "cult" was defined by an atheist government "on political premises, not by any religious authority, without defining what a good cult, or a good religion would be."<ref name=XIX>p. 9</ref>

Human rights groups and scholars have criticized use of the term to justify violence. David Ownby, Director of the Centre of East Asian studies at the University of Montreal, stated in response that Falun Gong is "by no means a cult." <ref>David Kilgour, notes for address At a conference of the International Society for Human Rights, Konigstein (near Frankfurt), Germany, 30 March 2007</ref> Former Canadian Secretary of State ] and human rights lawyer ], authors of investigative reports on organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners in China, profess that the label "is a manufactured tool of repression, but not its cause." They state that the label was used to incite hatred and dehumanize practitioners and served to create a pretext for the government's policy of persecution.<ref name=KMRR/>

A 2001 Amnesty report states that "the word 'cult' has been frequently used in English to translate the label recently put by the Chinese government on the Falun Gong and other similar groups. However, this translation is misleading. The expression used in China for this purpose, "xiejiao zuzhi", refers to a large variety of groups and has a far broader meaning than "cult." "Xiejiao zuzhi" is the expression used in Chinese legislation, official statements and by the state media to refer to a wide range of sectarian and millenarian groups, or unorthodox religious or spiritual organizations, and other groups which do not meet official approval."<ref name=Amnesty1/>

Johnson notes that none of the purported "victims" were allowed to be interviewed independently, making the state's claims "almost impossible to verify"; during the greatest period of Falun Gong merchandise sales in China, Li Hongzhi received no royalties because all publications were ]; and fundamentally, "the group didn't meet many common definitions of a ],"<ref name=wildgrass/> since Falun Gong practitioners do not live isolated from society; they marry outside the group; they have non-practitioner friends; they hold normal jobs; they do not believe that "the world's end is imminent"; they do not give over large amounts of money for Falun Gong, they believe that "suicide is not accepted, nor is physical violence."<ref name=wildgrass/>

==="Re-education" through forced labor===
According to the Ministry of Public Security, "]" is an administrative measure imposed on those guilty of committing minor offences, but who are not legally considered criminals.<ref name=dangerous /> In late 2000, the Party began to use this method of punishment widely against Falun Gong practitioners in the hope of permanently "transforming recidivists," who would often be immediately sentenced to re-education for up to three years.<ref name=dangerous /> Terms could also be arbitrarily extended by police. Practitioners may have ambiguous charges levied against them, according to Robert Bejesky, writing in the Columbia Journal of Asian Law, such as "disrupting social order," "endangering national security," or "subverting the socialist system."<ref name=bejesky>Robert Bejesky, “Falun Gong & reeducation through labour”, ''Columbia Journal of Asian Law'', 17:2, Spring 2004, pp. 147-189</ref> Up to 99% of long term Falun Gong detainees are processed administratively through this system, and do not enter the formal criminal justice system.<ref name=bejesky>p. 178</ref> Outside access is not given to the camps, prisoners are forced to do heavy work in mines, brick factories, and agriculture, and physical torture, beatings, interrogations, inadequate food rations, and other human rights abuses take place, according to Human Rights Watch.<ref name=dangerous /> A figure from 2004 sets the number of Falun Gong deaths in these institutions at 700, according to Bejesky.<ref name=bejesky>p. 179</ref>

There are estimates of at least 10,000 Falun Gong practitioners having been officially sentenced to reeducation from the beginning of the crackdown,<ref name=dangerous /> and that at least half of the 250,000 total recorded inmates in China's reeducation camps are Falun Gong practitioners, according to the US State Department.<ref name=USstate /> Upon completion of their reeducation sentences, practitioners are sometimes then incarcerated in "legal education centers," another form of punishment set up by provincial authorities to "transform the minds" of practitioners," according to Human Rights Watch, which delivered a comprehensive report on the persecution, including extensive references to state-media and official statements.<ref name=dangerous /><ref name=USstate /> While Beijing officials initially portrayed the process as "benign," a harder line was later adopted; "teams of education assistants and workers, leading cadres, and people from all walks of life" were drafted into the campaign. In early 2001 quotas were given for how many practitioners needed to be "transformed." Official records do not mention the methods employed to achieve this, though Falun Gong and third party accounts indicate that the mental and physical abuses could be "extraordinarily severe."<ref name=dangerous />

===Use of torture===
{{See|Reports of organ harvesting from Falun Gong in China}}
]
David Ownby writes that the Chinese authorities have harassed and detained "tens of thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands" of practitioners in China, and that authorities have extended the harassment to family members and friends of practitioners also.<ref name=Ownby2008>David Ownby, Falun Gong and the Future of China, 2008</ref> Falun Gong sources, accepted as accurate by human rights agencies such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch according to Ownby,<ref name=Ownby2008/> have documented over 3000 confirmed cases of deaths from torture in police custody. Reports of torture documented by the sources exceed 50,000. Human rights organisations, including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, as well as other NGOs monitoring the treatment of Falun Gong by the Chinese government, have also published reports on the torture and mistreatment of practitioners. Since 2000, the Special Rapporteur to the United Nations reported 314 cases of torture, representing more than 1,160 individuals, to the authorities. According to the UN Special Rapporteur, Falun Gong comprise 66% of all such reported torture cases, 8% occurring within '']'', which are psychiatric facilities.<ref name=nowak66/> The US State Department cites estimates that practitioners may account for half of the labour camp population,<ref name=USstate/> while Amnesty International notes that practitioners in detention are at a "high risk of torture or ill-treatment."<ref name=Amnesty2006></ref> <ref name=InterviewSurvivors> Both have since died as a result of the persecution.</ref>

In its "''United Nations Reports on China’s Persecution of Falun Gong" (2004)'',<ref name="UN2004">{{Citation | title = The United Nations Reports on China’s Persecution of Falun Gong (2004)| publisher = The Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group | url = http://flghrwg.net/reports/UN2004/UN2004.pdf |format=PDF| year = 2004}} The document is compiled and published by the Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group (FLGHRWG), who also wrote the introduction and appendix on torture methods. It contains excerpts from the 2004 annual reports of the ]’s Special Rapporteurs referring specifically to acts committed against Falun Gong practitioners.</ref> Falun Gong sources report numerous cases of extreme psychological and physical torture, accompanied by testimonies and details of identities of the victims, resulting in impaired mental, sensory, physiological and speech faculties, mental trauma, paralysis, or death. Over 100 forms of torture are purported to be used, including ], ], ], ], and ], with many variations on each type.<ref>{{cite web | title = Norway: Practitioners hold an Anti-Torture Exhibition and Receive Positive Media Coverage (Photos)| publisher = Falun Dafa Clearwisdom.net | url = http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2004/8/4/51010.html|date=2004-08-04 | accessdate = 2007-02-12}}</ref> The main purpose of the torture is ostensibly to have Falun Gong practitioners renounce or denounce the practice and their teacher, Li Hongzhi. <ref>CBC News (July 6, 2006) , ''CBC News'', retrieved July 6, 2006</ref> The Special Rapporteur refers to the torture scenarios as "harrowing" and writes that "The cruelty and brutality of these alleged acts... defy description."<ref>Asma Jahangir, , Report of the Special Rapporteur, United Nations, 2003, accessed October 15, 2007</ref>

John Pomfret and Philip P. Pan wrote in the ''Washington Post'' that the Party gained the upper hand in its protracted battle against Falun Gong by expanding its “use of torture and high-pressure indoctrination.”<ref name=torturebreak/> They report that, according to sources, in 2001, after a year and a half of difficulty in suppressing the practice, “the government for the first time this year sanctioned the systematic use of violence against the group, established a network of brainwashing classes and embarked on a painstaking effort to weed out followers neighborhood by neighborhood and workplace by workplace.” They repeat the reports of practitioners being beaten, shocked with electric truncheons, and being “forced to undergo unbearable physical pressure, such as squatting on the floor for days at a time... Many adherents are also sent to intensive classes where the teachings of Falun Gong leader Li Hongzhi are picked apart by former believers, sometimes friends who have already been tortured into submission.”<ref name=torturebreak/>

They cite three main ingredients, according to a party apparatchik: violence, a high-pressure propaganda campaign, and brainwashing classes. "Each aspect of the campaign is critical," the ''Post'' reports their source saying, "Pure violence doesn't work. Just studying doesn't work either. And none of it would be working if the propaganda hadn't started to change the way the general public thinks. You need all three. That's what they've figured out."<ref name=torturebreak/>

</ref>]]

They write that some local governments had tried brainwashing classes before, but only in January 2001 did the “secret 610 office, an interagency task force leading the charge against Falun Gong, order all neighborhood committees, state institutions and companies to start.”<ref name=torturebreak/> Pomfret and Pan write that no practitioner was to be spared, and that according to their source the most active are sent directly to labor camps, “where they are first 'broken' by beatings and other torture.”<ref name=torturebreak/>

The ''Post'' reported the story of James Ouyang, who was arrested for the second time protesting in Tiananmen Square. After he was arrested, “police methodically reduced him to an 'obedient thing' over 10 days of torture ... Ouyang was stripped and interrogated for five hours. 'If I responded incorrectly, that is if I didn't say, 'Yes,' they shocked me with the electric truncheon,' he said.”<ref name=torturebreak/> After he was put in a labor camp in west Beijing, the ''Post'' reported, “the guards ordered him to stand facing a wall. If he moved, they shocked him. If he fell down from fatigue, they shocked him ... By the sixth day, Ouyang said, he couldn't see straight from staring at plaster three inches from his face. His knees buckled, prompting more shocks and beatings.”<ref name=torturebreak/> Eventually he gave in to the guards demands, and denounced Falun Gong shouting into the wall, “Officers continued to shock him about the body and he soiled himself regularly. Finally, on the 10th day, Ouyang's repudiation of the group was deemed sufficiently sincere. He was taken before a group of Falun Gong inmates and rejected the group one more time as a video camera rolled.”<ref name=torturebreak/> They report that he left jail and then entered brainwashing classes, “Twenty days later after debating Falun Gong for 16 hours a day, he 'graduated.'”

] states that while "it is unknown how many Falun Gong practitioners are being executed by the Chinese authorities, ...various sources indicate China may be executing between 10,000-15,000 people a year."<ref>Amnesty International Fact Sheet on Persecution of Falun Gong, </ref> ] commented that most of the information available to it are from either official Chinese government or Falun Gong sources, stating that "There is no sure way of checking the information from either source, making it impossible to fully assess competing claims about the numbers of judicial sentences, reeducation through labor terms, deaths in custody, and so on. "<ref name=dangerous/> David Ownby, in his 2008 "Falun Gong and the future of China," vouches for the veracity of Falun Gong sources, and says they are well-respected and regarded as accurate by human rights groups.

Chinaview, an independent website focused on human rights abuses in China, says that the Gaoyang Forced Labour Camp was the first to begin force-feeding Falun Gong practitioners with human urine and excrement in the summer of 2003, and that “…the Chinese government awarded them for this innovation, and sent labour camp staff from around the country to learn this procedure.”<ref>{{cite web | title = Torture Methods 05 / Force-Feeding| publisher = Chinaview | url = http://chinaview.wordpress.com/2007/01/12/photo-china-modern-torture-methods-5-force-feeding/| accessdate = 2007-03-08}}</ref>

Amnesty International's ''"Falun Gong Persecution Factsheet"'' lists ] among the forms of torture Falun Gong practitioners are subject to.<ref>{{cite web | title = FALUN GONG PERSECUTION FACTSHEET| publisher = Amnesty International | url = http://web.archive.org/web/20070129054422/http://www.amnesty.org.nz/web/pages/home.nsf/dd5cab6801f1723585256474005327c8/83fba691f912206bcc2571d3001824ed!OpenDocument | accessdate = 2007-03-08}}</ref> ], a Beijing-based human rights lawyer, in his third open letter to the Beijing leadership stated his shock of the "unbelievable brutality, ...the immoral acts ...of 6-10 Office staff and the police. Almost every woman's genitals and breasts or every man's genitals have been sexually assaulted during the persecution in a most vulgar fashion. Almost all who have been persecuted, be they male or female, were first stripped naked before any torture."<ref>{{cite web | title = Gao Zhisheng's third open letter to Chinese leaders | publisher = Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China | url = http://cipfg.org/en/index.php?news=290 | accessdate = 2007-03-08}}</ref></blockquote> The Association for Asian Research reports that victims in the Dalian Labor Camp were tied up in a spread-eagle position as torturers repeatedly thrust foreign objects (toilet and shoe brushes, and long rods) into their vaginas.<ref>, Association for Asian Research, March 29, 2005</ref>

==Reports of organ harvesting from live Falun Gong practitioners in China==
{{main|Reports of organ harvesting from live Falun Gong practitioners in China}}
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: ] -->
In March 2006 '']'' published a number of articles alleging that the ] and its agencies, including the ], were conducting widespread and systematic organ harvesting of living ] practitioners.<ref name=epoch1>, Epoch Times, March 10, 2006</ref> It was alleged that practitioners detained in ] camps, hospital basements, or prisons, were being blood and urine tested, their information stored on computer databases, and then matched with organ recipients.<ref name=epochgeneral>The Epoch Times, Special Category:'''', accessed 13/6/08</ref> When an organ was required, it alleged, they were injected with drugs to stop the heart, their organs removed and later sold, and their bodies incinerated.<ref name=epochgeneral/>

The first series of allegations were based on apparent eye-witness testimony of two individuals, and directed specifically at the ] in ], ] province.<ref name=epoch2>Ji Da, , Epoch Times, March 17, 2006</ref> The story received some deal of media attention. Within one month, some third party investigators, including representatives of the US Department of State, said that there was insufficient evidence to support this specific allegation.<ref name=lum>Congressional Research Service report, http://www.usembassy.it/pdf/other/RL33437.pdf, page CRS-7, paragraph 3</ref> A few months after the Sujiatun incident, in July 2006, former Canadian Secretary of State, ], and Human Rights Lawyer ], published a report of their investigation into the reports of organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners in China. Their report titled concluded that large numbers of Falun Gong practitioners are victims of systematic organ harvesting, whilst still alive, throughout China and that the practice is still ongoing.<ref name=bh> Revised Report into Allegations of Organ Harvesting of Falun Gong Practitioners in China, by David Matas, Esq. and Hon. David Kilgour, Esq. 31 January 2007</ref> Kilgour and Matas state that several pieces of evidence contained in their reports are publicly verifiable. <ref name=bh />

Investigative reports from Sky News and BBC add evidence to the findings of the Kilgour-Matas report.<ref name="Suspicions Raised Over Organ Donors">Sky News, , accessed 1/12/07</ref> The Christian Science Monitor says the report’s evidence is circumstantial but persuasive.<ref>The Monitor's View (August 3, 2006), ''The ]'', retrieved August 6, 2006</ref> The Chinese Embassy in Canada dismissed the Kilgour-Matas report soon after its release as "rumors and totally groundless," though their response was met with strong skepticism from Amnesty International.<ref name="Falun Gong Persecution Factsheet">Amnesty International,, </ref> On August 2006, a ] report said that some of the report’s key allegations appeared to be inconsistent with the findings of other investigations, though the report does not provide details.<ref>CRS Report for Congress (August 11, 2006), '']'', retrieved November 12, 2007</ref> The US state department maintains that "ndependent of these specific allegations, the United States remains concerned over China’s repression of Falun Gong practitioners and by reports of organ harvesting."<ref name=usgov1></ref> Kilgour and Matas maintain that the issue has yet to be properly addressed, while commentators speculate that the media silence is related to China's prominent role in the international community, which western governments and media are afraid to compromise.

U.N. special rapporteur Manfred Nowak, in December 2007 said "The chain of evidence they are documenting shows a coherent picture that causes concern."<ref></ref> In November 2008, the United Nations Committee Against Torture made a strong statement on the matter, citing Nowak's note that an increase in organ transplant operations coincides with “the beginning of the persecution of ” and who asked for "a full explanation of the source of organ transplants." The Committee stated that it is concerned with the information that Falun Gong practitioners "have been extensively subjected to torture and ill-treatment in prisons and that some of them have been used for organ transplants." They called for the state to immediately conduct or commission an independent investigation of the claims of organ harvesting, and take measures to ensure that those responsible for such abuses are prosecuted and punished.<ref name=UNCAT>United Nations Committee Against Torture,, Forty-first session, Geneva, 3-21 November 2008</ref>

==The Tiananmen Square "self-immolation" incident==
{{main|Tiananmen Square self-immolation incident}}

On the eve of the ], January 23, 2001, five people apparently attempted to set themselves on fire in ]. Seven days later, footage was broadcast nationally in the People's Republic by the state controlled ] (CCTV) which claimed the immolators were practitioners.<ref name=schechter/> Initially, western news organizations disseminated the story as given by ], without the possibility of verifying it independently, given the tight ]. Falun Gong in New York emphatically denied that these people could have been practitioners, pointing out that the teachings explicitly forbid suicide and killing.<ref name="TheIssueOfKilling"> from ], ]</ref> On the very same day of the incident, Falun Gong in New York issued a press statement stating that the incident was "yet another attempt by the PRC regime to defame the practice of Falun Gong" and called for the "PRC regime to allow the world media and international human rights groups to investigate this case to clarify the facts."<ref name="Press Statement dated January 23, 2001 "> from The Falun Dafa Information Center, New York</ref> Danny Schechter notes that CCP's claims are "unsubstantiated by outside parties"

Falun Gong<ref name="falsefire.com"></ref>, Human Rights Activists <ref name="kilgourmatas"> Bloody Harvest: Kilgour Matas Report on Allegation of Organ Harvesting from Falun Gong Practitioners in China, 14 August 2001</ref> and third-party commentators have pointed out discrepancies in the government's version of events, and assert that the incident was staged in order to turn public opinion against the practice<ref name="unhchr"> Statement by United Nations Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, 53rd session, 14 August 2001</ref> and build public support for its persecution.<ref name="Sunderland">Judith Sunderland. From the Household to the Factory: China's campaign against Falungong. Human Rights Watch, 2002. ISBN 1564322696</ref><ref name="Beyond The Red Wall"> - The Persecution of Falun Gong, CBC Documentary</ref>

In August, 2001, Human Rights Organization, IED ( International Educational Department), stated in its report at the United Nations that they discovered the incident "in fact, had been staged" and requested that the international community and the UN Subcommission urgently address the situation. <ref name="unhchr"/>
<!--] image of one of the self-immolators at the scene]]-->
According to analysts, the Government's media war against Falun Gong capitalized on the incident. A six-month campaign that followed attempted to portray Falun Gong as an "evil cult"<ref name=breakingpoint>Matthew Gornet, , ], June 25, 2001</ref> through repeated broadcasts of images of scene.<ref name=pomfret>John Pomfret and Philip Pan, Washington Post, 5 Aug 2001 at A1, , October 2004, retrieved July 8, 2006</ref> The campaign is thought to be the government's first effort to gain public support for the crackdown of Falun Gong, and is "reminiscent of communist political movements -- from the 1950-53 ] to the radical ] in the 1960s."<ref name=tense>{{citeweb|url = http://archives.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/east/01/24/asia.falun.03/|title = Tiananmen tense after fiery protests|author = Staff and wire reports|publisher=CNN|date=24 January 2001|accessdate = 2007-02-09}}</ref> <ref name="Rutgers03">Smith, Chrandra D. (] ]) , ''Rutgers J. of L. & Relig. New Dev.66'', retrieved ] ]</ref><!-- Commented out: the source says nothing of the sort <ref name="Rutgers03">Smith, Chrandra D. (] ]) , ''Rutgers J. of L. & Relig. New Dev.66'', retrieved ] ]</ref> -->

Falun Gong related sources pointed out several apparent discrepancies in the Chinese government's version of the incidents in a video titled "False Fire"<ref name="falsefire.com"/>. Western media correspondents were denied access to the purported victims. 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> Danny Schechter notes that CNN videotapes of the incident are confiscated, never aired... China's charges are unsubstantiated by outside parties."<ref name=schechter/>

In a CBC documentary Clive Ansley, Chair of CIPFG and China Country Monitor for Lawyers Rights’ Watch Canada states "You've got Falun Gong people this country.. oppressed over and over again, they are not allowed to speak, they are not allowed to assert any of their rights as citizens and the level of frustration must be terribly high... I can understand people doing that.. that does not mean.. the movement is evil. But, ironically, we ultimately found out that it was a fraud anyway. It wasn't real, the people involved weren't Falun Gong members, it was completely staged by the government."<ref name="Beyond The Red Wall"/>

==Reports of psychiatric torture==
Soon after the onset of the persecution, Falun Gong and human rights observers began reporting widespread psychiatric abuse of mentally-healthy practitioners. Falun Gong says that thousands have been forcefully detained in mental hospitals and subject to psychiatric abuses such as injection of sedatives or anti-psychotic drugs, torture by electrocution, force-feeding, beatings and starvation.<ref>{{Citation | title = Falun Gong Practitioners Tortured in Mental Hospitals Throughout China | publisher = Falun Dafa Information Center | url = http://www.faluninfo.net/hrreports/PsychAbuse.pdf |format=PDF| year = | accessdate = 2007-03-10}}</ref> Schechter states that as the persecution progressed, the "authorities came up with a new tactic, throwing those arrested into mental hospitals."<ref name=schechter/>
Abuse of political dissidents in China is well documented by international Human Rights organizations. Human Rights Watch has documented 3,000 cases of psychiatric punishment of political dissidents since the early 1980s.<ref>Joseph Kahn, , ], ]</ref>In 2002, ] and the Geneva Initiative on Psychiatry issued a report which alleged that Chinese dissidents, independent labour organisers, whistle-blowers and individuals who complain about official misconduct have been labelled "political maniacs" and locked up in mental hospitals simply for opposing the government.<ref>John Gittings, , '']'', ], ]</ref>

Danny Schechter notes that "use of psychiatric institutions to imprison Falun Gong practitioners is becoming an international issue." The American Psychiatric Association, at its May 2000 meeting in Chicago, discussed this concern. The Committee on Misuse and Abuse in Psychiatry unanimously passed a resolution asking that the American Psychiatric leadership request the World Psychiatric Association to investigate this problem. Schechter notes that the body's intervention had helped prevent a similar practice in the Soviet Union in the 1970s and 1980s.<ref name=schechter/>

===Political abuse of psychiatry===
A 2001 report by Amnesty International states that "Several cases have been reported in which Falun Gong practitioners, alone or in groups, were taken by police to mental hospitals where they were detained for periods varying from a few days to several weeks, and often forced to take drugs against their will.<ref name=Amnesty1/>

Robin J. Munro was the first clinician to draw worldwide attention to the abuses of ] in China in general, and of Falun Gong practitioners in particular.<ref name=sunnygalli>Sunny Y. Lu, MD, PhD, and Viviana B. Galli, MD, “Psychiatric Abuse of Falun Gong Practitioners in China”, ''J Am Acad Psychiatry Law'', 30:126–30, 2002</ref> Munro says that large-scale psychiatric abuses are the most distinctive aspect of the government’s protracted campaign to "crush the Falun Gong."

Sunny Y. Lu and Viviana B. Galli credit Jiang Zemin with reversing the declining trend of using mental hospitals as places of government-directed torture in China, as part of a comprehensive and brutal campaign to eradicate Falun Gong. They draw comparison with political abuse of psychiatry by the ] aimed at ] and nonconformists, but point out that Falun Gong practitioners were "neither political nor nonconformists."<ref name=sunnygalli/>

Lu and Galli assert that the authorities began forcing sane Falun Gong practitioners into psychiatric facilities not long after the crackdown began. In cases where hospitals expressed reluctance to admit mentally healthy persons, the government would apply pressure through police. Without formal legal procedures for commitment, local police officers and members of the 6-10 Office arbitrarily commit Falun Gong practitioners to psychiatric institutions, with lengths of detention ranging from days to years. Lu and Galli state that “the perversion of mental health facilities for the purpose of the torture of Falun Gong practitioners is widespread”; the targets are from all tiers of society, including physicians, nurses, judges, military personnel, police officers and school teachers.<ref name=sunnygalli/>Their crimes were practising Falun Gong, passing out flyers against the persecution, appealing and petitioning to the government, and refusing to renounce the practice. Diagnoses may include ], “mental problems induced by superstition” and also the newly coined the “evil cult-induced mental disorder” (邪教所致精神障碍) --which Munro describes as a “politically opportunistic... hyperdiagnosis", and a throwback to the model found in Soviet forensic psychiatry.”<ref name=munro2002>p .105</ref>

{{rquote|left|''If the practitioners continue to perform the exercises in the hospital or refuse to renounce their beliefs, medication dosages are increased as much as five to six times the initial dose until the “patient” loses the ability to move or communicate... they are tortured by being tightly bound with ropes in very painful positions, beaten and shocked with electric batons, deprived of food or sleep, force fed through gastric tubing, and shocked with high voltage through acupuncture needles.''|Lu and Galli}}

Munro writes that detained practitioners are tortured and subject to ], painful forms of electrical ] treatment, prolonged deprivation of light, food and water, and restricted access to toilet facilities in order to force "confessions" or "renunciations" as a condition of release. Fines of several thousand yuan may follow.<ref name=munro2002>p. 107</ref> Lu and Galli write that dosages of medication up to five or six times the usual level are administered through ]s as a form of torture or punishment, and that physical torture is common, including binding tightly with ropes in very painful positions. Effects of this treatment, including drug or chemical toxicity, are loss of memory, migraines, extreme weakness, protrusion of the tongue, rigidity, loss of consciousness, vomiting, nausea and seizures.<ref name=sunnygalli>p. 128</ref>

Lu and Galli say that the Chinese government uses extreme measures to prevent investigation of the alleged abuses: threats, bribes, summary cremation of victims' bodies, arbitrary detention of potential whistleblowers, censorship of the internet, restricted access for western media and humanitarian organisations, and detention, harassment, deportation of journalist or revoking their licenses etc.<ref name=sunnygalli>p. 128</ref>

The '']'' also the reported in the issue: "The old Soviet Union pioneered the misuse of psychiatry against political dissidents; China has followed suit..." The Post recounts the story of 32-year-old computer engineer Su Gang as "dramatic". Su had been repeatedly detained by the security department of his workplace for refusing to renounce Falun Gong. Following a protest trip to the capital, on May 23, 2000 his employer, a state-run petrochemical company, authorized the police to "drag him off to a mental hospital." According to his father, doctors injected Mr. Su twice a day with an unknown substance. "When Mr. Su emerged a week later, he could not eat or move his limbs normally. On June 10, the previously healthy young man died of heart failure."<ref>Washington Post Editorial,'' '', 6/23/00</ref>

Reports state that practitioners are involuntarily admitted because they practice Falun Gong exercises, for passing out flyers, refusing to sign a pledge to renounce Falun Gong, writing petition letters, appealing to the government etc. Others are admitted because detention sentences have expired or the detainees have not been successfully “transformed” in the brainwashing classes. Some have been told that they were admitted because they had a so-called “political problem”—that is, because they appealed to the government to lift the ban of Falun Gong.<ref name=Psychatricabsue1></ref>

Amnesty reports of a case where, Yang Yong, a spokesman for a police station in Beijing, confirmed to a foreign journalist that around 50 Falun Gong had been incarcerated in a psychiatric hospital near Beijing. Yang Yong reportedly said that his police force was responsible for Falun Gong practitioners, the majority of them women, held at the Zhoukoudian psychiatric hospital. He told the journalist that the practitioners "are not patients, they are there to be re-educated... most of them are Falun Gong 'extremists' who have been to Beijing to protest at least 10 times".<ref name=Amnesty1/>

===Response to the reports===

Lu and Galli state that since September 1999, the police have forced mentally healthy Falun Gong practitioners into psychiatric facilities. They point out that such a commitment requires no formal legal procedure. Members of the 6-10 Office — an extraconstitutional body created for the sole purpose of terrorizing Falun Gong—the local police, or even the security forces of local factories can arbitrarily commit Falun Gong practitioners. Human rights groups now estimate that there are 1,000 Falun Gong practitioners being held against their will in mental hospitals. The actual number is very likely many times higher. The lengths of these detentions range from a few days to 1.5 years.<ref name=Psychatricabsue1/>

According to Lu and Galli, documented cases include "physicians, nurses, an associate professor, a judge, a computer engineer, military personnel, police officers, teachers, and others. They are known to have functioned at high professional levels in society before incarceration."<ref name=Psychatricabsue1/>

Lu and Galli state that the Chinese government uses extreme measures to block any investigations by Western media and that many foreign journalists who have attempted to investigate these matters (or, in some cases, merely cover Falun Gong) in the past year have been detained, harassed, and had their licenses revoked and in some cases have even been deported from China. China has also blocked attempts at investigation by international organizations such as Amnesty International and has not responded to the World Psychiatry Association’s request to send international experts to investigate psychiatric abuse in China.<ref name=Psychatricabsue1/> Munro brings attention to the 'coincidence' between the very sizeable increase in Falun Gong admissions to mental hospitals, and the onset of the government's persecution campaign. <ref name=munro2002> Robin J. Munro, "Judicial Psychiatry in China and its Political Abuses", ''Columbia Journal of Asian Law'', ], Volume 14, Number 1, Fall 2000, p 114</ref>

In 2002, the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) scheduled an investigation with the involvement of the Chinese Society of Psychiatrists' (CSP) to examine alleged abuses of Falun Gong practitioners who were sent to Chinese psychiatric hospitals and clinics as punishment. In April, several days before it was to start, the investigation was postponed indefinitely, at the Chinese government's insistence.<ref name=hausman>Ken Hausman, , Psychiatric News, WPA, August 6, 2004</ref>

Dr. ], Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at New York Medical College and former president of The American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, states "The allegations of psychiatric abuse in China involve mistreatment, torture, and fraudulent diagnoses in the case of large numbers of political dissidents and Falun Gong practitioners and should not be dismissed as mere `failures in accurate diagnosis.'" Schechter notes Halpern, who is also a former civil rights activist who worked with Martin Luther King Jr, as stating "the government needs to hospitalize, wrongfully, non-mentally ill dissidents because this will help them in their efforts to paint the Falun Gong practitioners as not being against the government policy, but as being mentally ill. So even if they were to hospitalize a small number, word would soon spread that Falun Gong practitioners are crazy."<ref name=schechter/> Halpern has also called on his colleagues worldwide to speak out on the issue.<ref name=schechter/>. Halpern also notes that "Deliberate hospitalization, wrongful hospitalization, is only part of the problem. They then make it very difficult for practitioners to get out of the hospital by demanding that their families pay exorbitant amounts of money for their 'treatment' in the hospital. So there's no question that this type of conduct, government-sanctioned, is a serious violation of human rights. And we'd like to stop it early rather than wait until large number of dissidents are placed in hospitals,as occurred in case of Soviet Union." <ref name=schechter/>

Munro maintains that the few cases of psychiatric torture of Falun Gong practitioners he mentions are typical of the “several hundred such accounts that have so far been compiled and published by the Falun Gong,”<ref name=munrores2002 /> and that "<nowiki></nowiki>ndependent investigations by foreign journalists… have confirmed the Falun Gong’s version of events in the cases that have been examined."<ref name=munrores2002>p. 270</ref> He responds to Lee and Kleinman's doubts by saying that they, in their own published work, relied on the very same documentation, drawn from facts, commentary, and decades of survey material written and compiled by Chinese psychiatrists and law-enforcement officers published in China’s officially authorized professional literature on psychiatry and the law. He opines that since they do not make any substantive rebuttal of his evidence, they must have no answer to it.<ref name=munrores2002>Robin Munro, , ''The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law'', 2002, 30:2, pp. 266–274</ref>

Munro contends that decades-long political abuse of psychiatry by the Party, directly preceding the section on Falun Gong, transfers the burden of proof "squarely back onto the Chinese authorities."<ref name=munrores2002>p. 270</ref>

==International response==
Human rights organizations, including Amnesty and Human Rights Watch, have raised acute concerns over reports of torture and ill-treatment of practitioners in China and have also urged the UN and international governments to intervene to bring an end to the persecution.<ref name=Amnesty1>. The Amnesty International</ref><ref name=HRW1/> David Ownby notes that human rights organizations "have unanimously condemned China's brutal campaign against the Falungong, and many governments around the world, including Canada's, have expressed their concern." <ref name=KMRR/>

Governments around the world, including United States and Canada have called upon the Chinese government to bring a complete end to the persecution.<ref name=KMRR/> The United States Congress has passed five resolutions - , , , and - where Congress expresses that oppression of Falun Gong by the Government of the People's Republic of China in the United States and in China should be ceased.<ref></ref>. The first, Concurrent Resolution 217, was passed in November, 1999.<ref>http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/download/infopack/res_218.html House Concurrent Resolution 217</ref>

Con. Resolution 188, passed unanimously (420-0) by the US Congress states: "Falun Gong is a peaceful and nonviolent form of personal belief and practice with millions of adherents in the People's Republic of China has forbidden Falun Gong practitioners to practice their beliefs, and has systematically attempted to eradicate the practice and those who follow it....this policy violates the Constitution of the People's Republic of China as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights... propaganda from state-controlled media in the People's Republic of China has inundated the public in an attempt to breed hatred and discrimination;... official measures have been taken to conceal all atrocities, such as the immediate cremation of victims, the blocking of autopsies, and the false labeling of deaths as from suicide or natural causes'... several United States citizens and permanent resident aliens have been subjected to arbitrary detention, imprisoned, and tortured."

===Response from Falun Gong===
''See also: ]''
]]]
Li Hongzhi, in response to accusations made against Falun Gong by the Chinese government, stated on July 22, 1999:
{{cquote|''Falun Gong is simply a popular qigong activity. It does not have any particular organization, let alone any political activities. I am a cultivator myself, and I have never been destined to be involved in political power. I am just teaching people how to practice cultivation. If one wants to practice qigong well, he/she must be a person of high moral standards...

''We are not against the government now, nor will we be in the future. Other people may treat us badly, but we do not treat others badly, nor do we treat people as enemies.

''We are calling for all governments, international organizations, and people of goodwill worldwide to extend their support and assistance to us in order to resolve the present crisis that is taking place in China.''<ref name=briefstate> Li Hongzhi, , July 22 1999, accessed 31/12/07</ref>}}

Falun Gong practitioners and supporters have set up human rights organizations to report torture and ill-treatment of practitioners in mainland china.<ref></ref><ref></ref>

After the persecution in 1999, practitioners began holding frequent protests, rallies, and appeals outside mainland China.

Some Falun Gong support groups and Human Rights activists outside of China responded to the crackdown by publishing ], and initiating a worldwide ]. Since it began on Dec 3, 2004, over 44 million members of the ] and its subordinate organizations (the ] and the ])have publicly denounced the CCP as of Aug 04, 2008, according to The Epoch Times.

The video "False Fire: Self-Immolation or Deception?", was successfully broadcast on Chinese television in a hacking incident in the city of Changchun. The video was first posted on the Minghui Net in March 2001 and distributed widely on cassettes; it has been one of the most accessed pieces on the Falun Gong human-rights related websites.<ref name=zhao>Yuezhi Zhao, "Falun Gong, Identity, and the Struggle over Meaning Inside and Outside China", in Contesting Media Power, 2004</ref><ref name="clearwisdom.net">, ClearWisdom.net, January 20, 2004</ref><ref name="clearwisdom.net"/> Liu Chengjun, named as the instigator of the television hacking incident, was sentenced to 19 years in prison; he was reportedly tortured to death after 21 months in Jilin Prison, and his body cremated without autopsy.<ref>, ], 30 December, 2003</ref>

==== Legal action ====
Falun Gong practitioners in the United States have filed several civil complaints in U.S. federal courts against PRC leaders for violations of the Torture Victim Protection Act, the Alien Tort Claims Act, and other crimes against humanity. Law suits have also been filed for violation of the Freedom from Religious Persecution Act of 1999. Chinese officials alleged to have taken part in human rights abuses against practitioners have become targets of legal action, particularly when they step upon foreign soil. Since 2001, there have been more than 70 legal cases launched by Falun Gong practitioners and sympathisers against those considered responsible for the persecution campaign in the Chinese government.<ref>, Justice for Falun Gong, Retrieved 2007-08-16</ref> According to ''International Advocates for Justice'', Falun Gong has filed the largest number of human rights lawsuits in the 21st century and the charges are among the most severe international crimes defined by international criminal laws.<ref name=Ownby2008/><ref> Described by Ownby as an "excellent window" into legal activities initiated by Falun Gong.</ref>
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== References ==
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== External links ==
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* , Pulitzer Prize winner Ian Johnson, 2001, ]


{{DEFAULTSORT:History of Falun Gong}}
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Latest revision as of 23:53, 6 September 2024

Falun Gong adherents practice the fifth exercise, a meditation, in Manhattan

Falun Gong, also called Falun Dafa, is a spiritual practice and system of beliefs that combines the practice of meditation with the moral philosophy articulated by its leader and founder, Li Hongzhi. It emerged on the public radar in the Spring of 1992 in the northeastern Chinese city of Changchun, and was classified as a system of qigong identifying with the Buddhist tradition. Li claimed to have both supernatural powers like the ability to prevent illness, as well having eternal youth and promised that others can attain supernatural powers and eternal youth by following his teachings. Falun Gong initially enjoyed official sanction and support from Chinese government agencies, and the practice grew quickly on account of the simplicity of its exercise movements, impact on health, the absence of fees or formal membership, and moral and philosophical teachings.

In the mid-1990s, however, Falun Gong became estranged from the state-run qigong associations, leading to a gradual escalation of tensions with Chinese Communist Party (CCP) authorities that culminated in the Spring of 1999. Following a protest of 10,000 Falun Gong practitioners near the Zhongnanhai government compound on 25 April 1999 to request official recognition, then-CCP general secretary Jiang Zemin ordered Falun Gong be crushed. A campaign of propaganda, large-scale extrajudicial imprisonment, torture and coercive reeducation ensued.

Falun Gong practitioners have responded to the campaign with protests on Tiananmen Square, the creation of their own media companies overseas, international lawsuits targeting Chinese officials, and the establishment of a network of underground publishing sites to produce literature on the practice within China. Falun Gong has emerged as a prominent voice for an end to one-party rule in China.

Timeline of major events

Before 1992

Falun Gong has been classified variously as a form of spiritual cultivation practice in the tradition of Chinese antiquity, as a qigong discipline, or as a religion or new religious movement. Qigong refers to a broad set of exercises, meditation and breathing methods that have long been part of the spiritual practices of select Buddhist sects, of Daoist alchemists, martial artists, and some Confucian scholars.

Although qigong-like practices have a long history, the modern qigong movement traces its origins only to the late 1940s and 1950s. At that time, CCP cadres began pursuing qigong as a means of improving health, and regarded it as a category of traditional Chinese medicine. With official support from the party-state, qigong grew steadily in popularity, particularly in the period following the Cultural Revolution. The state-run China Qigong Scientific Research Society was established in 1985 to administer and oversee qigong practice across the country. Thousands of qigong disciplines emerged, some of them headed by "grandmasters" with millions of adherents

From his youth, Li Hongzhi claims to have been tutored by a variety of Buddhist and Daoist masters, who, according to his spiritual biography, imparted to him the practice methods and moral philosophy that would come to be known as Falun Gong.

  • 1951 or 1952 – Falun Gong asserts that Li Hongzhi, founder of Falun Gong, was born on 13 May 1951 in Gongzhuling, Jilin Province. Official Chinese birth dates for Li have been given as 7 or 27 July 1952.
  • 1955 – According to his spiritual biography, Li begins learning under the tutelage of master Quan Je, a tenth-generation master of Buddhist cultivation who imparts to Li the principles of Zhen, Shan, Ren (truth, compassion, forbearance). The instruction lasts eight years.
  • 1963 – According to his spiritual biography, Daoist master Baji Zhenren begins training Li in Daoist martial arts disciplines and physical skills training.
  • 1970 – Li begins working at a military horse farm in northeast China, and in 1972 works as a trumpet player with a division of the provincial forestry police.
  • 1972 – Li continues his spiritual training under the instruction of a master Zhen Daozhi, who imparts methods of internal cultivation. According to Li's spiritual biography, his training in this period mostly took place under cover of night, possibly due to the political environment of the Cultural Revolution.
  • 1974 – Li's biography states that he begins studying the instruction of a female Buddhist master. Throughout the next several years, Li continued his studies and observations of spiritual cultivation systems.
  • Early 1980s – Having had his middle and high school education interrupted by the Cultural Revolution, Li completes his high school education via correspondence courses.
  • 1984 – According to his spiritual biography, to Li creates Falun Gong with his masters as a more accessible version of Falun Fofa, based on other qigong.
  • Mid-1980s – Li begins studying and observing a variety of other qigong disciplines, apparently in preparation for establishing and publicizing his own qigong system.
  • 1985 – Chinese authorities create a national organization to oversee the great variety of qigong disciplines that were proliferating across the country. The China Qigong Scientific Research Society was established in 1985, and convened its first meeting in Beijing in 1986. The organization counted among its leadership several eminent members and former members of the Politburo and National People's Congress, as well as former ministers of health and education.
  • 1989 – Li begins private instruction of Falun Gong to select students.

1992–1995

Falun Gong was publicly founded in the Spring of 1992, toward the end of China's "qigong boom," a period which saw the proliferation of thousands of disciplines. Li Hongzhi and his Falun Gong became an "instant star" of the qigong movement, and were welcomed into the government-administered China Qigong Scientific Research Society (CQRS). From 1992 to 1994, Li traveled throughout China giving 54 lecture seminars on the practice and beliefs of Falun Gong. Seminars typically lasted 8–10 days, and attracted as many as 6,000 participants per class. The practice grew rapidly based on its purported efficacy in improving health and its moral and philosophical elements, which were more developed than those of other qigong schools.

  • 1992 – On 13 May, Li begins public teaching of Falun Gong at the No. 5 Middle School in Changchun, Jilin Province, lecturing to a crowd of several hundred. The seminar ran for nine days at a cost of 30 Yuan per person.
  • 1992 – June, Li is invited by the China Qigong Scientific Research Society to lecture in Beijing.
  • 1992 – In September, Falun Gong is recognized as a qigong branch under the administration of the state-run China Qigong Scientific Research Society (CQRS).
  • 1992 – Li is formally declared a "Master of Qigong" by the CQRS, and received a permit to teach nationwide.
  • 1992 – Li and several Falun Gong students participate in the 1992 Asian Health Expo in Beijing from 12 to 21 December. The organizer of the health fair remarked that Falun Gong and Li "received the most praise at the fair, and achieved very good therapeutic results." The event helped cement Li's popularity in the qigong world, and journalistic reports of Falun Gong's healing powers spread.
  • 1992 – By the end of the year, Li had given five week-long lecture seminars in Beijing, four in Changchun, one in Tayuan, and one in Shandong.
  • 1993 – China Falun Gong (中国法轮功), the first major instructional text by Li Hongzhi, is published by Military Yiwen Press in April. The book sets forth an explanation of Falun Gong's basic cosmology, moral system, and exercises. A revised edition is released in December of the same year.
  • 1993 – In the spring and summer of 1993, a series of glowing article appear in Qigong magazines nationwide lauding the benefits of Falun Gong. Several feature images of Li Hongzhi on the cover, and asserting the superiority of the Falun Gong system.
  • 1993 – The Falun Xiulian Dafa Research Society is established as a branch of the CQRS on 30 July.
  • 1993 – In August, an organization under Ministry of Public Security sends a letter to the CQRS thanking Li Hongzhi for providing his teachings to police officers injured in the line of duty. The letter claimed that of the 100 officers treated by Li, only one failed to experience "obvious improvement" to their health.
  • 1993 – On Sept 21, The People's Public Security Daily, a publication of the Ministry of Public Security, commends Falun Gong for "promoting the traditional crime-fighting virtues of the Chinese people, in safeguarding social order and security, and in promoting rectitude in society."
  • 1993 – Li again participates in the Asian Health Expo in Beijing from 11 to 20 Dec, this time as a member of the organizing committee. He wins several awards at the event, and is proclaimed the "Most Acclaimed Qigong Master." Falun Gong also received the "Special Gold Award" and award for "Advancing Frontier Science."
  • 1994 – The Jilin Province Qigong Science Research Association proclaims Li Hongzhi a "Grandmaster of Qigong" on 6 May.
  • 1994 – Li gives two lectures on Falun Gong at the Public Security University in Beijing, and contributes profits from the seminars to a foundation for injured police officers.
  • 1994 – On 3 August, the City of Houston, Texas, declares Li Hongzhi an honorary citizen for his "unselfish public service for the benefit and welfare of mankind."
  • 1994 – As revenues from the sale of his publications grew, Li ceased to charge fees for his classes, and thereafter insists that Falun Gong must be taught free of charge.
  • 1994 – The last full seminar on Falun Gong practice and philosophy takes place from 21 to 29 December in the southern city of Guangzhou.
  • 1995 – Zhuan Falun (转法轮), the complete teachings of Falun Gong, is published in January by the China Television Broadcasting Agency Publishing Company. A publication ceremony is held in the Ministry of Public Security auditorium on 4 January.
  • 1995 – In February, Li is approached by the Chinese National Sports Committee, Ministry of Public Health, and China Qigong Science Research Association to jointly establish a Falun Gong association. Li declines the offer.
  • 1995 – Official attitudes towards the Qigong movement within some segments of the government begin to change, as criticisms of qigong begin appearing in the state-run press.
  • 1995 – Li leaves China and begins spreading his practice overseas.
  • 1995 – At the invitation of the Chinese embassy in Paris, Li begins teaching Falun Gong abroad. On 13 March, he gives a seven-day class in Paris, followed by another lecture series in Sweden in April (Gothenburg, Stockholm and Uddevalla).

1996–June 1999

Having announced that he was finished teaching his practice in China, Li Hongzhi begins teaching his practice in Europe, Oceania, North America and Southeast Asia. In 1998, Li relocates permanently to the United States.

As the practice continues to grow within China, tensions emerge between Falun Gong and Chinese authorities. In 1996, Falun Gong withdraws from the China Qigong Scientific Research Society, and thereafter finds itself the subject of growing scrutiny and criticism in the state-run press. The practice becomes a subject of high-level debates within the government and CCP, with some ministries and government authorities expressing continued support for the practice, and others becoming increasingly wary of the group. This tension also played out in the media, as some outlets continued to laud the effects of Falun Gong, while others criticized it as pseudoscience.

Tensions continue to escalate over this period, culminating in a demonstration on 25 April 1999 near the Zhongnanhai government compound, where over ten thousand Falun Gong practitioners gather to request official recognition. Following the event, Jiang Zemin, then-CCP general secretary, quietly prepares for the launch of a nationwide campaign to persecute the practice.

  • 1996 – The book Zhuan Falun is listed as a bestseller by Beijing Youth Daily (北京青年报) in January, March, and April.
  • 1996 – Falun Gong files for withdrawal from the China Qigong Scientific Research Society in March. Li later explains that he had found the state-run CQRS to be more concerned with profiting from qigong than engaging in genuine research. Li had also apparently rejected a new CQRS policy that mandated that all qigong practices create CCP branches within their organizations. Falun Gong is left entirely without government oversight or sanction.
  • 1996 – At Li's direction, administrators of the Falun Gong Research Association of China apply for registration with three other government organizations, including the Buddhist Association of China and United Front Work Department. All applications are ultimately denied.
  • 1996 – The first major state-run media article criticizing Falun Gong appears in the Guangming Daily newspaper on 17 June. The article writes that Falun Gong represents a manifestation of feudal superstition, and that its core text Zhuan Falun is a work of "pseudo-science" that swindles the masses. Falun Gong practitioners responded to the article's publication with a letter-writing campaign to the newspaper and national qigong association.
  • 1996 – Several Buddhist journals and magazines start to write articles criticizing Falun Gong as a "heretical sect".
  • 1996 – On 24 July, Falun Gong books are banned from further publication by the China News Publishing Bureau, a branch of the CCP Central Propaganda Department. The reason cited for the ban is that Falun Gong is "spreading superstition." Pirated and copied versions of Falun Gong books proliferate, with Li Hongzhi's approval.
  • 1996 – Li begins another international lecture tour in the summer of 1996, traveling to Hong Kong, Sydney, Bangkok, Houston, New York, and Beijing.
  • 1996 – The China Qigong Scientific Research Society issues a resolution on the cancellation of Falun Gong's membership with the society. The resolution stated that although practitioners of Falun Gong had "attained unparalleled results in terms of fitness and disease prevention," Li Hongzhi "propagated theology and superstition," failed to attend association meetings, and departed from the association's procedures.
  • 1997 – The Ministry of Public Security launches an investigation into whether Falun Gong should be deemed xie jiao ("heretical religion"). The report concludes that "no evidence has appeared thus far."
  • 1997–1999 – Criticism of Falun Gong escalates in state-run media. With the encouragement of Li, Falun Gong practitioners respond to criticisms by peacefully petitioning outside media offices seeking redress against perceived unfair reporting. The tactic succeeds frequently, often resulting in the retraction of critical articles and apologies from the news organizations. Not all media coverage was negative in this period, however, and articles continued to appear highlighting Falun Gong's health benefits.
  • 1998 - On 13 January, the China Buddhist Association held a meeting on how to react to Falun Gong.
  • 1998 – On 21 July, the Ministry of Public Security issues Document No. 555, "Notice of the Investigation of Falun Gong." The document asserts that Falun Gong is an "evil religion," and mandates that another investigation be launched to seek evidence of the conclusion. The faction hostile toward Falun Gong within the ministry was reportedly led by Luo Gan. Security agencies began monitoring and collecting personal information on practitioners; Falun Gong sources reported authorities were tapping phone lines, harassing and tailing practitioners, ransacking homes, and closing down Falun Gong meditation sessions.
  • 1998 – According to Falun Gong sources, Qiao Shi, the former Chairman of the National People's Congress, lead his own investigation into Falun Gong and concluded that "Falun Gong has hundreds of benefits for the Chinese people and China, and does not have one single bad effect."
  • 1998 – China's National Sports Commission launches its own investigation in May, and commissions medical professionals to conduct interviews of over 12,000 Falun Gong practitioners in Guangdong province. 97.9 percent of respondents say Falun Gong improved their health. By October the investigation concludes, noting "We're convinced the exercises and effects of Falun Gong are excellent. It has done an extraordinary amount to improve society's stability and ethics. This should be duly affirmed."
  • 1998 – Estimates provided by the State Sports Commission suggest there are upwards of 60 to 70 million Falun Gong practitioners in China.
  • 1999 – Li Hongzhi continues to teach Falun Gong internationally, with occasional stops in China. By early 1999, Li had lectured in Sydney, Bangkok, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Taipei, Frankfurt, Toronto, Singapore, Geneva, Houston and New York, as well as in Changchun and Beijing.
  • 1999 – Wu Shaozu, An official from China's National Sports Commission, says in an interview with U.S. News & World Report on 14 February that as many as 100 million may have taken up Falun Gong and other forms of qigong. Wu notes that the popularity of Falun Gong dramatically reduces health care costs, and "Premier Zhu Rongji is very happy about that."
  • 1999 – In April, physicist He Zuoxiu from the Chinese Academy of Sciences publishes an article in Tianjin Normal University's Youth Reader magazine criticizing Falun Gong as superstitious and potentially harmful for youth and stating that he knew someone who died because of it. At that time, some countries near China had people practicing, like Vietnam.
  • 1999 – Tianjin Falun Gong practitioners respond to the article by peacefully petitioning in front of the editorial offices. Editors initially agree to publish a retraction of the He Zuoxiu article, then renege.
  • 1999 – On 23 April, some 300 security forces are called in to break up ongoing Falun Gong demonstration. Forty-five Falun Gong practitioners are beaten and detained.
  • 1999 – Falun Gong practitioners petition Tianjin City Hall for the release of the detained practitioners. They are reportedly told that the order to break up the crowd and detain protesters came from central authorities in Beijing, and that further appeals should be directed at Beijing.
Falun Gong practitioners demonstrate outside the Zhongnanhai government compound in April 1999 to request official recognition.
  • 1999 – On 25 April 10,000–20,000 Falun Gong practitioners quietly assemble outside the Central Appeals Office, adjacent to the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing. Five Falun Gong representatives meet with Premier Zhu Rongji to request official recognition and an end to escalating harassment against the group. Zhu agrees to release the Tianjin practitioners, and assures the representatives that the government does not oppose Falun Gong. The same day, however, at the urging of Luo Gan, CCP general secretary Jiang Zemin issues a letter stating his intention to suppress the practice.
  • 1999 – On 26 April, Jiang Zemin convenes a meeting of the Politburo Standing Committee to discuss the Falun Gong demonstration. Some Politburo members reportedly favored a conciliatory position towards Falun Gong, while others – such as Jiang and security czar Luo Gan – favored a decisive suppression of the group.
  • 1999 – Authorities increased surveillance on Falun Gong, tapping telephones of practitioners and monitoring practitioners in several cities.
  • 1999 – On 2 May, Li Hongzhi gives a press conference to journalists in Sydney, Australia. When asked by a reporter whether he believed the government would kill or imprison his disciples to maintain social order, Li responded that " practitioners will never go against the law. In terms of the scenario you describe, I don't think it will happen. since the economic reform and opening up, the Chinese government has been quite tolerant in this respect."
  • 1999 – In May and June, just as preparations are quietly underway for a crackdown, Falun Gong practitioners continue their public meditation sessions. The Far Eastern Economic Review wrote "in a park in western Beijing, 100 or so Falun Gong practitioners exercised under a bold yellow banner proclaiming their affiliation... far from running scared."
  • 1999 – On 2 June, Li purchases space in several Hong Kong newspapers to publish an article defending Falun Gong, and urging Chinese leaders not to "risk universal condemnation" and "waste manpower and capital" by antagonizing the group.
  • 1999 – On 3 June, 70,000 practitioners from Jilin and Liaoning travel to Beijing in an attempt to appeal to authorities. They were intercepted by security forces, sent home, and placed under surveillance.
  • 1999 – On 7 June 1999, Jiang Zemin convened a meeting of the Politburo to address the Falun Gong issue. In the meeting, Jiang described Falun Gong as a grave threat to CCP authority – "something unprecedented in the country since its founding 50 years ago" – and ordered the creation of a special leading group within the party's Central Committee to "get fully prepared for the work of disintegrating ."
  • 1999 – On 10 June, the 6-10 Office was formed to handle day-to-day coordination of the anti-Falun Gong campaign. Luo Gan was selected to helm of the office, whose mission at the time was described as studying, investigating, and developing a "unified approach...to resolve the Falun Gong problem" The office was not created with any legislation, and there are no provisions describing its precise mandate.
  • 1999 – On 17 June 1999, On 17 June, Jiang Zemin declared in a Politburo meeting that Falun Gong is "the most serious political incident since the '4 June' political disturbance in 1989." The 610 Office came under the newly created Central Leading Group for Dealing with Falun Gong, headed by Li Lanqing. Both Li and Luo were members of the Politburo Standing Committee, and the four other deputy directors of the Central Leading Group also held high-level positions in the CCP, including minister of the propaganda department.
  • 1999 – On 26 June, thirteen Falun Gong exercise sites in public parks are shut down by Beijing security officials.

July 1999–2001

Falun Gong practitioners being arrested in Tiananmen Square following the ban

In July 1999, a nationwide campaign is rolled out to "eradicate" Falun Gong. The persecution campaign is characterized by a "massive propaganda campaign" against the group, public burnings of Falun Gong books, and imprisonment of tens of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners in prisons, reeducation through labor camps, psychiatric hospitals and other detention facilities. Authorities are given the broad mandate of 'transforming' practitioners, resulting in the widespread use of torture against Falun Gong practitioners, sometimes resulting in death.

From late 1999 to early 2001, hundreds of Falun Gong practitioners per day travel to Tiananmen Square to stage peaceful protests against the persecution. The protests take the form of performing Falun Gong exercises or meditation, or holding banner proclaiming Falun Gong's innocence. The protests are broken up, often violently, by security forces.

  • 1999 – During a 19 July meeting of senior CCP cadres, Jiang Zemin's decision to eradicate Falun Gong was announced. The campaign was originally intended to have begun on 21 July, but as the document was apparently leaked, the crackdown started on 20 July. A nationwide propaganda campaign is launched to discredit Falun Gong.
  • 1999 – Just after midnight on 20 July, Falun Gong practitioners and "assistants" are abducted and detained across numerous cities in China. In response, tens of thousands of practitioners petition local, provincial and central appeals offices. In Beijing and other cities, protesters are detained in sports stadiums.
  • 1999 – On 22 July, The Ministry of Civil Affairs declared the "Research Society of Falun Dafa and the Falun Gong organization under its control" to be unregistered, and therefore illegal, organizations. The same day, the Ministry of Public Security issues a notice prohibiting 1) the display of Falun Gong images or symbols; 2) the public distribution of Falun Gong books or literature; 3) assembling to perform group Falun Gong exercises; 4)using sit-ins, petitions, and other demonstrations in defense of Falun Gong; 5) the spreading of rumors meant to disturb social order; and 6) taking part in activities opposing the government's decision.
  • 1999 – The 19 July circular is released publicly on 23 July. In it, Falun Gong is declared the "most serious political incident" since 1989. The Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party forbids party members from practicing Falun Gong, and launches study sessions to ensure cadres understand that Falun Gong is incompatible with the belief system of Marxism.
  • 1999 – on 26 July, the authorities begin the process of confiscating and destroying all publications related to Falun Gong, including "books, pictures, audio-video products, and electronic publications." Within one week, two million copies of Falun Gong literature are confiscated and destroyed by steam-rollers and public book burning.
  • 1999 – In late July, overseas Falun Gong websites are hacked or subject to denial-of-service attack. According to Chinese internet expert Ethan Gutmann, the attacks originated from servers in Beijing and Shenzhen, and was among the first serious attempts at network disruption by China.
  • 1999 – 29 July, Chinese authorities ask Interpol to seek the arrest of Li Hongzhi. Interpol declines. The following week, Chinese authorities offer a substantial cash reward for the extradition of Li from the United States. The U.S. government similarly declines to follow up.
  • 1999 – On 29 July, the Beijing Bureau of Justice issues a notice requiring all lawyers and law firms to obtain approval before providing consultation or representation to Falun Gong practitioners. According to Human Rights Watch, the notice was "inconsistent with international standards which call on governments to ensure that lawyers are able to perform their professional functions without intimidating hindrance, harassment, or improper interference."
  • 1999 – In October, 30 Falun Gong practitioners hold a secret press conference for foreign media in Beijing to tell of the violence and persecution they are suffering. At the end of the press briefing, participants are arrested, and some of the foreign reporters present are questioned and briefly detained. Ten of the organizers were detained almost immediately afterwards, and one of them, a 31-year-old hairdresser names Ding Yan, is later tortured to death in custody, according to Falun Gong sources. During the press conference, some of the first allegations of Falun Gong torture deaths in custody are made.
  • 1999 – On 30 October, the National People's Congress of the People's Republic of China issues a resolution on article 300 of the criminal code. The resolution elaborates on the identification and punishments for individuals who use "heretical religions" to undermine the implementation of the law.
  • 1999 – On 5 November 1999, the Supreme People's Court of the People's Republic of China issues a circular giving instruction to the people's courts that Falun Gong should be prosecuted as a 'heretical religion' under article 300. The notice, sent to all local courts in China, stressed that it was their political duty to severely punish Falun Gong, and to handle these cases under the leadership of the Party committees.
  • 1999 – On 27 December, four high-profile Falun Gong practitioners are put on trial for "undermining the implementation of the law" and illegally obtaining state secrets. They include Beijing engineer and prominent Falun Gong organizer Zhiwen Wang, sentenced to 16 years in prison, and Li Chang, an official of the Ministry of Public Security, sentenced to 18 years. According to Amnesty International, in these prosecutions and others, "the judicial process was biased against the defendants at the outset and the trials were a mere formality."
  • 2000 – During Lunar New Year celebrations in early February, at least 2,000 Falun Gong practitioners are detained on Tiananmen Square while attempting to peacefully protest the ban against the group.
  • 2000 – On 20 April, Wall Street Journal reporter Ian Johnson publishes the first article in a series on Falun Gong. The article details the torture death of 58-year-old grandmother in Weifang city, who was beaten, shocked, and forced to run barefoot through the snow because she refused to denounce Falun Gong. Johnson went on to win the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for the series.
  • 2000 – On 21 April, Xinhua News Agency admits for the first time the difficulty the Central authorities have had in stamping out Falun Gong, noting that since "22 July 1999, Falun Gong members have been causing trouble on and around Tiananmen Square in Central Beijing nearly every day."
  • 2000 – Zhao Ming, a graduate student at Ireland's Trinity College, is sent to the Tuanhe forced labor camp in Beijing in May. He spends two years in the camp amidst international pressure for his release, and is reportedly tortured with electric batons.
  • 2000 – On 1 October, thousands of Falun Gong practitioners travel to Tiananmen Square to stage protests against the persecution. Foreign media correspondents witness security officers beating and practitioners on the square.
  • 2000 – In November, Zhang Kunlun, a Canadian citizen and professor of art, is detained while visiting his mother in China and held in a forced labor camp where he reported being beaten and shocked with electric batons. Canadian politicians intervene on his behalf, eventually winning his release to Canada.
  • 2001 – On 23 January, five individuals set themselves on fire on Tiananmen Square. State-run media claim they are Falun Gong practitioners, driven to suicide by the practice. Falun Gong sources deny involvement, saying that Falun Gong forbids suicide and violence, and arguing that the event was staged by the government to turn public opinion against the practice. Authorities seize on the event to escalate a media campaign against the group, and support for Falun Gong wanes.
  • 2001 – As sympathy for Falun Gong erodes in Mainland China, authorities for the first time openly sanction the "systematic use of violence" against the group, establishing a network of brainwashing classes and rooting out Falun Gong practitioners "neighborhood by neighborhood and workplace by workplace."
  • 2001 – By February, international concern grows over psychiatric abuses committed against Falun Gong practitioners, several hundred of whom had reportedly been held and tortured in psychiatric facilities for refusing to denounce the practice.
  • 2001 – On 20 November, a group of 35 Falun Gong practitioners from 12 different countries gathers on Tiananmen Square to meditate under a banner that reads: "Truth, Compassion, Tolerance" – Falun Gong's core moral tenets. They are arrested within minutes, and some are beaten while resisting arrest.
  • 2001 – On 23 December, a New York District Court hands down a default judgement against Zhao Zhifei, Public Security Bureau chief for Hubei Province, for his role in the wrongful death and torture of Falun Gong practitioners.

2002–2004

By 2002, Falun Gong practitioners had all but completely abandoned the approach of protesting on Tiananmen Square, and coverage in Western news outlets declined precipitously.

Falun Gong practitioners continued adopting more novel approaches to protesting, including the establishment of a vast network of underground 'material sites' that create and distribute literature, and tapping into television broadcasts to replace them with Falun Gong content. Practitioners outside China established a television station to broadcast into China, designed censorship-circumvention tools to break through Internet censorship and surveillance, and filed dozens of largely symbolic lawsuits against Jiang Zemin and other Chinese officials alleging genocide and crimes against humanity.

From 2002 to 2004, the paramount position of power in China were transferred from Jiang Zemin to Hu Jintao. Annual Falun Gong deaths in custody continued to grow through 2004, according to reports published by Falun Gong sources, but coverage of Falun Gong declined over the period.

Westerners stages a demonstration in Tiananmen Square, 2002
  • 2002 – On 14 February, 53 Falun Gong practitioners from North America, Europe and Australia attempt to stage a demonstration on Tiananmen Square. They are detained, and several reportedly assaulted by security forces before being expelled from China.
  • 2002 – On 5 March, a group of six Falun Gong practitioners in Changchun city intercept television broadcasts, replacing them with content about Falun Gong and the persecution. Apparently believing that it to be a signal that the ban on Falun Gong had been lifted, citizens gather in public squares to celebrate. The Falun Gong broadcasts run for 50 minutes before the city goes black. Over the next three days, security forces arrest some 5,000 Falun Gong practitioners in Changchun. Amnesty International reports that "police 'stop-and-search' checkpoints have reportedly been established across the city." All six individuals involved in the television hijacking are later tortured to death.
  • 2002 – In June, Jiang Zemin visits Iceland. Dozens of Falun Gong practitioners from around the world attempt to travel to the country to protest, but find their names on an international blacklist organized at the behest of Chinese authorities, suggesting extensive espionage against foreign Falun Gong practitioners.
  • 2002 – Falun Gong practitioners in New York establish New Tang Dynasty Television, a Chinese-language station created to present an alternative to state-run Chinese media.
  • 2002 – On 24 July, U.S. House of Representatives passes a unanimous resolution (House Concurrent Resolution 188) condemning the persecution of Falun Gong in China.
  • 2002 – On 21 October, Falun Gong practitioners from North America, Europe and Australia file a legal case against Jiang Zemin, Zeng Qinghong, and Luo Gan to the United Nations Human Rights Committee and the International Criminal Court for their involvement in the persecution of Falun Gong.
  • 2002 – In November, Hu Jintao begins the process of taking over China's leadership from Jiang Zemin, assuming the position General Secretary of the CCP.
  • 2003 – On 22 January, Falun Gong practitioner and American citizen Dr. Charles Lee is arrested by security forces in Nanjing immediately upon his arrival in China. Lee is sentenced to three years in prison.
  • 2003 – On 1 May, Pan Xinchun, Deputy Consul General at the Chinese consulate in Toronto, published a letter in the Toronto Star in which he said that local Falun Gong practitioner Joel Chipkar is a member of a "sinister cult." In February 2004, the Ontario Superior Court found Pan liable for libel, and demanded he pay $10,000 in compensation to Chipkar. Pan refused to pay, and left Canada.
  • 2003 – June, A San Francisco District Court issues a default ruling against Beijing Party Secretary and former Beijing Mayor Liu Qi and Deputy Governor of Liaoning Province Xia Deren, who had been accused of overseeing the torture of Falun Gong practitioners.
  • 2003 – On 26 December, Liu Chengjun, one of the leaders behind the Changchun television broadcasts, is tortured to death while serving out a 19-year prison sentence.
  • 2004 – In October, U.S. House of Representatives passed a unanimous resolution detailing and condemning the Chinese government's attempts to interfere with and intimidate Falun Gong practitioners in the United States.
  • 2004 – In December, prominent Weiquan lawyer Gao Zhisheng writes to the National People's Congress detailing torture and sexual abuse against Falun Gong practitioners in custody. In response to his letter, Gao's law firm is shut down, his legal license is revoked, and he is put under house arrest.

2005–2007

As Falun Gong becomes more overt in its rhetorical charges against CCP rule, allegations emerge that Chinese security agencies engage in large-scale overseas spying operations against Falun Gong practitioners, and that Falun Gong prisoners in China are killed to supply China's organ transplant industry.

  • 2005 – On 15 February, Li Hongzhi issues a statement renouncing his earlier membership in the Communist Youth League.
  • 2005 – On 4 June, Chinese diplomat Chen Yonglin, a political consul at the Chinese consulate in Sydney, defects to Australia. He reports that a large part of his job was to monitor and harass Falun Gong practitioners in Australia. Days later, on 8 June, Hao Fengjun, a former member of the Tianjin city 610 office, goes public with his story of defection, and tells of abuse against Falun Gong in China.
  • 2005 – On 16 June, Gao Rongrong is reported tortured to death in Shenyang at the age of 37.
  • 2005 – In June, the number of Falun Gong practitioners allegedly killed as a result or torture and abuse in custody exceeds 2,500.
  • 2006 – UN special rapporteur on torture Manfred Nowak releases the findings of his 2005 investigation on torture in China. He reports that two-thirds of reported torture cases are against Falun Gong practitioners.
  • 2006 – In July 2006, former Canadian Member of Parliament David Kilgour and international human rights attorney David Matas release the findings of their investigation into allegations of organ harvesting. Although their evidence was largely circumstantial, they conclude that involuntary organ extractions from Falun Gong practitioners are widespread and ongoing. Chinese officials deny the allegations.
  • 2006 – Falun Gong practitioners in the United States establish Shen Yun Performing Arts, a classical Chinese dance company that begins touring internationally in 2007.
  • 2007 – Falun Gong sources report that the number of persecution deaths exceeds 3,000.
  • 2007 – August, practitioners of Falun Gong launch the Human Rights Torch Relay, which toured to over 35 of countries in 2007 and 2008 ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The relay was intended to draw attention to a range of human rights issues in China in connection with the Olympics, especially those related to Falun Gong and Tibet, and received support from hundreds of elected officials, past Olympic medallists, human rights groups and other concerned organizations.

2008–2014

Top-level Chinese authorities continue to launch strike-hard campaigns against Falun Gong surrounding sensitive events and anniversaries, and step up efforts to coercively "transform" Falun Gong practitioners in detention facilities and reeducation centers. Lawyers who seek to represent Falun Gong defendants continue to face punishment from Chinese authorities, including harassment, disbarment, and imprisonment.

The human rights torch relay launch in Athens, Greece, 9 August 2007.
Falun Gong practitioners enact torture scenes in New York City
  • 2008 – In the first six months of the year, over 8,000 Falun Gong practitioners are abducted by security forces under the pretext of preventing protests during the Beijing Olympics.
  • 2009 – CCP heir apparent Xi Jinping is put in charge of 6521 Project, a strike hard effort to crack down on Tibetans, democracy activists and Falun Gong practitioners around sensitive anniversaries. Zhou Yongkang heads a parallel effort to crack down on Falun Gong practitioners, ethnic separatism, and protests.
  • 2009 – In March, U.S. House of Representatives passes a resolution on recognizing and condemning the ongoing persecution of Falun Gong in China.
  • 2009 – On 13 May, Weiquan lawyers Zhang Kai(张凯) and Li Chunfu(李春富) are violently beaten and detained in Chongqing for investigating the death of Jiang Xiqing(江锡清), a 66-year-old Falun Gong practitioner killed in a labor camp.
  • 2009 – On 4 July, Dalian city lawyer Wang Yonghang(王永航) is taken from his home by security agents, interrogated, and beaten for defending Falun Gong practitioners. In November 2009, Wang was sentenced in a closed court to seven years in prison for his advocacy on behalf of Falun Gong practitioners. When his lawyers were permitted to see him in January 2010, they reported that he had been tortured.
  • 2009 – In November, Jiang Zemin and other high-ranking Chinese officials are indicted by a Spanish court on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity for their involvement in the persecution of Falun Gong. A month later, an Argentine judge concludes that top Chinese officials Jiang Zemin and Luo Gan had adopted a "genocidal strategy" in pursuing the eradication of Falun Gong, and asks Interpol to seek their arrest
  • 2010 – Over 100 Falun Gong practitioners in Shanghai are abducted and detained in connection with the Shanghai World Expo. Some reportedly face torture for their refusal to disavow Falun Gong.
  • 2010 – In the Spring of 2010, Chinese authorities launch a new, three-year campaign whose goal is to coercively transform large portions of the known Falun Gong population through attendance in reeducation classes.
  • 2010 – On 22 April 2010, Beijing lawyers Liu Wei and Tang Jitian were permanently disbarred for defending Falun Gong practitioners.
  • 2011 – In February, a Falun Gong practitioner named Qin Yueming dies in custody at the Jiamusi Prison. His family state that his body was covered with extensive bruising, with blood in his nose, though authorities said the cause of death was heart attack. A petition seeking redress for his death garners over 15,000 signatures. Qin's wife and daughter are subsequently imprisoned and reportedly tortured for their efforts to draw attention to the case.
  • 2011 – In May, a lawsuit is filed on behalf of Falun Gong practitioners against Cisco. The suit alleges, based mainly on internal Cisco documents, that the technology company "designed and implemented a surveillance system for the Chinese Communist Party, knowing it would be used to root out members of the Falun Gong religion and subject them to detention, forced labor and torture."
  • 2011 – In Hebei province, 3,000 Chinese citizens sign a petition calling for the release of detained Falungong practitioners Zhou Xiangyang and Li Shanshan, who were being held at the Gangbei Prison and Tangshan reeducation center, respectively.
  • 2012 – In June 2012, 15,000 people in Heilongjiang Province signed and affixed their fingerprints to a petition requesting that the government investigate the death of Qin Yueming, a Falun Gong practitioner who died in custody.
  • 2012 – In early June, Falun Gong practitioner Li Lankui was detained and sent to a reeducation-through-labour camp in Hebei province. Hundreds of villagers mobilized to call for Li's release, including by signing petitions calling for an end to the persecution of Falun Gong. This prompted further crackdowns by security agents, leading to the arrest of at least 16 villagers. Some reported that they were tortured for expressing their support for Li Lankui.
  • 2012 – in December, a woman in Oregon finds a letter written in both Chinese and English in a box of Halloween decorations purchased from Kmart. The letter said that the decorations were assembled in Unit 8, Department 2 of Masanjia forced labour camp. It went on to describe forced labor conditions in the camp, and noted that many of the detainees were Falun Gong practitioners being held without trial. The letter's author, a Falun Gong practitioner from Beijing, was later identified by The New York Times.
  • 2013 – Central 610 Office authorities launch a new three-year campaign calling for the ideological "transformation" of Falun Gong practitioners. Local governments issue quotas and targets for the number of Falun Gong practitioners to reeducate, and prescribe the appropriate means for doing so.
  • 2013 – A photojournalism magazine in China publishes an exposé detailing human rights abuses committed by female detainees at the Masanjia forced labour camp in Shenyang, where Falun Gong practitioners were estimated to comprise approximately half the detainees. The article was promptly removed from the magazine's website, but not before galvanizing nationwide opposition to and condemnation of the labor camp system. Soon thereafter, New York Times photographer Du Bin releases a documentary on the Masanjia labor camp.
  • 2013 – Chinese officials begin dismantling the nationwide network of reeducation-through-labour camps, in which Falun Gong practitioners comprised a significant portion of detainees. Human rights groups expressed skepticism at the scope of reforms, however, noting that other forms of extralegal detention were still being used to detain Falun Gong practitioners and political dissidents.
  • 2013 – On 12 December, European Parliament adopts a resolution on organ harvesting in China, where it "Calls for the EU and its Member States to raise the issue of organ harvesting in China"
  • 2014 – In August, investigative journalist Ethan Gutmann publishes his book "The Slaughter: Mass Killings, Organ Harvesting, and China's Secret Solution to Its Dissident Problem," in which he writes that large number of Falun Gong practitioners and ethnic Uyghurs have been killed for their organs in China.
  • 2014 – Four lawyers in Northeast China are detained and reportedly tortured by the police while investigating abuses against Falun Gong practitioners held at the Qinglongshan farm reeducation centre.

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