| Offical:
no room for evil cults (02/20/2001)
The Chinese government highly respects the freedom of religions
but will never allow the existence of evil cults in the country,
a senior Chinese official in charge of religious matters said here
Monday.
Respecting freedom of religions and guaranteeing independent running
of religious groups are two basic principles of China's religious
policy, Ye Xiaowen, director of China's State Bureau of Religious
Affairs, said at a conference on religion.
Stressing that the Chinese people now enjoy full freedom of religious
beliefs, Ye cited that religious believers in China have now exceeded
100 million, among whom there are more than 10 million Christians,
four million Catholics, and 18 million Moslems.
Up to 1996, there were more than 85,000 worship sites nationwide
for practitioners of Buddhism, Islam, Taoism, Christianity and Catholicism
to conduct religious activities, Ye said.
The number of religious professionals in China has reached 300,000,
while those of religious groups exceeded 3,000 and higher-learning
religious schools amounted to 74, respectively, said Ye.
China's religious circles maintain exchanges and contacts with
religious groups in more than 70 countries and regions, Ye said.
People from the religious sector also play an active role in the
country's political life, with some 17,000 people with religious
affiliation elected as deputies to the National People's Congress
and members of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference.
Though the government grants full freedom to religious beliefs,
Ye stressed that evil cults like the much-condemned Falun Gong can
go nowhere in the country since the Chinese government will never
allow any evil cult to harm its people and jeopardize society.
The Chinese government classified Falun Gong under the category
of evil cults given the destructive consequences it caused to society.
A string of criminal activities of Falun Gong fully exposed its
anti-human, anti-society and anti-science nature, Ye said.
The cult has claimed 1,600 lives in the Chinese mainland, leading
to suicides, suicidal blazes, self-mutilation, and even children
killing their parents, Ye said, noting that any responsible government
will not hesitate to take actions to prevent such tragedies from
happening.
As for Falun Gong in Hong Kong, Ye said that the Falun Gong group
here also takes instructions from Li Hongzhi, leader of the evil
cult. Recently, Falun Gong activities in Hong Kong have gone increasingly
internationalized and politicized, Ye said.
Hong Kong's Falun Gong group has now peeled off its disguise of
"not participating in politics, not opposing the government
and not joining force with any political forces," and has targeted
directly against the central government, he said.
Some people and media in Hong Kong have already expressed doubt
on whether the group's activities are in line with the creeds under
which the group was registered, Ye said.
He warned that any group or individual attempting to use Hong Kong
as a base for Falun Gong activities or as an anti-China base to
hamper the implementation of "one country, two systems"
and harm Hong Kong's prosperity and stability is doomed to failure.
The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR) government is
a responsible government, Ye said, adding that he believes that
the SAR government is wise and capable enough to handle the Falun
Gong matter in Hong Kong.
Ye delivered his speech, entitled "The Development of Chinese
Religions in the Past Century in China," as the first keynote
speaker at an event organized by the Chinese University of Hong
Kong to discuss religions in the past and their future.
Attending the lecture series were hundreds of renowned religious
leaders and scholars from the mainland, Hong Kong, China 's Taiwan
and the United States.
(Xinhua)
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