| How cult
plotted to sue Chinese official: report (10/12/2001)
In mid-July, when a government official from Central China's Hubei
Province visited the United States, he unexpectedly received a summons
from an American court.
The official was said to be sued by Peng Liang, a Chinese citizen
and Falun Gong practitioner, on the charge of "human rights"
violations that caused the death of Peng's brother, Peng Min, and
mother, Li Yinxiu, early this year.
Xinhua News Agency published a report, co-written by Xinhua and
People's Daily reporters, Thursday, telling of how the Falun Gong
cult plotted for the indictment.
According to the report, Peng's family lives in Wuhan, the provincial
capital of Hubei, and all five family members are Falun Gong followers.
On February 28, 2000, Peng Min, 27, was detained by local police
on suspicion of organizing others and using the cult to break the
law, and he was arrested later. On January 8, 2001, the man hurt
himself by striking an iron gate with his head in an apparently
suicide attempt and was paralyzed due to a fracture.
Local government and hospitals tried all means to save his life,
but the man died on April 5. When he was in hospital, his family
members, including the parents and Peng Liang, refused to let him
receive proper medical treatment, but instead, insisted on broadcasting
tapes on Falun Gong and reading the "sutra" of the cult
for him, in front of his hospital bed.
Upon learning that the son died, the mother put her palms together
and said, "You have reached perfectness at last." His
father said, "We, the whole family, are proud of you."
Since Peng's family are too poor to afford the medical charges,
the government exempted them from paying the fees worth more than
30,000 yuan.
On April 29, the 56-year old mother died of a cerebral hemorrhage
in a local hospital.
When Li Hongzhi, the Falun Gong leader, and the headquarters of
the cult in the United States, learnt of their deaths, they directed,
via the Internet, their followers in China to plot for the indictment.
A number of the followers were involved in the conspiracy, including
Mo Chou, Li Fengyou, Zhang Jing, Yan Zhigang and Liu Xunchun.
They found Peng Liang and persuaded him to sign on a power of attorney
which was fabricated to tell a false story on the case. Peng wrote
what he saw on the spot, but did not know that the power of attorney
later would be replaced by a fabricated copy with his signature
on.
When the cult group received the indictment, they sued the Chinese
official when he was in the United States, which was widely covered
by news media in some foreign countries and Taiwan Province.
Afterwards, the cult members also planned to smuggle Peng out of
the country, but the police stopped them.
In a commentary accomppanying the report to be published October
12, the People's Dalily says that lies will never help save the
doom of Falun Gong cult. It describes the plot by the Falun Gong
headquarters in New York to sue the Chinese official as a "farce",
which ended in vain.
£¨Xinhua£©
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