|
Practitioners Expose CCP's Organ Harvesting Atrocities
On May 5, 2007, Falun Gong practitioners held an
anti-torture exhibit at the Aotea Square in downtown Auckland, New
Zealand. The exhibit exposed the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)'s
persecution of Falun Gong, and supports an Amnesty International
campaign that aims to improve human rights conditions in China. The
exhibit highlighted the most heinous and horrifying crime in human
history, that is the CCP's crime of harvesting organs from living Falun
Gong practitioners and cremating their bodies to destroy the evidence.
People view truth clarifying boards at the
anti-torture exhibit



People sign the signature collection book to express their support for
the Falun Gong practitioners' efforts of countering persecution

Simulation of organ harvesting atrocities
Amnesty International began a campaign in New Zealand on April 10,
2007 focusing attention on China's human rights conditions. Amnesty
International will tour 31 cities and towns in New Zealand, and have
dialogues with local governments in hopes of bringing pressure towards
improving China's human rights situation through contacts with China's
"sister cities." One of the organizers of the activity said that they
aimed to help New Zealand government officials and people learn more
about human rights issues happening in China.
On May 5, at the anti-torture exhibit held in downtown Auckland,
numerous passersby learned about the CCP's persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners. Some people had heard about the persecution, but truly
came to understand it here. Some people learned about it for the first
time. Many passersby felt that the CCP is too cruel. They felt sad for
the victims. People who have learned about the facts signed a petition
to condemn the CCP's crimes and call for an end to the persecution of
Falun Gong. Some people suggested Falun Gong appeal to Parliament,
asking them to urge the CCP to stop all persecution prior to the 2008
Olympics.
Before the conclusion of the activity, a teacher came over and read
the introduction about the persecution of Falun Gong. She told a
practitioner, "Such a persecution is too cruel, but as you see yourself,
there are so many people who are indifferent. We should collect more
signatures or exert more pressure on the Chinese government in other
approaches; otherwise, they won't change. I'd like very much to go to
China, but I want to wait until the end of the persecution. I'll pass
your stories to Amnesty International, allowing you to have more
opportunities to voice your concerns."
|