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When a government official from Central China's Hubei Province
visited the United States in mid-July, 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, earlier this year.
A report, co-written by Xinhua and People's Daily reporters,
published Thursday told how the Falun Gong cult plotted the
indictment.
It stated that 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 later arrested.
Nearly a year later on January 8 the man hurt himself by striking
an iron gate with his head in an apparent suicide attempt
and was paralyzed following a fracture.
Local government and hospitals tried everything 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.
Instead they 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 her son had died, the mother put her palms
together and said: "You have reached perfection at last."
His father said: "We, the whole family, are proud of
you."
Since Peng's family is too poor to afford the medical charges,
the government exempted them from paying fees worth more than
30,000 yuan (US$3,614).
On April 29, the 56-year old mother died of a cerebral haemorrhage
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 used the Internet to direct their followers in China
to plot for the indictment.
A number of 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 a power of
attorney that 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 would later 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 accompanying the report Friday, the People's
Daily says that lies will never help save the Falun Gong cult
from doom. It describes the plot by the Falun Gong headquarters
in New York to sue the Chinese official as a "farce,"
which ended in vain.
(China Daily 10/12/2001)
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