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Angered by its attack on China's telecommunications satellite
Sinosat, people across China have again expressed their strong
indignation against the Falun Gong cult.
"The attack constitutes a serious violation of international
telecommunications regulations, world order and public morality,"
said Chen Ruming, a researcher with the China Institute of
Telecommunications.
"If such behavior is not checked, it could cause a catastrophe
to global telecommunications satellites, and civilization,"
he added.
Between June 23 and 30, the cult illegally launched radio
signals to jam the transmission of China's Sinosat satellite.
As a result, nine channels of China's Central Television Station
and 10 provincial television stations were seriously affected.
Yang Guiming, senior engineer with the Chinese Central Meteorological
Station, said that jamming the satellite transmission posed
a threat to the gathering of weather data.
"This is very dangerous in the current flood season",
he said.
"While we were going all out to fight floods, the Falun
Gong cult attacked our satellite. They are very mean,"
said Liang Fei, who lives in the recently flooded Yudu County
of Jiangxi.
Television viewers were angry over the interruption to TV
programs. "Look how many lives they've destroyed. And
they are still so unscrupulous. We must deal them a heavy
blow," said a television viewer in Baotou, the Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region.
"Modern communications must not stop for a minute because
they are as important to society as vital nerves are to a
person's life. By interfering with communications facilities,
the Falun Gong cult is committing crimes," said Zhang
Chu, a professor at the Beijing Post and Telecommunications
University.
"Such acts cannot be tolerated in a modern law-abiding
society," he said.
(Xinhua News Agency July 9, 2002)
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