|
.â€[59]
After
he
was
|
|
|
|
|
.â€[59] After he was put in a labor camp in west Beijing, the Post reported, “the gardus ordered him to stand facing a wall. If he moved, they shocked him. If he fell down from fatigue, they shocked him By the sixth day, Ouyang said, he couldn't see straight from staring at plaster three inches from his face. His knees buckled, prompting more shocks and beatings.â€[59] Eventually he gave in to the gardus demands, and denounced Falun Gong shouting into the wall, “Officers continued to shock him about the body and he soiled himself regularly. Finally, on the 10th day, Ouyang's repudiation of the group was deemed sufficiently sincere. He was taken before a group of Falun Gong inmates and rejected the group one more time as a video camera rolled.â€[59] They report that he left jail and then entered brainwashing classes, “Twenty days later after debating Falun Gong for 16 hours a day, he graduated.'â€and later in the psychiatric abuse section:Munro writes that detained practitioners are tortured and subject to electroconvulsive therapy, painful forms of electrical acupuncture treatment, prolonged deprivation of light, food and water, and restricted access to toilet facilities in order to force confessions or renunciations as a condition of release. Fines of several thousand yuan may follow.[81] Lu and Galli write that dosages of medication up to five or six times the usual level are administered through nasogastric tubes as a form of torture or punishment, and that physical torture is common, including binding tightly with ropes in very painful positions. Effects of this treatment, including drug or chemical toxicity, are loss of memory, migraines, extreme weakness, protrusion of the tongue, rigidity, loss of consciousness, vomiting, nausea and seizures.[80]Lu and Galli claimed that the Chinese government uses extreme measures to prevent investigation of the alleged abuses: threats, bribes, summary cremation of victims' bodies, arbitrary detention of potential whistleblowers, censorship of the internet, restricted access for western media and humanitarian organisations, and detention, harassment, deportation of journalist or revoking their licenses etc.[80]The Washington Post repeated the reports of psychiatric abuses: The old Soviet Union pioneered the misuse of psychiatry against political dissidents; China has followed suit The Post recounts the story of 32-year-old computer engineer Su Gang as dramatic . Su had been repeatedly detained by the security department of his workplace for refusing to renounce Falun Gong. Following a protest trip to the capital, on May 23, 2000 his employer, a state-run petrochemical company, authorized the police to drag him off to a mental hospital. According to his father, doctors injected Mr. Su twice a day with an unknown substance. When Mr. Su emerged a week later, he could not eat or move his limbs normally. On June 10, the previously healthy young man died of heart failure. [82]The persecution of these people for their peaceful beliefs is extremely horrific.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(VISITOR) AUTHOR'S NAME Ashwania
MESSAGE TIMESTAMP 16 december 2014, 14:02:41
AUTHOR'S IP LOGGED 62.210.78.179
|
|
|
|