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In August of last year, Montreal newspaper publisher Crescent Chau somehow drummed up the funds to print 100,000 copies of a special 32-page tabloid—without a single advertisement—and distributed it nationwide, for free.
The newspaper was not only missing ads; it was also devoid of typical news. All 32 pages were packed with articles condemning the Falun Gong spiritual group, which is persecuted by the communist regime in Mainland China.
It was quite an achievement for Chau, whose own Chinese-language newspaper, Les Presses Chinoises, has a circulation of only 6000 and is limited in its distribution to Montreal. About 100 copies are circulated in Ottawa.
But it did not surprise Chen Yonglin, a former diplomat at the Chinese consulate in Sydney, Australia who recently visited Canada and warned that Chinese spies and front organizations are widespread here, including those targeting groups persecuted by the regime in China.
“It is clear that the Les Presses Chinoises is cooperating with the Chinese embassy and consulate and has become the hatchetman and propaganda tool for the Chinese Communist Party here,” Chen says.
“It is very likely that the printing costs were directly funded by the Chinese embassy and consulate—the contents seem to be mostly produced and provided by the CCP.”
Chen supports his claims with a document from the Chinese consulate in Sydney.
Titled the “Special Anti-Falun Gong Working Group Division of Labour Table” and dated February 7, 2001, it lists the responsibilities for members of the anti-Falun Gong team, which included the heads of all sections at the consulate.
For example, the head of the political affairs department was responsible for “recommending” anti-Falun Gong articles from state-run media in China for use in Chinese-language media overseas and writing anti-Falun Gong articles for publishing in Chinese-language media.
The head of the culture department was charged with sending such articles to politicians and media.
Chau denies he is taking orders from the Chinese authorities. He portrays his opposition to Falun Gong as a personal “crusade.”
While Chau says he aspires to eliminate Falun Gong in Canada, he admits not having interviewed Falun Gong practitioners for the stories he published, nor having read Falun Gong’s teachings.
He rejects that he has been paid to publish his anti-Falun Gong newspapers.
But according to other Chinese-language media in Montreal, the source of Chau’s first anti-Falun Gong articles, a woman named He Bing, had offered to pay “whatever it takes” to have her anti-Falun Gong articles published in Chinese-language press. Reliable sources told The Epoch Times that CSIS had investigated He and believed her to be a Chinese agent.
Several other Chinese papers reportedly turned her down before her articles appeared in Chau’s Les Presses Chinoises.
In her articles, which appeared first as paid ads, He Bing accused Falun Gong adherents of everything from sucking blood and bestiality to murder and suicide. She called Falun Gong practitioners “insane,” “stupid,” and “scatter-brained.”
University of Montreal professor David Ownby, an expert in popular Chinese religions who has studied Falun Gong, called the statements “unsubstantiated filth poured upon the page” and said he’d seen nothing to suggest any truth behind He’s accusations.
But Chau continued to publish such content even after two Quebec court orders told him stop, even calling practitioners “enemies of the state.”
In Feb. 2001, Chau published his first anti-Falun Gong special edition, which included a petition rallying the Chinese community to “unite” in “denouncing Falun Gong.”
He Bing returned to China and was paraded in Chinese state media as a hero in the war on Falun Gong.
Chau, too, became a celebrity of sorts in the Mainland Chinese press. He attended conferences in China that promoted “information exchange and business cooperation” between overseas and mainland Chinese media. State media quoted Chau as saying the Chinese regime “should strengthen its connection to the overseas Chinese community.”
And Chau’s anti-Falun Gong efforts were reported in national media in China, which referred to Les Presses Chinoises not as a local Montreal newspaper but as “Canada’s Les Presses Chinoises. ”
The coverage of Chau was so overwhelming that some Mainland Chinese thought the Canadian government had also banned Falun Gong.
“My parents in China were worried for me,” said Yang Hui, one of the Montreal-area Falun Gong practitioners who were named in Chau’s articles. “They saw all the reports and thought that Canada had started to persecute Falun Gong too.”
In August 2006, Chau published his first nationwide anti-Falun Gong paper, with copies circulated as far west as Vancouver.
His efforts did not go unnoticed. Within four days of the “special edition” hitting the streets, the website for the Mainland China-based People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party, published a report praising Chau.
“The Justice Special Edition [the paper also bore the English name Truth Magazine ] has 32 pages with a distribution of more than 100,000 copies,” the People’s Daily said. “The front page carries publisher Crescent Chau’s special article … It is very sharp, rich in content, and powerful.”
In it Chau parroted the Chinese regime’s official line on Falun Gong, accusing the group of everything from shunning medical treatment to murder and suicide.
Such claims are groundless, say human rights groups like Human Rights Watch, but they have been used to justify the regime’s violent repression of the group, which began in 1999.
Chau used these claims to rally opposition to Falun Gong in Canada.
“Everyone should join in the efforts to fight against Falun Gong,” wrote Chau. “We must unite together to condemn [Falun Gong founder] Li Hongzhi and Falun Gong.”
New Approach
Last week, the fourth installment of Chau’s Truth Magazine hit the streets in Toronto. As with the previous three, it comes on the heels of some particularly bad press for the Chinese regime.
One previous edition was published after former secretary of state for Asia Pacific, David Kilgour, and lawyer David Matas released a report concluding that the Chinese communist regime was stealing organs from live Falun Gong practitioners detained in China for sale in a lucrative organ trade.
Another came as a Chinese-language television station, New Tang Dynasty Television, put on a prominent Chinese New Year show that included one act depicting the persecution of Falun Gong in China. That one was also delivered to Canadian members of parliament.
This time, the special edition followed the visit of the former diplomat Chen who described the Chinese front organizations in Canada, citing in particular the Nation Congress of Chinese Canadians (NCCC).
The latest edition is 16 pages and makes no mention of Falun Gong on the cover. In its place is a large headline: “Will your Maple Card (Canadian residency card) expire?” But inside, the remaining 15 pages are devoted to attacking Falun Gong.
This issue repeats many of the same slurs against Falun Gong. It also takes aim at Chen and at The Epoch Times, which reported Chen’s comments, and defends prominent NCCC leaders that were named in the Epoch Times report.
Chau calls on Chinese-Canadians to “unite to conquer” what he calls the “evil” Falun Gong and Chen Yonglin.
Curiously, though Chau’s publishing company resides in Montreal, the latest ,I>Truth Magazine appears to have been distributed only in Toronto, where the three NCCC leaders named in the Epoch Times report—David Lim, Hughes Eng, and Ping Tan—reside.
Police Involvement
And from there, the links become more curious.
Since the August 2006 issue of Truth Magazine hit the streets, police in several Canadian cities have been looking into whether the papers qualify as hate propaganda.
On Saturday afternoon, Toronto police confronted a Truth Magazine deliveryman at a Chinese grocery store in the northeast of the city. He gave his name as Lu Ping.
The police asked Lu who had hired him to deliver the newspapers. Lu reluctantly provided the name and phone number of Ms. Li Miao of Canyon Web Printing.
Canyon Web Printing happens to have the same address and phone number as those listed on yellowpages.ca for the Chinese Canadian Post, which is owned by NCCC Executive Secretary David Lim.
Ms. Li, for her part, is listed as the contact for an upcoming event organized by NCCC National Co-Chair Hughes Eng and supported by the Chinese embassy’s culture section.
Inaction
But aside from some investigation by police, little has been done to stop the disparaging reports.
The Ontario Human Rights Tribunal found in a separate case that Falun Gong “is a protected creed” as its essence is spiritual elevation. But to date, police have not used such grounds to lay charges.
A Montreal police sergeant who spoke with The Epoch Times last year cited sensitivities in investigating Mr. Chau because of his prominence in the Chinese community.
A trial court in Montreal said that Mr. Chau was exercising his freedom of speech in publishing the slurs, a decision that is now being appealed.
But all this has made members of Canada’s Falun Gong community feel they are not being protected.
“I believe if such slanders were directed at another group in our society, it would not be tolerated,” says Ottawa Falun Gong practitioner Lucy Zhou. “It seems like because this has to do with China, people can get away with saying anything about us and it’s OK.
“Crescent Chau has incited hate against us for five years with impunity. I feel the system is failing us.”
– By Mark Morgan
Popularity: 1% [?]
Thanks for the truth. I can’t fathom how some public officials are willing to sell moral principles for trade relations. If it was their family or their child being persecuted, it would be different for sure.
Here are the facts of the case:
- La Presse won the court case. Here’s what Quebec Superior Court justice Jeannine Rousseau wrote in her ruling against Falun Gong:
“[39] Amongst the characteristics of Master Li’s teachings are the rejection of science as being misleading and dangerous, the promise of supernatural powers, amongst which a rotating wheel in the stomach of practitioners to purify them, constant health, rejuvenation, and the ability to see into other spatial dimensions.
[40] It is a controversial movement, which does not accept criticism.”
- Falun Gong’s organ harvesting allegation has been discredited by undercover investigation conducted by US State Dept as well as Chinese dissident Harry Wu.
- Epoch Times receives funding from Falun Gong. Just check GuideStar.org for non-profit declarations of various Falun Dafa Associations, and the money trail will be obvious.
Is Charlie Liu an on-line version of Crescent Chau working for the regime? See article in the following:
http://organharvestinvestigation.net/media/WesternStandard_040907.htm
Sowing Confusion; Embarrassed by reports of live organ harvesting, China’s sympathizers launch a high-tech disinformation campaign
April 9, 2007 Monday
Final Edition
Kevin Steel, Western Standard, Alberta
He posts his messages everywhere under several different names on Internet blogs and discussion groups. He writes letters to the editor anywhere and sends e-mails to anyone–anyone who might take seriously shocking evidence that the Chinese government “harvests” and sells live organs from political prisoners. His main message is that the Falun Gong–the group which first brought evidence of live organ harvesting to light–and the Epoch Times newspaper that broke that story are spreading propaganda against China’s Communist government. And he’s not even Chinese. He is Charles Liu, a 40-year-old Taiwanese-born technology consultant who lives in Issaquah, Wash., and does business in China.
Liu has been so active and so pro-Beijing in his writings that some Falun Gong supporters–in particular Epoch Times reporter Jana Shearer–have accused him of being an agent for the Chinese government, waging a disinformation campaign against them, trying to confuse people, and deliberately wasting everyone’s time.
It’s a charge that upsets Liu, who dismisses it as “a bunch of kooky friends making unfounded accusations. It’s just a bunch of blog BS.” As for why he devotes so much energy to attacking the Falun Gong and the organ harvesting allegations, he says, “My position is that I simply don’t agree with their brand of politics, because I observed their politics turning from anti-Communist party, to anti-China, . . . and recently it’s morphed into this anti-Chinese hysteria and that’s going to be hurting people,” he says. As an Asian-American, he says he decided to speak up.
He doesn’t really explain, when asked, why he started a blog last year called “The Myth of Tiananmen Square Massacre” under the name of Bobby Fletcher (one of his online aliases, which he also uses to comment on the Western Standard’s online blog). On that blog, he pushes the minimal 250 casualty figure that the Chinese government has always maintained died that night in 1989 (more reliable estimates put the figure at at least ten times that).
Liu’s actions mirror disinformation campaigns waged by the Chinese government in the past. Typically, these include the deliberate spreading of false or misleading facts to sow confusion or doubt among the conflicting accounts. The classic example is the Tiananmen Square massacre; the Chinese government has maintained that no one died in the square itself, that there was only pushing and shoving on the streets around the square, resulting in a few military casualties. Overseas, the CCP relies on its United Front Work department, part of the Chinese intelligence service, to propagate its message. During the Cold War, the Soviets employed many overseas flunkies through their Disinformation Department.
Former Canadian MP David Kilgour, who co-authored a report on China’s macabre organ harvesting industry, has received many propaganda e-mails from Liu. For instance, Liu has written repeatedly that a U.S. congressional committee looked into the organ harvesting allegations and found nothing. “[David] Matas and I gave evidence to that subcommittee and got support from both the Republican chairman and the Democratic vice-chair,” says Kilgour. “I just came to the conclusion he was trying to waste my time, and I have other things to do.”
Winnipeg-based human rights lawyer, and Kilgour’s co-author, David Matas, really doesn’t know what to make of Liu. “I don’t know who he is, but what he does is spend a lot of time replicating nonsense to defend the Chinese government,” Matas says.
The only concern Matas has is that Liu seems to know who he and Kilgour met with in the United States to discuss their report. Matas discovered Liu had sent e-mails to politicians–and their staff–prior to the meetings. “The only people who would have that information would potentially be the Chinese government. I can’t imagine how Liu would know we were meeting with those people,” Matas says. “We’re not super-secretive, but you can’t find information on the Internet or in any public place about who we’re meeting with, where and when.” He himself has received at least 10 e-mails from Liu, all of which he’s ignored. Maybe Matas is onto something with that approach.
I deny the “Chinese spy” allegation Epoch Times reporter Jana Shearer made in this article. It seems Jana and her Falun Gong cohorts have been attacking other bloggers as well, attempt to silence its critics:
http://falungongpolitics.blogspot.com/2007/04/epoch-times-reporters-gone-wild.html
Notice Falun Gong practioner Helen Lai have to add a question mark “?”
Where’s your Truth Helen?
Helen is not a Falun Gong practitioner.
But Helen is observing Charles Liu’s wired behavior on the internet for two years, and there can be no explanation other than Charlie Liu is working for the Chinese government - the Western Standard article is a good source of information for us all.
honorable mention of FLG disciple Helen Li:
www.cbc.ca/news/background/china/falun_gong.html
www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2008/3/13/95305.html
So much for your claim of Truth…
By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.