khktmd 2015






Đạo học làm việc lớn là ở chỗ làm rạng tỏ cái đức sáng của mình, thương yêu người dân, đạt tới chỗ chí thiện. Đại học chi đạo, tại Minh Minh Đức, tại Tân Dân, tại chỉ ư Chí Thiện. 大學之道,在明明德,在親民,在止於至善。












Thứ Bảy, 9 tháng 11, 2019

'Crimes against humanity': is China killing political prisoners for their organs? - Source Sydney Morning Herald



One day in November, 2006, Jintao Liu, a 26-year-old chemical engineering student at the China University of Petroleum in Beijing, got a phone call from his lecturer, asking if he could come to the chemistry lab for a quick chat. It was about noon and Jintao was about to start lunch, but the lecturer was an important man, so Jintao did as he was told.

“I thought he wanted to talk to me about work,” says Jintao. When he entered the lab, however, he saw his lecturer, together with two policemen and four plain-clothed members of the 610 Office, an extra-judicial body set up by the Communist Party with the sole purpose of eradicating Falun Gong, a spiritual movement the Chinese government regards as an evil cult and a challenge to its authority.

Jintao, who practised Falun Gong, had recently downloaded some material – music mainly – onto his desktop computer in the lab. When the policemen examined the computer, they found the Falun Gong material and arrested him. “I asked them if they had a search warrant or an arrest order and they scribbled on a piece of paper, chucked it at me and said, ‘That’s your warrant.’ ”

Jintao, who has anglicised his name to Tony, lives in a 1970s red-brick home in Epping, a quiet, leafy suburb in Sydney’s north-west. He and his wife, Tina, fled China in 2013, coming to Australia where they were granted protection visas. (They are now Australian citizens.) At 39, Tony has broad-set eyes, a cautious smile and a pronounced liking for black tea, which Tina supplies in prodigious quantities throughout our conversation. He still adheres to Falun Gong, which he credits with far-reaching mental and physical benefits. In a country like China, where organised religion has been repressed, Falun Gong gave Tony what he calls “a deeper sense of meaning”.

Following his arrest, Tony underwent four months of brainwashing in the Beijing Changping Detention Centre, where he was forced to watch videos and read newspapers detailing Falun Gong’s alleged crimes. When he refused to denounce the movement, he was put in a cell with eight drug addicts who were induced by the guards to regularly beat him. “One day, they were beating me around the back and waist when a guard ran in and told them, ‘Don’t damage his organs!’ ”

In May 2007, Tony was moved to Beijing Tuanhe Re-education Through Labour Camp, where the abuse worsened. Tony claims he was starved for three days, then force-fed through a tube, into which another prisoner urinated. “Some of the prisoners didn’t want to beat me, so the guards moved them and brought in really cruel ones.” The prisoners stripped him and forced the handle of a toilet brush into his anus; they burnt his back on a heating unit, yanked on his testicles, and shoved metal under his nails. “All the time they wanted me to sign statements saying I would give up Falun Gong.”

In late 2007, he and other Falun Gong prisoners received a series of medical tests. They had their height and weight measured, had their blood taken and were X-rayed. “They X-rayed all of my torso,” Tony says. “A year later, they gave me another X-ray, and took more blood.” None of the prisoners were told what the tests were for, and they never received the results. But given his treatment, Tony doubted they were out of concern for his health.

In 2009, Tony finally signed the statements renouncing Falun Gong. After lobbying by his family, he was released. He married in 2012 and got a job in Beijing as an engineer. But he was still required to file regular “thought reports” to the authorities, who continued to monitor him closely. Fearing re-arrest, he and Tina decided to leave, seeking asylum in Australia.


In the years following, he often thought back on the X-rays and blood tests. He thought about when the prisoners were instructed by the guards not to injure his organs. Though he had heard whispers of prisoners being killed for their organs, he had always found it hard to believe. Then he remembered one particular day, in 2007. He had been in his cell when a senior guard, named Li Wei, came to see him privately. “He bent down so we were almost face to face, and said, ‘Nothing is impossible!’ ”

In December 2018, Tony gave evidence via phone to the China Tribunal, an independent inquiry held in London into the murder in China of prisoners of conscience for their organs. (Despite medical advances, the demand for organs worldwide still outstrips supply, causing an increase in transplant tourism, especially to countries like China, where the black market for body parts is rife, and where desperate patients from around the globe can find organs at short notice.)

The tribunal was headed by a seven-person panel and chaired by Sir Geoffrey Nice QC, a hawkish-looking British barrister and part-time judge at the Old Bailey, who worked at the International Criminal Court for the former Yugoslavia from 1998 to 2006, and led the prosecution of Serbia’s former president, Slobodan Miloševic.

The tribunal, which was initiated by a global not-for-profit group called the International Coalition to End Transplant Abuse in China (ETAC), was a world first. Other inquiries, such as those by the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs in 2012 and the European Parliament in 2013, have found credible evidence of systematic organ harvesting in China. But none explored specifically whether such allegations constituted international criminal offences, including genocide and crimes against humanity, as defined by the Geneva Convention and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. Accordingly, the tribunal adopted a single criminal standard: proof beyond reasonable doubt. “ETAC provided the bulk of the material, just as any prosecuting authority would do,” says Nice, talking on the phone from London. “And we were no different to a judge or jury, filtering information to make objective judgments.”

The tribunal had a huge task. Over a period of 12 months it examined thousands of pages of submissions, including previous investigations and academic papers, internal Chinese medical records, and reports from Amnesty International, independent watchdog group Freedom House and the United Nations Committee Against Torture. It reviewed undercover video footage taken inside Chinese hospitals, covert telephone recordings with Chinese transplant surgeons, and heard from 50 witnesses, some of whom appeared in person and others via video link, from France, Canada, the US, Japan, Australia, Turkey and Korea.

The public hearings were held at the Grand Connaught Rooms, an ornate, heritage-listed building in Covent Garden. Witnesses included Enver Tothi, a former surgeon from the western Chinese region of Xinjiang, now living in London, who claimed to have removed the kidneys from a still-living prisoner, and a Chinese man who, as a medical intern at Shenyang Army General Hospital, had been involved in harvesting livers, kidneys and corneas from “incompletely executed” prisoners. Huige Li, a professor of pharmacology at the University Medical Centre of Mainz, Germany, who also gave evidence at the tribunal, claimed “incomplete execution”, often via a gunshot to the right side of the chest, is not uncommon, the purpose being to maintain blood circulation to the organs.

Witnesses often identified their torturers by name, rank and police number; they could remember each camp they were held in, when, and for how long. They recounted how they had been told by guards that they would be killed for their organs; how guards referred to Falun Gong prisoners as “merchandise”; and that they were “being kept as spare goods”.

The tribunal heard multiple accounts of medical testing, including regular X-rays and CT scans; witnesses also claimed they had been forced to provide urine and blood samples. Only Falun Gong prisoners were subject to such tests, the selective and systematic nature of which was, in the view of the tribunal’s medical experts, highly suggestive of methods used to assess organ function. (The Chinese government was invited to take part in the tribunal but declined to do so.)

The tribunal relied in part on a 2016 report called Bloody Harvest/The Slaughter by David Matas, a Canadian expert in refugee and human rights law, David Kilgour, a former Canadian secretary of state, and American investigative journalist Ethan Gutmann. Bloody Harvest/The Slaughter is 678 pages long and includes 2367 footnotes. (Earlier research by Matas and Kilgour on organ harvesting saw them nominated for the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize.)

The tribunal also listened to dozens of phone calls made by Falun Gong practitioners in Europe, the US and Australia to hospital officials and transplant surgeons within China. The calls, which were independently verified, included Chinese surgeons and medical staff admitting to, and in some cases boasting about, taking organs from prisoners of conscience.

The tribunal wound up in April. The final judgment, a 60-page summary of which was released in June, found that official transplant statistics in China are routinely falsified, and that instead of performing 10,000 operations as claimed, the real figure is between 60,000 and 90,000 a year. It found that the main source of these organs were Falun Gong, but that Uighurs, a mostly Muslim minority – up to 1.5 million of whom are incarcerated in China – were at risk of becoming the next “organ bank”.

It also found that illicit organ transplants had become a lucrative industry in China, directed by the state and enabled by the military. Geoffrey Nice and the panel effectively accused the People’s Republic of China of having committed mass murder, and warned that governments or any other bodies that engaged with it in any substantial way “should now recognise that they are interacting with a criminal state”.

China has in the past admitted to using the organs of executed criminals. (It claims the practice ended in 2015.) But it denies harvesting organs from prisoners of conscience. Dr Huang Jiefu, China’s former vice minister of health and one of the country’s leading transplant surgeons, has described such claims as “nonsense”. Dr Haibo Wang, director of the Organ Transplant Response System Research Centre, at the Ministry of Health, says the tribunal’s findings were “clearly based on falsified information”. In an email to Good Weekend, Wang says reports of prisoners being X-rayed were “non-factual”. An Australian physician, Professor Jeremy Chapman, former head of the global peak body, the Transplantation Society, and one of the world’s foremost experts on kidney transplantation, has likewise cast doubt on claims that China is engaged in systematic organ harvesting from groups such as the Falun Gong, describing the allegations as “pure imagination”.

According to Nice, a certain degree of scepticism is natural. “People didn’t at first believe that the Holocaust was happening, either,” he says. “If you’ve been brought up in a gentle suburb of Melbourne or London, you’d think, ‘How could this happen?’ It’s just so outlandish. But look at Cambodia. Look at people hacking each other to death in Rwanda. Human experience shows us again and again that there is nothing too outlandish to be true.”

Organ transplants in China have, almost from the beginning, been inextricably linked to politics. One of the earliest recorded accounts is that of Zhong Haiyuan, a young schoolteacher who was executed in Jiangxi Province on April 30, 1978 for being an “active counter-revolutionary element”. According to one of the executioners, who later spoke to Chinese journalist Hu Ping, Zhong was shot in the head and her kidneys removed in the back of an army truck. They were then transplanted into an airforce officer named Shi Yunfeng, the son of a retired deputy commander of the Nanjing Military Region. (Three years later, Zhong was exonerated of all charges and posthumously pardoned.)

In 1984, China introduced regulations allowing the use of organs from executed prisoners, with the operations to be kept strictly confidential. By the mid-1990s, army surgeons were removing livers, kidneys and corneas for use by Communist Party high-ups. A Chinese Army doctor named Wang Guoqi later told a United States Congressional Committee how he had removed not just internal organs, but skin for eventual transplant to burn victims. (China’s then Foreign Ministry spokeswoman described Wang’s testimony as “sensational lies” and “vicious slander”.)

From the year 2000, the Chinese transplant industry began a period of extraordinary growth. The government prioritised organ transplantation, incorporating it into its Five Year Plans. Thousands of transplant beds, specialist surgeons and personnel were added to the system in a matter of years. Between 2000 and 2006, the number of hospitals that performed organ transplants went from 91 to 1000, their numbers multiplying, as one official put it, “like bamboo after the rain”. Operations also skyrocketed: according to an internal speech by then vice-minister of health, Huang Jiefu, China conducted 34,726 organ transplants between 2000 and 2004 – including an 18-time increase for livers, and 24.5-time increase for lungs.

Then, in March 2006, two sensational stories came to light. The first was from a man calling himself Peter, who claimed that Falun Gong practitioners were being held in a secret concentration camp located in Sujiatun, in north-eastern China. According to Peter, the camp had on-site doctors to remove the inmates’ internal organs, and a crematorium to dispose of the bodies. The organs were sold, he said.

Just days afterward, a woman calling herself Annie, who was then living in Washington, DC, claimed that between 2003 and 2005 her ex-husband, a surgeon, had harvested thousands of corneas from Falun Gong practitioners in the same camp. The Falun Gong were killed during the harvesting, and their bodies cremated.

The surreal nature of the allegations, together with the fact that the stories appeared in The Epoch Times, a Falun Gong-affiliated newspaper, undercut their credibility. The accounts were also attacked by Harry Wu, a Chinese-American human rights activist and an expert on China’s detention facilities. Yet it piqued the interest of David Matas and fellow Canadian David Kilgour, both long-time human rights activists. In May 2006, at the request of a pressure group called the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China (CIPFG), the two men began investigating Peter and Annie’s claims, pro bono.

In 2006, the Chinese government claimed to be conducting 10,000 organ transplants a year. But Matas and Kilgour were sceptical of this figure. “There is so much secrecy and official propaganda,” says Matas. He and Kilgour then set about calculating the real number of transplants in China by, among other things, examining its transplant infrastructure: bed counts, surgeon numbers, hospital capacity and volumes, transplant waiting times, current and archived hospital websites, hospital revenues and research facilities, and so on. They also collected media reports and interviews with health officials. (Many of these reports have since been taken down.) They found that the official claim of 10,000 operations a year was easily accounted for by just a few hospitals, and that the real figure was closer to 60,000.

As new hospitals came online, that figure kept rising. In 2010, the First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University in Guangzhou admitted it had performed “tens of thousands of transplants”. In 2013, Zhu Jiye, director of the Organ Transplantation Institute at Peking University, told the China Economic Weekly magazine that they had conducted 4000 liver and kidney transplants in one year. Huang Jiefu told Guangzhou Daily newspaper that he alone had done 500 kidney and liver transplants in 2012.

The source of these organs remained unclear. China’s voluntary organ donation system did not become operational until 2013. (Chinese people have a cultural aversion to organ donation, owing to a traditional belief that the body must be buried intact.) In Shanghai, the first donation from a deceased organ donor happened on August 21, 2013. Yet there were 11 transplant centres in Shanghai approved by the Ministry of Health. In 2015, the Red Cross in Beijing confirmed that it didn’t even have a donation office, and hadn’t arranged a single case of organ donation. Yet there were 20 state-approved transplant centres in the city, many of them with the capacity to carry out thousands of transplants a year. “There seemed to be an endless supply of organs,” says Matas. “The numbers just didn’t add up.”

One of the most unusual aspects of China’s organ transplant system is the extraordinarily short waiting times. “In most countries with voluntary donation systems, patients wait long periods for organs,” says Professor Maria Fiatarone Singh, a geriatrician at the University of Sydney, who is also a member of global pressure group Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting. In the UK, the average waiting time for a liver transplant is 135 days. In Australia, people needing a kidney can wait between five and seven years. Waiting times in China, meanwhile, can be as little as two weeks. On the Chinese website haodf.com, or “Good Doctor”, an online chatboard where patients swap reviews of their surgeons, people talk of receiving organs in a matter of days.

By the mid-2000s organ transplants had become big business in China, especially in military hospitals, where such operations were generating millions of dollars in “grey income”. Hospitals began touting directly online. In 2008, the Changhai Hospital affiliated with the Second Military Medical University in Shanghai spruiked its “good-quality kidneys” at “low cost”, with “a short waiting time due to an abundant supply”. The Kunming Kidney Disease Hospital in Yunnan province told prospective patients that, “In case of failure, we will continue to perform transplants until one is successful, and will not charge for the repeated surgeries.” In 2007, the China International Transplantation Network Assistance Centre (CITNAC), an organ broker in Shenyang in north-eastern China, boasted that “Organ providers can be found immediately!” CITNAC mainly targeted foreigners – Japanese, Korean, Russian – and offered a comprehensive price list: kidney transplant, $US65,000; liver transplant, $US130,000; heart transplant, $US130,000 to $US160,000.

Group tours became popular: Matas and Kilgour talked to organ recipients from south-east Asia who had travelled to China in groups of up to nine patients; one group of seven had all its members operated on simultaneously. The bigger the hospital, the bigger the tour. “In 2007, Tianjin First Central Hospital hosted 331 Koreans – patients and their family members – together with new customers,” says Hwang Ho Kim, director of the Korea Association for Ethical Organ Transplant. “The hospital even paid for their airfares.”

Matas’ research suggests that roughly 28 per cent of organ recipients in China today are foreigners, the bulk of whom go through brokers, which are legal in China. For the anxious patient, brokers offer not only convenience but peace of mind. Some, such as Lovehandy Healthcare Service in Tianjin, sell a door-to-door service, picking up patients at the airport and dropping them back after surgery. “Lovehandy will guide the patient step by step,” it says on the company’s website. “An assistant/interpreter will be assigned [to] be with the patient all the time in hospital to help arrange everything.”

As scrutiny on the trade has increased, Chinese brokers have become more opaque, moving away from online shopfronts to an Avon-style, direct-marketing approach, where past transplant recipients recruit prospective patients. The existence of such services is a sign that something is seriously wrong, says Fiatarone Singh from the University of Sydney. “Booking in a transplant, whether it be through a hospital or a broker, is impossible in a normal, voluntary organ donor system,” she says. “There is only one way you can do this, and that is where you have an organ bank – a large group of people who are being held in detention and killed on demand.”

In December 1992, a 41-year-old former police band trumpeter named Li Hongzhi appeared at the Oriental Health Expo in Beijing. According to reports, Hongzhi, who claimed to have been tutored by at least 20 spiritual “masters”, used a special kind of healing energy to cure people in the crowd of conditions such as paralysis and kidney stones. The director of the fair lauded the treatment, which Hongzhi called Falun Gong, as a “star cultivation system”, kick-starting what would become one of the largest and most controversial spiritual movements in modern-day China.

Falun Gong, translated as “Dharma Wheel Practice”, is an esoteric blend of Taoism and Buddhism that combines meditation and qigong – a series of breathing exercises and Tai Chi-like movements – with a moral philosophy centered on the tenets of truthfulness, compassion and forbearance. It was free, easy to do, and it tapped into the spiritual vacuum left after the Mao Zedong era. By 1998 there were 70 million Falun Gong practitioners in China, more than the number of Communist Party members.

“Falun Gong had no political ambitions,” says Matthew Robertson, a PhD student in Chinese politics at the Australian National University. “But if you claim that your body and your beliefs are your own and that you have a right to follow those beliefs, then in China that is seen as an implicitly political claim.”

On April 25, 1999, some 10,000 Falun Gong practitioners gathered, unannounced, outside the Communist Party headquarters in Beijing. The protesters were concerned about a run of negative state media coverage; they also wanted the government to recognise the movement, granting it legal status. As protests go, it was exceedingly tame: those present spent most of the time meditating, and even collected their rubbish when they left. But the fact that such a crowd could gather, undetected, in the centre of Beijing spooked the authorities, who feared a repeat of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.

Two months later the government created the 610 Office, a shadowy, extra-judicial security agency specially tasked with crushing the Falun Gong. Answerable only to the Communist Party, the 610 (named for the date of its creation on June 10) launched a brutal crackdown, beginning with the arrest of Falun Gong adherents, thousands of whom were held in sports stadiums. Falun Gong materials were burnt in the streets; there were televised show trials and a propaganda blitz that categorised Falun Gong as an evil cult; and one of the “five poisons” – along with Tibetans, democracy activists, pro-independence Taiwanese and Uighur Muslims – that the government considers to be the biggest threats to its rule. According to the American journalist Ethan Gutmann, there were by the mid-2000s between 450,000 and one million Falun Gong imprisoned in re-education camps, psychiatric hospitals and “black jails” across the country.

At the time, the push against Falun Gong was regarded as the worst instance of religious persecution in China since the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution. Yet it has been dwarfed by the crackdown against Uighur Muslims, up to 1.5 million of whom have been locked up in Xinjiang, in China’s north-west, since 2017. Human rights groups have voiced grave concern about the Uighurs, whom the Chinese government regards as a threat to cultural unity, and who have been subject to medical testing similar to that practised on Falun Gong prisoners. According to global watchdog Human Rights Watch, authorities in Xinjiang are collecting DNA samples, fingerprints, iris scans and blood samples from all residents in the region between the ages of 12 and 65. The government claims the DNA databases are used for solving crimes, including terrorism and child trafficking. But many Uighurs suspect the worst.

“In the past, China relied on Falun Gong practitioners as a source [of organs] but now they are changing the supply chains to Uighurs,” says Nurmuhammad Majid, president of the East Turkistan Australian Association. “We know that healthy males are being transferred in secrecy to inland cities in bulk.” Majid claims that Saudi Arabia is demanding “halal” organs and that “sourcing them from Muslim Uighurs is the best way to do that”.

Australia is one of 22 countries to sign a letter protesting China’s treatment of the Uighurs, sent on July 8 to the United Nations’ Human Rights Council. Australia has also raised concerns over China’s persecution of Falun Gong practitioners. But it has rejected claims that China is forcibly harvesting organs from prisoners of conscience. In a statement to a parliamentary inquiry into organ trading held last year, Graham Fletcher, then head of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade’s North Asia Division, appeared to ridicule the allegations. “As to the idea that there is a separate, parallel, hidden, vast network of unspeakable activity where people are essentially killed for their organs, we don’t believe that that is happening,” he said.

Fletcher said the Chinese have described the prospect of Falun Gong practitioners being killed for their organs as “complete nonsense”. He also said China seemed serious about changing its organ donation system so it no longer relied on executed criminals: “[Chinese authorities] realise why that doesn’t look very good at all.” (Fletcher is now Australia’s ambassador to China.)

In any case, Australia is not favourably positioned to question China’s human rights record. China is our largest trading partner, and Australia-China human rights dialogues are infrequent: the last one was in 2014, right as Fletcher was finalising the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement.

Other countries and organisations, including the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Transplantation Society, are similarly conflicted. The China Tribunal’s report makes clear that such groups have often been wary of offending the Chinese, and when it comes to human rights have chosen a policy of co-operation, not confrontation. “The WHO has been sincere in its pursuit of reform,” says Matthew Robertson. “But when it comes to engaging with China, the price of admission is that you do not go digging around to find out if crimes against humanity have occurred.”

Some groups now refuse to deal with China’s transplant system. In 2017, the Alberta Transplant Institute, in Canada, declined an invitation to partner with Zhejiang University Fourth Affiliated Hospital, because of the high likelihood that at least a majority of “donated” pancreas organs are being forcibly harvested. Dr Jacob Lavee, director of the Heart Transplantation Unit at the Sheba Medical Centre, in Israel, spearheaded the Israeli Organ Transplant Law in 2008, blocking outgoing transplant patients to China.

Australia, however, has been more accommodating. Sydney’s Westmead Hospital, which is connected to the University of Sydney, has long-standing links to Third Xiangya Hospital, a major transplant centre in Hunan province. The relationship, which reportedly began in 2005, has involved academic exchanges, collaboration in transplant research and advice on Xiangya’s cellular transplantation programs, much of it conducted at a time when the bulk of China’s organs came from executed prisoners. (Conducting research on organs from executed prisoners contravenes international ethical standards.) Co-operation between Westmead and Chinese hospitals is ongoing, particularly in regard to xenotransplantation, where animal body products are used in humans. And Chinese doctor Dandan Huang, from the Xiangya Changde Hospital, was conducting research into kidney transplantation at Westmead as recently as June this year.

Professor Jeremy Chapman, who has been director of the Division of Medicine and Cancer at Westmead since 2007, denies any wrongdoing. “I have had no collaborations with Chinese programs,” he says, adding: “I have been and remain at the forefront of global [efforts] to stop the Chinese from using organs from executed [criminals] … Any assertion that I have been anything other than a strong antagonist to the Chinese government would be incorrect and appalling journalism.” In 2016, Chapman said he believed the use of organs from executed prisoners had ceased in China from January 2015. “They have 60,000 road deaths a year, they have many more workplace deaths, they have plenty of people in their ICUs who can be organ donors. The whole focus of the Chinese transplantation program, from what I have seen, has turned around to proper organ donations,” he said.

The University of Sydney is another Australian institution which has faced scrutiny over China links. In 2013 it emerged that Huang Jiefu, the controversial head of China’s transplant system, had been an honorary professor at the university since 2008. (Jiefu trained at the university between 1984 and 1987.) The university said the honorary professorship was for Jiefu’s efforts to end the practice of using organs from executed prisoners. But critics, headed by the University of Sydney’s Fiatarone Singh, claimed that Jiefu had long presided over, and taken part in, a system he knew to be deeply unethical.

The university was forced to defend itself in the face of public criticism, including a story on the ABC’s 7.30 program. In 2014 it renewed Jiefu’s honorary professorship, before letting it lapse in 2015, when he became head of China’s Organ Donation and Transplantation Committee. (A University of Sydney spokesman said Jiefu’s honorary professorship was not dropped due to ethical concerns but because his role changed from an academic to a primarily administrative one.)

The messy realities of dealing with China are being felt everywhere – even in Epping, in suburban Sydney, where Jintao “Tony” Liu lives with his wife and three children. A little while ago, Tony gave an interview to SBS about the torture he received in China. Soon afterwards, security officers turned up to his mother’s house in Shandong Province. “They warned her to tell me to stop talking,” he says. (Tony is currently saving money to bring her to Australia.)

One time, when he was in detention, Tony met an older man who had been sent to re-educate him. The man had, as a student, been part of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. “He had really suffered at Tiananmen,” Tony says. “He saw people being shot at.” Now he was there to tell Tony to stop struggling, to stop fighting the system. “He said to me, ‘Learn from the lessons of the students. What did they achieve? What did they get for their efforts? What do you think you’ll achieve?’ ”

Sometimes in China, Tony says, “It’s better to say nothing and do nothing. In order to survive you need to keep a blind eye or numb yourself to reality.” I ask if Tony is afraid.
“No! They are the ones who are afraid,” he says. “That’s why they are always trying to keep things secret, because they are afraid of the truth.”


 

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