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The |
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE
1400 HRS CALIFORNIA MAY 19, 1997
TESTIMONY
BEFORE THE CALIFORNIA SENATE TO EXAMINE
THE RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION IN
CHINA
AND
THE MOST FAVORED NATION TRADING
STATUS TO CHINA
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA
MAY 19, 1997
BY
JOSEPH M. C. KUNG
PRESIDENT
THE CARDINAL KUNG FOUNDATION
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The Cardinal Kung Foundation |
Tel: 203-329-9712 |
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PO Box 8086, Ridgeway Center |
Fax: 203-329-8415 |
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Stamford, CT 06905 |
E-Mail: jmkung@aol.com |
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U. S. A. |
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Mr. Chairman: Thank you for this opportunity to present
you with the situation of the on-going religious persecution in
China.
In my presentation, I will focus on the Roman Catholic
Church. Other religious communities such as Protestantism,
Muslim, and Buddhism have undergone the same degree of
persecution and also suffered greatly under the Chinese
Government.
Mr. Chairman, while billions of Christians celebrated
Christmas and Easter, there was no public celebration for the
underground Roman Catholic Church across China. It may be a
surprise to some Americans that Roman Catholics have no open
churches in China because they are underground. Religious
services can only be secretly conducted in private homes or
deserted fields. The Chinese government deem these gatherings as
illegal, unauthorized, subversive and punishable by exorbitant
fines, detention, house arrests, jail or labor camp.
In April and May last year, 5000 soldiers supported by
dozens of armored cars and helicopters sealed off a tiny village
called Dong Lu in Hebei Province where a national Catholic Marian
shrine is located. The soldiers destroyed that shrine. They
confiscated the Statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary. They arrested
Bishop Jacob Su, the bishop of this Diocese. He is now missing.
They also arrested his auxiliary bishop, arrested the pastor of
the Marian shrine, and a number of other pastors in the same
area. These pastors are currently either in jail, in hiding, or
under house arrest.
Please try to visualize this: 5000 soldiers, armored
cars, helicopters, beatings and arrests -- all against unarmed,
defenseless villagers. Doesn't that sound as if Tiananmen square
was repeated all over again on a smaller scale in that tiny
village? The only difference is that there were no reporters, and
no cameras. The Chinese Government had a free hand in rounding up
the villagers, beating and torturing them for 10 months without
the outside world knowing it. That is until the New York Times
and the Washington Times reported in January this year.
Mr. Chairman, this incident is not an isolated case of
brutality of the Chinese government.
Bishop Thomas Zeng Jingmu was caught offering a
Holy Mass without government permission. He was 75 year old and
sick at that time, yet he was sentenced to three years in a labor
camp.
Bishop Joannes Han Dingxiang, Bishop of Yong
Nian, near Beijing, was offered a bribe by a local government
official to leave the Roman Catholic Church and to join the
government sponsored Patriotic Association's church. He refused
the bribe. His answer to the official was that he had only ONE
soul, and that soul was NOT for sale. He too went to jail. Bishop
Han is 60 years old. One third of his life was spent in the
Chinese gulag.
On November 20 of last year, 120 Catholics were arrested
in Jianxi province.
In late March of this year, a few days before Vice
President Gore's visit, the government ransacked the home of
Bishop Joseph Fan Zhongliang, a Jesuit. He is the administrator
of the Shanghai diocese of the underground Roman Catholic Church.
Bishop Fan is 79 years old. He spent 30 years in jail and labor
camps. They not only confiscated his religious statues, religious
books, and holy articles for Mass, but also took away 20,000
Yuen, about US $ 2,500. No warrant or receipt was issued.
Earlier this year, we obtained and released worldwide an
internal document of the Chinese government detailing procedures
on how to eradicate the underground Roman Catholic Church.
This document Urges the leadership to employ
"resolute, decisive and organized measures...to eradicate
the illegal activities of the underground Roman Catholic
Church."
This communist document removes any remaining doubt
about the government's role in the persecution of the Roman
Catholic Church, and about the government's ultimate goal.
All reports indicate that the current persecution is the
most severe during the past two decades.
Mr. Chairman, the persecution persists and worsens at a
time when China is making significant economic progress, and at a
time when China is working hard to secure its status as an
important member of the international community.
The economic improvement in China and the interaction of
China with the international communities did not bring about the
expected improvement in Human Rights.
Why? Because the Chinese Government does not believe
that "freedom of religion" should be open to the free
choice and conscience of an individual. Rather, it must be
submitted to the government's choice. For Catholics, the
government's choice is not the Roman Catholic Church, but the
"Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association" created by the
government in 1957. Anyone who remains faithful to the Pope and
refuses to join this government sponsored Patriotic Association
is considered a criminal in China, and therefore is subject to
harassment and arrest.
China continues its oppressive religious policies
because it knows that MOST governments in the free world are not
serious about their demands of human rights improvement in China.
With all the above examples of religious persecution,
how could we expect China to honor any agreement it made with the
free world?
McDonald Douglas Corp had its share of nightmare. It
shipped to China in 1994 some highly technical and sensitive
equipment and had an agreement with China to use them for making
civilian jetliners only. However, the machines were secretly
diverted 800 miles away to a military complex that builds
missiles and fighter aircraft.
The current policies of the United States government to
delink human rights from trade send a clear, but wrong, message
to China that we will tolerate human rights abuses for the sake
of profits and trade. This policy also gives the Chinese
Government the confidence that it can continue persecuting
religious believers without affecting its international
relationships. Thus, the religious persecution continues and
intensifies in China.
"Zero Tolerance" is the buzz word that U.S.
corporations often allude to in their policies of zero tolerance
of discrimination of any kind, conflicts of interest,
sexual harassment, child labor, and others. These
policies are directly related to the upholding of human rights
principles. Yet, the strong commitment to zero
tolerance of human rights violations, or, for that
matter, even a minimal tolerance has not found its
way into the policy of those U. S. Companies doing businesses in
China.
According to the congressional record of February 15,
1996, Chrysler fired an employee because he was arrested by the
Chinese government for praying without authorization. Only after
an intensive international human rights campaign was waged was he
rehired .
It is very wrong, bordering on hypocrisy, for any
corporation to demand of its employee a strong commitment to
human rights, when it is more than willing to relinquish this
policy once the company is 20 hours away in China. It is even
more hypocritical that hiding behind President Clinton's policy
of delinking trade from human rights, these companies turn a
blind eye to the atrocious religious persecution in China in
exchange for their "thirty pieces of silver".
The United States of America was founded because our
forefathers suffered, fought, and worked hard to gain this God
given right of freedom. This freedom must not be exclusive to the
United States. Rather, it is a fundamental entitlement and should
be enjoyed by all people around the globe.
This basic right of freedom was the reason why our
country took great risks and sacrifices to help liberate Europe
from Nazism, to play a major role freeing Eastern Europe from
Communism, and to help victims of apartheid, war and famine. Our
foreign policy on China should not be anything less. To do so
otherwise would be an insult to the spirit and principle of our
founding fathers and would be yet another example of double
standard in our foreign policy.
The President cannot guard and foster American values in
one corner of the world and neglect these values in another
corner of the world, namely China. To do so, America will not
only lose its credibility among all nations, but also lose its
sense of true values at home, which would be a grave disservice
to all the people of this nation.
While the MFN trading status given to China is an
important foreign policy of the United States Government, the
principles of freedom and human rights must play a decisive
factor.
It is an established fact that there is no freedom in
China. It is also an established fact that the contemporary human
rights record in China is one of the worst in many years as
reported by our own State Department.
We must send a clear and unequivocal signal to China
that the United States cannot tolerate such violations of human
rights as religious and political persecution, forced abortions,
and slave labor camps; neither can we tolerate such misdeeds as
protectionist trade practice, weapon proliferation, and the
questionable illegal Chinese political contributions.
To renew the MFN trading status to China under the
current situation would again send a wrong message.
Contrary to the Chinese government claims and to certain
fellow Americans, America will not be forcing its values on China
by helping its people achieve freedom. There are about 100
million religious believers who cry out for religious freedom.
There are millions of silent dissidents crying out for freedom of
speech. There are not millions, but hundreds of millions of
child-bearing women together with their spouses crying out for
their second babies who are being slaughtered even before they
are born. All these people constitute a huge majority of the
population in China. They are all helplessly demanding freedom
and their human rights. The Chinese people fully subscribe to the
same values that we ourselves espouse. The only difference is
that Americans can pursue freedom and enjoy it, even if sometimes
some Americans seem to be taking this liberty for granted. On the
other hand, the Chinese people are voiceless and suppressed. We
have a moral duty to help them.
It is, therefore, imperative that President Clinton and
Congress take responsibility, as Americans, to strongly protest
with the end to stop China's religious persecution, the most
basic violation of human rights. This mandate needs to be
incorporated into the United States foreign policy.
America must use all legal, ethical, and economic power
to promote religious freedom in China and elsewhere throughout
the world. Only in this way can America safeguard its own
principles and values for our own children.
We therefore urge the President and Congress to revoke
the MFN trading status to China this year. The American
conscience demands that they do so.
The American spirit dictates that the altar of freedom,
and the altar of human rights must be higher than economic
considerations. Anyone arguing otherwise, in support of the
renewal of MFN status to China, betrays the noble founding
principle of our great nation.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman
Please help with
donations and with prayer.Biography
of Ignatius Pin-Mei Cardinal Kung (Gong)
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