A female Falun Gong practitioner calling attention to Beijing’s human rights abuses was assaulted by a man in London, the latest attack on the faith group that has sparked concerns about Beijing’s attempts to quash freedom of speech overseas.
British police have opened an investigation into the incident, according to the victim, Zhang Chunhua. The Metropolitan Police didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The scuffle took place on Feb. 23 outside the British Museum, a popular tourist attraction for Chinese visitors in central London. Falun Gong practitioners, like Zhang, place posters outside the museum’s gate and talk to passersby almost daily, aiming to raise awareness of the communist regime’s brutality against their faith.
Zhang, who was holding a poster at the time, approached a group of Chinese tourists as they were leaving the museum for a nearby bus. Zhang sought to drive a conversation with them, but was stopped by their Chinese tour guide, who cursed and shouted at her, Zhang told The Epoch Times.
A male driver suddenly emerged from the bus, snatched her poster, and threw it away. As Zhang attempted to photograph him, the man grabbed her phone and tossed it into a nearby library’s gate, according to Zhang’s account.
The scene turned violent as the man pushed her to the ground.
Zhang said she had been trying to stop the man from leaving and call the police after getting back on her feet. But the man strangled her neck and punched her face, knocking her down again and continuing to beat her.
The assault, she said, left bruises on her face, neck, and hand.

Austin Tang, who witnessed the attack, expressed his shock when recounting it to The Epoch Times on March 10.
“I was just about to call the police when it happened,” Tang said. “In that instant, she was already lying on the ground. The driver attacked her so fast.”
“I was caught off guard by the sudden attack. ... And a man beating a woman, that’s something you rarely see here,” he said.

The attack on Falun Gong practitioners is the latest in a series of similar incidents in London and elsewhere that have heightened concerns about a hate and harassment campaign exported from China.
Falun Gong, a spiritual practice that was introduced to the public in 1992, involves meditative exercises and moral teachings centered on the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and forbearance.
“Our actions—whether it’s clarifying the truth or collecting petitions—are peaceful and protected by law,” Zhang said.
“It’s shocking that the driver, who appeared to be from the West, could carry out such a violent act. This illustrates how deeply the CCP’s lies could have influenced people.”
She highlighted the tour company’s link to Beijing. The bus operator, FCD Transportation Limited, is owned by EG Travel, which describes itself on the official website as the “only supplier” appointed by the Chinese Embassy in Dublin, Ireland. The site listed high-ranking Chinese officials whom the company had served, including a stopover by then-Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in 2015.







