Beijing Targets Falun Gong Refugees in US, Tracking Their Whereabouts

Beijing Targets Falun Gong Refugees in US, Tracking Their Whereabouts
Falun Gong practitioners perform slow-moving exercises at a rally commemorating the 20th anniversary of the persecution of Falun Gong in China, on the West Lawn of Capitol Hill on July 18, 2019. (Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times)
Eva Fu
4/4/2021
Updated:
4/5/2021

NEW YORK—Chinese authorities are attempting to track down Falun Gong practitioners who fled the regime’s persecution by collecting their overseas address and other personal data, a number of adherents told The Epoch Times.

Harassment of the Falun Gong community in China by the Communist Party has been commonplace since the regime began a decades-long eradication campaign against the faith group, subjecting millions to various abuses including torture, imprisonment, forced labor, and even forced organ harvesting. According to its website, Falun Gong is a self-improvement practice rooted in Buddhist traditions. It promotes the values of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance.

In the past few weeks, especially around the convening of China’s politically sensitive “Two Sessions”—the regime’s most important annual meeting—multiple Falun Gong practitioners in the United States found Chinese police prying for their personal information from their families in China, even obstructing the families’ normal activities if they refused to comply.

When Ling Jilei’s parents were selling their house and needed to update Ling’s place of residence with the local police, the police turned down the routine procedure three times, she said.

“The first day, they wouldn’t do it. Then they asked for my address and phone number. The next time, they asked me to take a photo with my child along with our IDs,” Ling, a Falun Gong practitioner who fled Xinjiang to the United States five years ago, told The Epoch Times.

“The local police know me by name,” she said. “What I am doing, what my job is ... which school my child attends. They asked about everything.”

Ling is far from the only Chinese person having to live with state monitoring even after having found refuge overseas. Adherents originally from Beijing, Guizhou Province of southwestern China, Guangdong Province in the south, and eastern Shandong Province have reported similar experiences.

‘Rock Bearing Down on My Heart’

The intimidation and monitoring appear to match government instructions seen in a leaked 2015 internal government document from northeastern Liaoning Province, in which officials ordered the comprehensive collection of information about Falun Gong practitioners who had left China, including their Chinese and foreign names, photographs, new identification documents such as green cards, and key details about their families in China.

The document tasked local villages and work units to “analyze every individual based on their relations in China and set up customized working plans” for the central government authorities’ approval.

A 2020 document from the standing committee of China’s rubber-stamp legislature, the National People’s Congress, showed that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) continues to see suppressing Falun Gong as key to its political stability.

“There’s never been true rule of law under the CCP,” Peng Yongfeng, who was a human rights lawyer before he left China, told The Epoch Times. “They have only one ultimate goal: to gather and store as much information as possible from the Chinese communities so as to maximize their control of the populace.”

For Ling—who was arrested multiple times for her faith in China, at one point being cuffed to a wooden board and electrocuted by Chinese prison guards—the police monitoring has rekindled her fears.

“It was as if I was back in China that instant,” Ling said, recalling how she felt when learning about the incident from her father. “That entire night, I felt there was a rock bearing down on my heart. I felt that they could come to arrest me the very next day.”

In Xinjiang, Falun Gong practitioners and other ethnic and religious minorities have been placed in internment camps for refusing to renounce their beliefs or to toe the party line. After Ling finished serving time in the labor camp, she still had to report to the local authorities weekly. The police regularly visited or made phone calls to probe about her activities, she said. She said she was lucky to escape overseas—she has a friend, also a Falun Gong practitioner, who was barred from leaving Xinjiang despite holding a U.S. visa.

“It gave me the feeling I was being kept in check,” she said of the weekly reports to the police station.

A Falun Gong practitioner from Guizhou, who asked to remain anonymous to protect his family’s safety, said his hometown village committee recently demanded his birth date, U.S. address, and details about his workplace.

The village officials told his family they were doing a population count. The man, however, left China two decades ago and has not lived in the region for more than 30 years.

Falun Gong practitioner Li Peng from Shandong now lives in New York. She told The Epoch Times that the police in her hometown called her mother insisting to know where she now works and lives, as well as her opinion on China-related issues.

“How can the Chinese Communist Party oversee what people think?” she said.

What the police demands of Li’s family is a testament to the “extreme” nature of the regime’s governance model, Peng said.

“They’re saying that, regardless of whether you’re in China or overseas, as long as you’re Chinese, you’re under the jurisdiction of the Chinese government,” she said.

“They treat Falun Gong as their enemy because they know what’s coming to them when Falun Gong’s efforts make people aware of what they are.”

Li Xin’an contributed to this report.