Calgary Herald

Special focus needed to counter China pressure

- TOM BLACKWELL

The alleged harassment of a Falun Gong practition­er at Ottawa’s Dragon Boat Festival is one more reason the federal government needs dedicated officials to handle complaints of Chinese-government intimidati­on, says a prominent human-rights watchdog.

The incident involving practition­er Gerry Smith was “very troubling,” and part of a wider pattern of coercion by Beijing’s representa­tives, said Alex Neve, Canadian head of Amnesty Internatio­nal.

But Ottawa continues to handle the issue with a scattersho­t approach that leaves possible victims unclear how to get help, he said.

“When something happens, they don’t really know where should they turn to report this,” he said. “Is this a criminal law matter, is this a security and intelligen­ce matter, is this just a diplomatic incident? Is it all of the above, is it none of the above?”

Neve said Amnesty has been urging federal authoritie­s for some time to create a single point of contact for people and groups “who feel intimidate­d by Chinese government.”

Such a system would also help Ottawa track the extent of the problem, he said.

Smith says he briefly entered the festival grounds last month with the nineyear-old son of a friend, and was ordered to remove a T-shirt bearing the words Falun Dafa — another name for Falun Gong — by the festival’s CEO. He said John Brooman told him he didn’t want the event politicize­d, and mentioned that it was co-sponsored by the Chinese embassy. Brooman also threatened to remove a group of other Falun Gong followers doing exercises outside the festival in cityowned Mooney’s Bay park, Smith charges.

A city councillor said he also saw some Falun Gong supporters handing out leaflets to people entering the festival.

China has a well-documented history of persecutin­g the group — seen as a threat to Communist control — while Canadian authoritie­s have deemed the Falun Gong a spiritual movement deserving of human-rights protection­s.

Brooman could not be reached for comment, but said in a letter to the organizati­on he is sorry if he offended Smith, calling him a “very nice man,” while emphasizin­g he did not want any organizati­on to “use our event as a platform for advocacy.”

Smith says there was no advocacy; he was just getting his friend’s son something to eat.

The Chinese embassy — listed as a festival “gold sponsor” — told the National Post Thursday it was unaware of the incident, but echoed Brooman’s comments on keeping politics out of the event.

“If anyone wants to politicize this platform and destroy its reputation, we are afraid that the organizers and the Ottawa citizens will not agree,” the embassy’s press office said in a statement.

Amnesty Internatio­nal spearheade­d a coalition of groups that distribute­d a confidenti­al report to government agencies in 2017, documentin­g long-standing Chinese intimidati­on of activists here.

Prominent among the targets are what the Chinese Communist Party has called the five poisons: the Falun Gong, Tibetan and Uyghur rights activists and supporters of Taiwan and democracy in China.

“It’s pervasive and if anything appears to be expanding,” Neve said, noting that what happened to Smith was less severe than others have faced, but still wrong.

“For China to be able to exert that kind of influence by virtue of its sponsorshi­p of a public event, a festival, that is broadly … very troubling.”

Elected representa­tives for the Mooney’s Bay area where the festival took place, though, did not exactly leap this week at the chance to condemn the incident.

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson is away on vacation and unavailabl­e, while MPP John Fraser was also tied up, said their spokespeop­le. MP David Mcguinty did not respond to a request for comment.

 ?? JEAN LEVAC/POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Gerry Smith, who was asked to remove his Falun Gong T-shirt at Ottawa’s Dragon Boat festival, stands in front of the Chinese Embassy Thursday.
JEAN LEVAC/POSTMEDIA NEWS Gerry Smith, who was asked to remove his Falun Gong T-shirt at Ottawa’s Dragon Boat festival, stands in front of the Chinese Embassy Thursday.

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