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Luo
Gan, The Head of China's Gestapo
By By
Ye Deming
The Epoch Times
Infosearch:
Máximo Tomás
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
February 3, 2006
Luo Gan, a member
of the Chinese Government's Politburo Standing Committee, recently
visited Argentina, Uruguay, and Cuba. On December 14, when Luo was
in Argentina, Falun Gong practitioners protesting outside the Argentine
parliament were attacked by a gang of Chinese men believed to have
been hired by the Chinese Embassy. On December 16, the Falun Gong
practitioners who were beaten submitted a lawsuit through their
attorney Mr. Alejandro Cowes against the assailants and the Argentinean
police who witnessed the beating but did not intervene.
On December
13, the day before the attack and while Luo was visiting Argentina,
Falun Gong practitioners filed a lawsuit against him at the Federal
Criminal Court in Buenos Aires. The beating and lawsuits drew international
attention to Luo, the head of China's Gestapo.
Monopolizing
Power
Luo has kept
a low profile to the outside world since becoming a member of the
Politburo Standing Committee. Internally, however, he has tightly
embraced his power and allowed no one to share it. Although Luo
is the last of the nine Standing Committee members in ranking, he
is actually the oldest, most experienced, and has been working in
Zhongnanhai (the central government compound) longer than anyone
except Wen Jiabao. His real power is much stronger than most of
the members of the Standing Committee.
Zeng Qinghong
has wanted to share Luo's power, but he has not had much success.
Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao are both "courteous" towards
Luo, seemingly unwilling to get involved in Luo's business.
On the issue
of the Tiananmen Square Massacre, the CCP leadership still does
not dare to cross the line drawn by the previous administration
of Jiang Zemin and Li Peng. Luo had a monopoly on how to suppress
free speech and demonstrations during the three months before the
June 4th Massacre, how to control political dissidents, and how
to keep tabs on former CCP General Secretary Zhao Ziyang.
Luo Gan has
built a national security "empire" no less so than Lavrenty
Pavlovich Beria, the head of the KGB during Stalin's reign who killed
numerous political enemies of Stalin.
Accomplice to
the Tiananmen Square Massacre
Luo Gan was
first given important powers during the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
He insisted on cracking down on the student movement. At that time,
there was much disagreement among the highest levels of the CCP
leadership, and many officials opposed military suppression. Luo
played an important role in the decision to open fire. On behalf
of the Beijing CCP Commission, he also spread many lies about the
students.
Zhang Liang,
author of the book June Fourth: The True Story , said that during
the Tiananmen Square Massacre, Luo Gan passed down and implemented
many orders. Throughout the night of June 3 and the early morning
of June 4, Luo personally gave orders at Zhongnanhai to supervise
the armed police, the Ministry of Public Security, the Ministry
of State Security, Xinhua News Agency, and the Broadcasting, Film,
and Television Bureau. He also closely monitored the progress of
the military as it entered Beijing and Tiananmen Square.
Luo also carefully
forged footage of rioting students burning tanks and cars in order
to provide justification for the massacre and to deceive the Chinese
people.
Thwarting Redress
of the Tiananmen Square Massacre
On February
24, 2004, Dr. Jiang Yanyong from the People's Liberation Army's
301 Hospital, who was the whistleblower during the SARS epidemic,
wrote a letter to the Politburo, the National People's Congress
(NPC), the State Council, and the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference (CPPCC), requesting that they redress the Tiananmen Square
Massacre. This was just ten days before the meetings of the NPC
and the CPPCC, when the political atmosphere was tense and the security
was extremely high.
Dr. Jiang's
letter broke the fearful silence on this issue and again touched
the most sensitive nerves of the top CCP leadership. The central
government at Zhongnanhai was shocked. After Luo received Dr. Jiang's
letter, he personally visited Li Peng's office on the same day to
report the letter. Li asked Luo to convey to Hu Jintao that he needed
to order all CCP Central and State Council officials above the bureau
level to watch the 3.5-hour video on the Tiananmen Square Massacre
produced by the CCP under the direction of Jiang Zemin and Li Peng
in the spring of 2001.
Under pressure
from Li Peng and Jiang Zemin, the CCP Central General Office ordered
all officials above the bureau level of all ministries under the
CCP Central to watch the video within three months. The officials
also had to state their position on the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
Luo paid particularly
close attention to the Tiananmen Square Massacre because he was
the only person in the top CCP leadership circle to have participated
in every step of the decision-making related to the massacre. Fearful
of a redress of the incident, he closely monitored the situation.
Arrest of the
Tiananmen Mothers
On March 25,
2004, in Hong Kong, six Tiananmen Mothers led by Ding Zilin and
Zhang Xianling submitted video testimony to the United Nations Human
Rights Commission. In her testimony, Ms. Ding said that from the
moment her son died, she had always felt that being alive was worse
than death. However, in the end, she chose to live. "After
I chose to live, I also chose to break the silence, which had become
the cause of the CCP's monitoring and surveillance." Through
the process of losing her son, being monitored by the CCP, and searching
for family members of other victims, Ms. Ding "finally saw
the CCP's true face and understood the evilness of the system."
She has since publicly appealed to the international community to
assist in finding the people who were missing after the Tiananmen
Square Massacre.
Luo was infuriated
after reading the testimony. He wrote a long order to Xu Yongyue,
Minister of State Security, asking Xu and the state security system
to closely monitor Ding. On the afternoon of March 28, during the
UN Human Rights Commission meeting in Geneva, the state security
system in Wuxi and Beijing arrested Ding Zilin, Zhang Xianling,
and Huang Jinping, three family members of victims of the Tiananmen
Square Massacre. The reason for the arrests was that they had "illegally
shipped T-shirts from Hong Kong."
The arrests
prompted strong protests inside and outside of China. Facing pressure
from the public and the media, Hu Jintao inquired about the arrests
and requested that the state security system release the three women.
After five days of detention, the women were released.
Ordering Severe
Punishment for Cai Zuohua
Beijing-based
home church leader Cai Zuohua was arrested on September 11, 2004
for publishing religious books, including the Bible. His wife Xiao
Yunfei, Xiao's brother Xiao Gaowen, and sister-in-law Hu Jinyun
were arrested on September 27 in Hunan Province. On November 8,
Beijing Haidian District Court sentenced Cai to three years in prison
and 200,000 yuan (US$25,000) in fines for running an "illegal
commercial operation." Ms. Xiao Yunfei was sentenced to two
years and 150,000 yuan (US$18,750) in fines. Mr. Xiao Gaowen was
sentenced to 18 months in prison and 100,000 yuan (US$12,500) in
fines.
According to
Fu Xiqiu, a former instructor at the Beijing Municipal Party School
and a pastor of a home church, Luo was personally involved in the
Cai case and insisted that Cai be punished severely.
Violently Suppressing
the Peasants' Rights Movement
From November
5 to November 6, 2004, peasants from Hanyuan County, Sichuan Province
were dissatisfied with the government's seizure of farmland to build
a power plant dam without just compensation, and staged a protest
to stop the damming of the river. Luo flew to Sichuan in person
to direct the suppression. As soon as he arrived in Sichuan, he
called an emergency meeting and ordered the use of violence.
That evening,
five paramilitary police vans from Chengdu City arrived in the county
seat of Hanyuan and shot smoke bombs and tear gas bombs at the peasants.
The smoke bombs killed an elderly woman and injured dozens. At 11
a.m. on November 6, about two hundred buses and military vehicles
full of paramilitary policemen arrived in the county seat; the police
arrested many people. The peasants didn't dare leave their homes.
The paramilitary police also shot at unarmed peasants. A woman in
her 50s was killed. By midnight on November 6, preliminary reports
indicated that 17 peasants were killed and more than 40 were injured.
Reporters on their way to Hanyuan were stopped more than 62 miles
away and sent back.
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