Tuesday, February 6, 2007

Who goes where Hu goes?

I'll tell ya who goes where Hu goes... the Falun Gong. Wherever you find HU, you'll find the Falun Gong. Never afraid of a fight, never afraid to tell their story. Wherever you find the CCP, you'll will find the Falun Gong, brave and challenging the Chinese Communist party. I imagine, such behavior is a great risk to their person. What's interesting is the Falun Gong seem to have mobilized several other groups. People now believe they can and should speak out to the horrors of the Chinese Communist Party, where killing prisoners and cutting out their organs is an admitted practice.

What's worse, China appears to be exporting their brand of business. Ever hear of a Chinese sweat shops? Horrible to us, normal to Communist China. Well, it turns out China has no export controls on these most sensitive of Chinese practices. And what better way to hide your slave labor than to export it to Africa...tuck it away... Shessshhh!!!

MEN'S NEWS DAILY.COM

Reaction to President Hu’s visit to Namibia is not all positive. The National Society for Human Rights has some harsh words for Chinese policies at home and abroad.

“President Hu’s visit to Namibia is best remembered by us as a human rights group with regard to human rights violations in China. That is torture and ill treatment, as well as persecution of people like Falun Gong practitioners. Another thing, of course, that comes to our minds is the occupation of Tibet. We are reading reports from Tibetan human rights groups that about 1.2 million have fled the country and that includes Dalai Lama, the respected spiritual leader,” he says.

Upon visiting African countries, President Hu often announces aid or investment packages worth millions of US dollars. Nevertheless, the human rights leader says, “That is probably so. (But) the results are not seen on the ground. This is based on the complaints, daily complaints, by Namibian workers (about) slave like practices and exploitative labor practices.”

He says Chinese business people are competing with local business owners on the micro-credit level.

Ya Nangoloh says he fears a rise in xenophobia in Namibia against the Chinese that could lead to violence.

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