(Minghui.org) A Suzhou City resident was home alone on June 22 when police broke in and arrested her for refusing to renounce Falun Gong, a spiritual discipline being persecuted by the Chinese communist regime.
This is the seventh time that Ms. Sun Aixia, 76, was detained for her faith. When she protested against the illegal arrest, officer Wang yelled, “We’re going to have you sentenced again!” He knew that Ms. Sun was once given a three-year prison term in late 2007.
As the police refused to provide details on Ms. Sun’s latest arrest, it took her daughter several days to find out that her mother was being held at Huangdai Fourth Detention Center.
She requested her mother’s release, only to be threatened by police.
The younger woman is not the only one in her family that has been threatened by police. Her father became mentally unstable after Deputy Chief Zhang Jun threatened to charge him with “harboring a criminal” following his wife’s arrest on April 18, 2012.
The 76-year-old man went missing days later, and his body was found in a lake in late December that year.
Ms. Sun holds former Chinese dictator Jiang Zemin responsible for her repeated detention and her husband’s death. She mailed out her criminal complaint against Jiang on June 19, 2015.
Background
In 1999, Jiang Zemin, as head of the Chinese Communist Party, overrode other Politburo standing committee members and launched the violent suppression of Falun Gong.
The persecution has led to the deaths of many Falun Gong practitioners in the past 16 years. More have been tortured for their belief and even killed for their organs. Jiang Zemin is directly responsible for the inception and continuation of the brutal persecution.
Under his personal direction, the Chinese Communist Party established an extralegal security organ, the “610 Office,” on June 10, 1999. The organization overrides police forces and the judicial system in carrying out Jiang's directive regarding Falun Gong: to ruin their reputations, cut off their financial resources, and destroy them physically.
Chinese law allows for citizens to be plaintiffs in criminal cases, and many practitioners are now exercising that right to file criminal complaints against the former dictator.
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