Young Woman Zhang Ziru from Inner Mongolia Suffers Mental Collapse from Persecution

Facebook Logo LinkedIn Logo Twitter Logo Email Logo Pinterest Logo

Ms. Zhang Ziru, about 29 years old, lives in Duolun County, Inner Mongolia. For appealing to the government on behalf of Falun Gong, she suffered cruel persecution at the hands of police officers and during her detention at the Hohhot Women's Forced Labour Camp. As a result, she suffered a mental collapse.

On July 22, 1999, Ms. Zhang went to Beijing to clarify the truth about Falun Gong at the appeals office run by the State Council. Immediately after she entered the appeals office, she was detained with three other fellow practitioners. Then she was transferred to a detention centre, where she refused to cooperate with the authorities. After 15 days, she was released from the detention centre.

On September 30, Ms. Zhang went to Beijing again to clarify the truth. She was arrested on the underground path near Tiananmen Square. Because the Chinese Communist Party's 50th Year Celebration was the following day, Jiang Zemin's regime was greatly upset by her deed. All the units involved, from the autonomous region to each level of the local government, were criticized and punished. The police from the Inner Mongolia Police Bureau were ordered to take her back to her hometown.


After Ms. Zhang was sent back to Duolun, she was sentenced to three years of forced labour. She was the first Duolun practitioner to be sentenced and was sent to the Women's Forced Labour Camp in Hohhot City, where she suffered inhuman persecution both mentally and physically. Prior to that, she had to endure the authorities' misunderstandings and hatred, and her family was threatened.


The forced labour camp tries to crush people's will by applying intense mental pressure and using physical torture. Immediately after practitioners are admitted to the forced labour camp, they are forced to watch videotapes and read books that defame and slander Falun Gong and its founder. They are also forced to repeatedly write a so-called "reflection" article and talk about it. Their minds are left with no room for other thoughts. If there is even a little bit of thought that is against the requirements of the labour camp, practitioners face severe and cruel persecution.


Practitioners are separated from each other, making it difficult to find out each practitioner's situation. When a fellow practitioner saw Ms. Zhang again, she had already suffered a mental collapse.


Even in this condition, she was still forced to wrap chopsticks and make knitted products, until she truly couldn't finish her tasks. In May of 2000, she was confirmed as a mental patient after the forced labour camp reviewed her medical examination.

When Ms. Zhang returned home, her family took her to Shalingzi Mental Hospital in Zhangjiakou City for treatment, but without success. In the name of "justice," the Duolun Government and unlawful officers from the Hohhot Female Forced Labour camp persecuted a kind and peaceful lady to mental collapse. The forced labour camp even blamed Ms. Zhang's mental breakdown on the practice of Falun Gong. In actuality, beginning in August 1999 and for almost one year of being persecuted, Ms. Zhang had not been able to practise the Falun Gong exercises at all.


Also at Hohhot Female Forced Labour Camp, a pregnant practitioner from Linhe City was illegally detained during the spring and summer of 2000. She was handcuffed to a handrail, forced to half-squat and not allowed to stand up. Two weeks later Liu, the No.3 team leader, shocked her with an electric baton while walking her back to her cell. She was also hung up while handcuffed so that her feet couldn't touch the ground. This went on for several hours. Another time the torture lasted the whole day.


Chinese version available at http://minghui.ca/mh/articles/2004/12/26/92219.html

* * *

Facebook Logo LinkedIn Logo Twitter Logo Email Logo Pinterest Logo

You are welcome to print and circulate all articles published on Clearharmony and their content, but please quote the source.