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Falun Dafa Australia
Information Centre

The Age: No gong from China to ban Melb sect

Concern for crowd safety, not politics, was the reason the spiritual
group
Falun Dafa was excluded from last year’s Chinese New Year Festival in
Melbourne, a tribunal heard today.

Members of Falun Dafa, also known as Falun Gong, are claiming in the
Victorian and Civil Administrative Tribunal they were discriminated
against
by the festival hosts because of their political and religious views.

Opening the case for the Federation of Chinese Association, Paul Vout
said
organisers’ concerns over the potential consequences of the group’s
controversial views lay behind the refusal to accept their application.

“This hearing is not about Shanghai-based anti-religious bigotry
reaching
out to Little Bourke Street,” Dr Vout said.

Nor was the case about the oppressive dictates of the Chinese government
and
its treatment of its citizens.

Instead, the case centred on “one decision” by the festival hosts, their

legal responsibilities and their preparedness to accept the consequences

that could arise from allowing Falun Dafa a stall at the event, Dr Vout
said.

When controversial political views could provoke conflict and scuffles
there
was a legitimate basis for rejecting the group, Dr Vout said.

Large numbers were expected at the festival, including many families,
and
the Falun Dafa group were known to display explicit photos, he said.

The group was advised their application had been denied by the festival
hosts just one day before the 2002 event began despite complaining to
the
Victorian Equal Opportunity Commission over an earlier rejection.

Yesterday their lawyer Mark Irving told the tribunal the group was not
given
a reason for the rejection.

“The question of the refusal is going to be central. We say that the
real
reasons for the refusal were the religious and political views and
activities of the organisation.”

Falun Dafa claims the Chinese government has persecuted, tortured and
killed
hundreds of practitioners since it was banned in China in 1999.

It is believed there are as many as 100 million members of the group in
China, and its teachings are practised in more than 50 countries.

The hearing continues.

A Falun Dafa spokeswoman today said the group had not applied to attend
the
2003 Chinese New Year festival in the city.

– AAP

http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/02/19/1045330652615.html

Posting date: 20/Feb/2003
Original article date: 19/Feb/2003
Category: Media Reports