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Christian human rights group joins others denouncing New York Times

Two human rights groups have condemned a recent New York Times (NYT) report for what they described as an “open display of religious bigotry” against the spiritual group Falun Gong, which is severely persecuted in China.

U.S.-based nonprofits Lantos Foundation and the Christian group 21 Wilberforce said a July 4 NYT article unfairly singled out developers of an internet firewall circumvention tool, Ultrasurf, due to their personal beliefs in Falun Gong. Like Christians and Muslims, followers in China have been persecuted by the communist regime.

The article highlighted a recent change of leadership at the Open Technology Fund (OTF). The internet freedom group is overseen by the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM), a federal agency that also supervises government-funded media outlets such as Voice of America. Citing experts, the article authors suggested that circumvention tools such as Ultrasurf were not suitable for funding from OTF.

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Falun Gong members are tortured and even used for organ harvesting by Chinese authorities.

“In describing tools used to circumvent the internet firewall in closed countries, the reporters made no fewer than 9 references to the personal beliefs and religious practices of two developers,” the joint statement said. “Though several other technology companies, NGOs, and other individuals were written about, none of their religious affiliations were mentioned.”

The nonprofits said, had the report applied the same treatment to developers who were Christian, Muslim, or Jewish, “there would have been an outcry, and rightly so.”

READ: China harvesting organs of religious minorities

“Yet the Times’ denigrating coverage of Falun Gong is no different and should be condemned in equal terms,” they said. “Choosing a small, persecuted religion to single out does not make the bigotry any more palatable.”

They said the way the article was framed implied that the developers’ faith in Falun Gong had a “direct bearing on the legitimacy of the tools that they have developed and whether they deserve to be among those that receive funds from the U.S. Government.”

The groups said that while they welcomed open debate on the merits of technology aimed at advancing internet freedom, “[i]t remains entirely unacceptable, and frankly un-American, to dismiss or disqualify or even describe an individual or product largely on the basis of religious affiliation or belief.”

“We would never have imagined such a lapse in journalistic ethics from America’s self-proclaimed ‘newspaper of record,’” the statement said.

Both nonprofits advocate for technology to circumvent China’s “Great Firewall,” the regime’s massive internet censorship apparatus, so Chinese citizens may access unfiltered information about the CCP’s abuses.

READ: U.S. turns attention to Chinese persecution of faith

In a June 9 letter to the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, the foundation’s president Katrina Lantos Swett proposed dedicating $20 million of federal funding to censorship circumvention initiatives Freegate, Lantern, Psiphon, and Ultrasurf.

Their statement in response to The New York Times was released on July 20, which coincided with the 21st anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party launching its campaign of brutal violence against Falun Gong.

Since then, millions of practitioners have been detained in Chinese labor camps, prisons, and brainwashing centers, according to estimates by the Falun Dafa Information Center. Inside these facilities, adherents are tortured and abused in an attempt to coerce them into giving up their faith, More than 4,000 practitioners are confirmed to have died from torture, according to Minghui.org, an online clearinghouse for information on the persecution of Falun Gong, although the actual figure is likely to be far greater given the tight controls of information in China.

The United States on July 20 called for an immediate end to the Chinese regime’s persecution and unconditional release of all detained practitioners, joining hundreds of officials from dozens of countries in their condemnation of the regime’s actions.

The New York Times did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The nonprofits said the NYT article was not an isolated case of religious bigotry against practitioners of Falun Gong.

“In recent interviews with several reporters regarding the future of the Open Technology Fund, the same inappropriate questions about the developers’ religious beliefs have been raised time and again—though occasionally strong pushback against such bigotry has encouraged journalists not to include this angle in their reporting,” they said.

“This has clearly become part of the narrative being pushed, and bought in to, across the journalistic world.”

–EPTimes

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