PDA

View Full Version : Chinese Microwave Exposure / Chen Yuansen 1


gerryduffett
August 23rd, 2006, 10:37 AM
First Report of
Chinese Targeted Individuals

Chinese Microwave Exposure

http://www.mindjustice.org

Author, Chen Yuansen

Author Chen Yuansen still dreams of joining his family back in Changsha, China. Chen came to Canada in June 2002 to visit his daughter. While in Canada, he was inspired to write his first book, The Campaign to Incite Hatred in Fo-Huai Village, a book that made it impossible for him to return to his hometown in China. Although Chen has been granted political asylum in Canada, he still lives in constant fear.

..."I think it may be the CCP's spies using the microwave to injure my brain in order to prevent me from writing and revealing their crimes, because the tester frequently reads a microwave intensity around me of 0.5 and even 1.0 Tesla." Mr. Chen notes.

Here is Mr. Chen's story in detail.

http://theepochtimes.com/news/5-2-8/26329.html

Chinese Author Persecuted Because of His Book

By Feng Daosheng

Feb 08, 2005

MONTREAL - Author Chen Yuansen still dreams of joining his family back in Changsha, China. Chen came to Canada in June 2002 to visit his daughter. While in Canada, he was inspired to write his first book, The Campaign to Incite Hatred in Fo-Huai Village, a book that made it impossible for him to return to his hometown in China. Although Chen has been granted political asylum in Canada, he still lives in constant fear.

The Campaign to Incite Hatred in Fo-Huai Village

Chinese version available at

http://www.epochtimes.com/gb/nf2872.htm

unveils the cruelty of the Chinese Communist Party's land reform program in the 1950s, which wantonly slaughtered innocent people, degraded social conduct in the countryside and destroyed human morality.

Shaking the Foundation of the CCP

The land reform program was a political campaign that originated in 1950, shortly after the CCP came into power. Mr. Chen explained that, "My novel is unprecedented in that it literarily depicts the massacre of two million landlords and analyzes the main reasons why the CCP launched the land reform, which were to destroy the countryside's morals, to eliminate rural gentry to set up the communist regime, to plunder people's properties to prepare for the Korean War and to recruit sufficient cannon fodder."

It is commonly thought that the peasants benefited by the elimination of the landlord class. Chen's novel, however, tells of Mao Zedong's and the CCP's continuous manipulation, deception and cruel mistreatment of the peasants after completely wiping out the landlord class. It also describes how the nation's traditional culture and morality were destroyed from the "peasants' movement in Hunan Province," to the "agrarian revolution," "land reform," and "people's commune."

Unveiling the Truth of the Land Reform
"I was 11 years old when the land reform began." Mr. Chen recalls. "I saw a group of poor peasants kneeling down before a land reform cadre and asking for a favor in dealing with an influential landlord, who was eventually executed. From then on, I began to get information on the landlords from fellow villagers. Even as an adult, I was interested in the problems in the countryside. After years of research, I realized that the land reform destroyed human moral values and the stability of the rural structure; the land reform itself was a persecution of the peasants."

Mr. Chen adds, "I never uttered a word about writing a novel, nor dreamt of its publication. I only furtively read some pertinent data and filled my head with those pitiful stories."

A Feeling of Elation after Unveiling His Secret

In June 2002, Chen's daughter and son-in-law invited him to come to Canada. "Once I landed in this country, I was influenced and inspired by the democracy and freedom it emanated," he said. "I made up my mind to disclose in literary form what I had researched and thought over for dozens of years. That is to seek redress and justice for the two million landlords who have been wrongly massacred, to expose the CCP's crime of genocide, deceiving the peasants and degrading morality. This has been the 'top secret' in my life."

"My initial plan was to secretly write the novel under a pen name, get it published outside China and return to my homeland. I only wanted to get my long-cherished wish granted." To prevent his daughter and son-in-law from getting involved, Chen wrote secretly and meticulously. His work progressed slowly since the relevant information available on the Internet was limited and it was difficult to find Chinese documents concerning the land reform in Canada. Instead, he relied on what he remembered from past research. By the end of November 2002, only two-thirds of the book was finished.

Chen's daughter suggested an extension of his visa until the end of May 2003. But Mr. Chen had planned on going back to China in the beginning of May, so his visa was extended until May 20.

Shocked by the Words of an Expert

The anti-virus software in his laptop also acted as spy ware. "As long as your computer is connected to the Internet, the Ministry of Public Security in Beijing knows everything that you are doing. One day in December, Chen met a Chinese lady from the Mainland who was working in the IT Department in Montreal. He asked her about the slow performance of his laptop. After she examined it, she told him that the anti-virus software he installed in his laptop also acted as spy ware. She told him, "As long as your computer is connected to the Internet, the Ministry of Public Security in Beijing knows everything that you are doing." She went on to explain that the software was developed two years ago by a company in Zhongguancun, Beijing for the Chinese Ministry of Public Security. Chen was shocked and wasn't sure what to do. He didn't know how to explain it to his daughter, and instead went to ask his trustworthy friends for advice.

Surrender or Cross the Rubicon?

A friend of Chen told him, "Don't worry about it. You haven't published the book yet! Anyway, you are not the first Chinese to write an anti-CCP novel. Many well-known dissidents have not had any trouble, let alone you! You should go to the Chinese Embassy and confess. That way there won't be any problem."

Chen told his friend, "But I know the CCP well, and I know the value of my novel. It has exposed the slaughter of two million landlords on a moral level, addressed half a century of forbidden territory and shaken the CCP's foundation of the "alliance between workers and peasants." Even if I make a confession, I will not be pardoned. Also, who has ever been let off by the CCP? There's nothing left for me to do but finish writing the book and get it published immediately. Then I will have accomplished one of the biggest tasks in my lifetime, even if it's a desperate fight."

The Campaign to Incite Hatred in Fo-Huai Village was eventually published on The Epoch Times web site's literature column in May 2003.

Reporting to the Canadian Security Intelligence Agency
In the beginning of January 2003, while Mr. Chen was house-sitting for his daughter (who went back to China for a visit), he began to feel numbness on the tip of his tongue, and his hands and feet started to tremble. He also experienced depression, poor appetite, and a burning thirst that could not be quenched no matter how much water he drank. Mr. Chen didn't have any addictions, and has always been fit. At a medical check-up in November 2002, the doctor told him, "A 60-year-old man like you with a 30-year-old heart will certainly live a long life."

CONTINUED