Chinese pilot seeks political asylum in U.S.
http://www.sgvtribune.com/search/ci_4160013
Chinese pilot seeks political asylum in U.S. By Fred Ortega Staff Writer - San Gabriel Valley Tribune EL MONTE - A Chinese airline pilot is seeking political asylum in the United States, fearing he will be imprisoned - and perhaps even killed - for his religious beliefs if he returns to his homeland. Sheng Yuan, 39, of Shanghai, announced during a hastily organized news conference Wednesday that he would not be returning to China on his regularly scheduled flight today. The conference was held at the Asian American Association building in El Monte by local human rights activists assisting Yuan in his plight. Yuan, a follower of the Falun Gong religion outlawed by the Communist Chinese government, claims he was confronted by members of Shanghai's Pudong Airport police as he and fellow crew members prepared to take off on China Eastern Airlines Flight MU 583 on Tuesday. The flight, bound for Los Angeles, was already fully loaded with 300 passengers and awaiting tower orders to begin its 11-hour, trans- Pacific trip. "I had talked to an airport worker about the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in China, and the fact that over 12 million people had renounced their membership in the Communist party, and the worker had reported this conversation to the airport police," Yuan, speaking through a translator, said. He added he is an 18-year pilot who has logged 12,400 hours flying for China Eastern, mostly on Airbus A-340s like the one he was boarding Tuesday. After a long and heated discussion, Yuan said his three fellow flight crew members convinced the police that they could not safely make the long flight without him and the plane was allowed to take off. But not before the police supervisor had written down Yuan's return date, address and other information. "He said he would let me go this time, but that they would talk about my statements when I came back," Yuan said. The police supervisor's move to allow Yuan to leave and "talk" about what he told his co-worker when he returned was ominous, said human rights activist Pinchao Jiang, who was jailed for three years after being involved as a student protester in the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown. "After Tiananmen, the authorities started a series of countrywide arrests despite their assurances that those involved in the protests would not be persecuted," said Jiang, adding he was one of more than 20 students in his town of Wolong who were taken into custody. "This is the same case as in Tiananmen. Although the police said they would not detain him upon his return, just to talk, they will be much harsher and send him to prison, as they did with us." Calls seeking comment from the Chinese Consulate and the U.S. State Department were not returned. Jail may be the least of Yuan's worries, said You Fu Li, chairman of the Falun Gong Association of West Los Angeles. "We know of at least 3,000 Falun Gong practitioners in China that have been persecuted to death," Li said, adding that the true number could be much higher. Another local Falun Gong practitioner, Daniel Wong, went a step further by accusing Chinese authorities of deliberately killing prisoners detained for their Falun Gong beliefs and harvesting their organs, which are then sold to other Chinese and foreign recipients. "Lots of hospitals in China advertise that they can find organs for patients - hearts, livers, kidneys or corneas - within a week, and it is very hard normally to get a match so quickly" through voluntary organ donations, said Wong, 34, a Caltech computer technician from Pasadena. Allegations of organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners detailed in a July report by a Canadian lawyer and former parliament member were vehemently denied by the Chinese Embassy in Washington in an official statement. The U.S. State Department has since demanded the Chinese government investigate the claims in the report. Yuan, who also said he had heard of the alleged organ harvesting, said he now fears for his wife and teenage daughter, who are in Shanghai. "I have talked to my wife and she has expressed concern about her safety and what the authorities will do to her and my daughter," Yuan said, adding that in the past families of Falun Gong practitioners have lost their jobs or ability to go to school. "In the worst case, they could be detained themselves," he said. |
Originally Posted by Luv319
(Post 2789056)
http://www.sgvtribune.com/search/ci_4160013
Chinese pilot seeks political asylum in U.S. By Fred Ortega Staff Writer - San Gabriel Valley Tribune EL MONTE - A Chinese airline pilot is seeking political asylum in the United States, fearing he will be imprisoned - and perhaps even killed - for his religious beliefs if he returns to his homeland. Sheng Yuan, 39, of Shanghai, announced during a hastily organized news conference Wednesday that he would not be returning to China on his regularly scheduled flight today. The conference was held at the Asian American Association building in El Monte by local human rights activists assisting Yuan in his plight. Yuan, a follower of the Falun Gong religion outlawed by the Communist Chinese government... "At Least Seven Falun Gong Practitioners Who are Pilots Suffer Persecution - Liu Ping Tortured to Death (Photos)" http://clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2006/9/7/77750.html |
"He added he is an 18-year pilot who has logged 12,400 hours flying for China Eastern, mostly on Airbus A-340s like the one he was boarding Tuesday."
Can this be accurate??? |
Hours in 18 years
The hours he has flown in 18 years service amount to under 700 a year - is this not possible/realistic? Is it the A 340 aspect that is bothering you? I don't know how long it has been in service but the quote says "mostly"
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Originally Posted by AlphaWhiskyRomeo
(Post 2834496)
"He added he is an 18-year pilot who has logged 12,400 hours flying for China Eastern, mostly on Airbus A-340s like the one he was boarding Tuesday."
Can this be accurate??? |
Please give it a rest! They mean he has been a pilot for 18 years, not that he is an 18 year old pilot. :rolleyes:
|
Well why not?
It seems we let Cubans live here if they make it to our shores... Where's TSA when you need 'em? Oh, I know...sniffing for mouthwash at the checkpoints... |
Originally Posted by AlphaWhiskyRomeo
(Post 2834496)
"He added he is an 18-year pilot who has logged 12,400 hours flying for China Eastern, mostly on Airbus A-340s like the one he was boarding Tuesday."
Can this be accurate??? "My name is Yuan Sheng. I am 39 years old. I was born in Zhangqiu, Shandong Province. After graduating from the Civil Aviation Flight University of China in 1989, I began working for the Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines. This is my 18th year as a pilot there, with more than 12,400 hours of safe flying on record... ...In many other countries, it takes an experienced captain until their 50s or 60s to have a record as high as mine. In the last 18 years, I have never had any accidents and won a silver medal for safe flying..." http://www.theepochtimes.com/news/6-8-11/44846.html |
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