December 24, 2003
Spiritual group Falun Dafa is seeking an apology from the Melbourne City Council
after a tribunal yesterday found the council had discriminated against it by
excluding it from this year's Moomba parade.
Judge John Bowman, deputy president of the Victorian Civil and Administrative
Tribunal, said that while he was satisfied Falun Dafa's participation in the
parade would have been cultural and not political, some people could infer the
council itself was politically motivated.
Falun Dafa, also known as Falun Gong, has been banned in China since 1999.
It bases its beliefs on improving people's moral character and physical
wellbeing. The group, which says that more than 500 [practitioners] have been
killed because of their beliefs, also says its only political agenda is seeking
the end to persecution of Falun Dafa in China.
Judge Bowman said the council had treated the group harshly by saying in January
that it would allow [practitioners] to take part in Moomba 2003 - after they
gave an undertaking not to spread political messages - then banning them in
February on the basis of their apparent "strong political
associations". The council had breached the Equal Opportunity Act, he said.
Greens councillor David Risstrom, who voted against excluding Falun Dafa in a
six-to-three council vote in February, said that limiting community involvement
because of a group's political affiliation was a dangerous precedent. Deputy
Lord Mayor Susan Riley said in a statement that "the council will abide by
the umpire's decision".
Judge Bowman set a directions hearing for February to determine the issue of the
council's apology.
A Falun Dafa spokesman said the group hoped the council would apologise
publicly.
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/12/23/1071941726523.html
Category: Falun Dafa in the Media