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TWO obsessed female Falun Gong practitioners have admitted
killing a maid in a hostel in Northwest China in a move they
described as releasing her soul from purgatory, according to
police.
Police in Xianyang City in Shaanxi Province were told at
about 11 a.m. March 1 that Mai Xinping, a maid at Hongbin
Hostel, had been strangled in a hostel room.
When they went to the hostel south of a coach station on
Xilan Road, the police discovered the maid on a bed in Room
210 apparently strangled with a nylon rope.
There were marks on her body to indicate a struggle,
according to their report.
The police later concluded two women from Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region who left Room 210 at about 11 a.m. that day
were the most likely suspects.
From one of the women’s ID codes the hostel recorded when
she checked in, police learned from their counterparts in
Xinjiang she was Lin Chunmei, an obsessed Falun Gong
practitioner.
Police did not locate the other woman named Wen Yuping,
another obsessed Falun Gong practitioner, until July.
The two women have been arrested by police and confessed
they killed the maid to help the victim “enjoy happiness in
heaven.” In an interview with Xinhua, the two women who are in
police custody said what they had done was “a good thing,” and
they committed the murder simply to release souls from
purgatory.
They also gave the police details of the killing.
They claimed they could talk with their Falun Gong leader,
Li Hongzhi, through “voice induction” without meeting face to
face.
During their “talks” with Li Hongzhi, they said, Li agreed
with their plan to release souls from purgatory, adding they
would do something very great in the future, or kill “evil
people.”
“All those who condemn Falun Gong and Li Hongzhi, and
sabotage the Falun Gong are evil people,” they said. Lin
Chunmei, 38, who used to be a staff member of the Construction
Bank in Xinjiang, began practicing Falun Gong in 1998. Wen
Yuping, 42, was sentenced to three years imprisonment with a
four-year stay in 2000 on a charge of theft after she was
dismissed as a gas station cashier because of financial
problems in 1997. The two women frequently met after November
2001 to share their experiences in practicing Falun Gong.
They both rushed to Tian’anmen Square in central Beijing
before March 10, but failed to notice the bodily changes their
leader Li Hongzhi had claimed would happen. Police were still
investigating the case, a spokesman said.
Under the influence of Falun Gong and Li Hongzhi, the
cult’s leader, several thousand people in China have committed
suicide or killed. The Chinese Government outlawed the cult in
1998. (SD-Agencies)
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