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An ‘Army of Child Laborers’ Enriches Shen Yun, Ex-Dancers Say in Suit

NEWS: The group performing traditional Chinese dance has been under scrutiny for its treatment of performers and financial practices.

Two former dancers for Shen Yun Performing Arts, the traditional Chinese dance company, filed a lawsuit on Thursday accusing the group of amassing a financial fortune and worldwide renown by subjecting an “army of child laborers” to brutal working conditions and psychological coercion.

The lawsuit by the former dancers, Sun Zan and Cheng Qingling, is at least the second civil action targeting the group and its leaders since The New York Times last year detailed the treatment of performers and financial practices at the arts company, an arm of the Falun Gong religious movement.

Federal criminal investigators have also been examining possible visa fraud at Shen Yun, and New York State has been investigating the group’s compliance with labor laws.

Advertising a glimpse into “China Before Communism,” Shen Yun performs hundreds of shows a year featuring acrobatic routines by performers in billowy outfits. The group also serves as a messaging platform for Falun Gong, promoting the teachings of its founder, Li Hongzhi, and portraying the Chinese government, which has banned and persecuted his followers, as evil.

Shen Yun accumulated $266 million in assets by 2023, the lawsuit says, while performers worked up to 15 hours a day in training and on a “crushing” tour schedule for little pay.

“The child laborers were paid generally no more than $500 a month — less than the price of a pair of orchestra seats at this year’s Lincoln Center performance,” according to the lawsuit, which was filed in federal court in Manhattan.

Representatives for Shen Yun and Falun Gong said in a statement that the allegations “are false and present a distorted picture of our organization, our mission, and our faith.”

“We operate with integrity and are committed to upholding the highest artistic and ethical standards,” said the representatives, Ying Chen for Shen Yun and Levi Browde for Falun Gong. They said Shen Yun uses both professional, salaried performers and students following a state-approved curriculum. And they said that a few former performers were spreading a false narrative pushed by the Chinese government while many more performers and their families have defended Shen Yun.

Mr. Sun and Ms. Cheng, who married after leaving Shen Yun and now live in New Zealand, were featured in The Times’s coverage. Each had parents who were adherents of Mr. Li, who teaches that people can attain enlightenment in part by following his regimen of meditation and exercises and has implied that he created the universe.

Mr. Li started Shen Yun in 2006 and expanded it rapidly at Dragon Springs, his movement’s 400-acre headquarters located northwest of New York City.

The suit describes Mr. Li as “the mastermind of the entire forced labor scheme,” naming him as a defendant along with his wife, Li Rui, and two schools that Mr. Sun and Ms. Cheng say were used to create the “pretext” of educating performers. Ms. Chen and Mr. Browde said the schools provide a quality education and their students excel.

The lawsuit accuses Shen Yun of forced labor, human trafficking and other violations of the Federal Trafficking Victims Protections Act, seeking damages for physical and psychological injuries. One of the former dancers’ lawyers, Carol Merchasin, has specialized in cases involving abuse in religious and spiritual communities.

Mr. Sun was sent by his parents across the world to Dragon Springs at 15; Ms. Cheng arrived at 13. Their suit described the high-fenced compound as akin to “a penal colony,” with performers confined there through psychological and physical control and their passports locked in a safe. Representatives for the groups said holding passports for safekeeping is normal at boarding schools, and they are returned upon request.

Performers had a “dreadful existence” of six-day work weeks full of training and religious practice, the suit says, and just two or three hours of classroom time per day. Instructors allowed Mr. Sun to cheat on exams and sleep in class because of the priority given to training, the suit says.

Humiliation and violence were commonplace, the suit says: “A late-arriving child laborer could expect to have an instructor’s shoe strike their head moments after walking in.” They were told such treatment “was an indication of talent, and so they should be thankful for being beaten.”

Leaders instilled fear by shaming rule-breakers at schoolwide assemblies. Around 2011, a school principal berated Ms. Cheng’s roommate for looking at pornography when she had actually been reading Japanese comic books known as manga, the lawsuit says.

Like other performers, Mr. Sun and Ms. Cheng said they performed through injury and without medical treatment. Mr. Li teaches that only faith can purge the body of illnesses.

Mr. Sun suffered internal bleeding when an instructor told other students to force him into a side split; he had to hold that position for 10 minutes a day for three months and has scarring on his legs, the suit says.

After Ms. Cheng suffered a training injury that made her left arm go numb, Mr. Li ordered a school principal to meditate with her rather than arranging treatment; she has permanent damage to her shoulder, the suit says.

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Police Warn Parents—Delete Messaging App From Your Kid’s iPhone, Android

NEWS: There have been multiple recent warnings from federal, state and local law enforcement given the plague of threats on our phones. Chinese text hackers, call and messaging scams, and dangerous installs. Now the latest warning tells iPhone and Android users to delete one of the world’s most popular messaging apps with more than a billion users.

We’re talking Telegram, which has something of a reputation for doubling as a hyperscale messaging app and dark web marketplace for criminals. Ironically, while Telegram was always steadfast in its refusal to share any data with law enforcement, that changed following the arrest of its founder Pavel Durov in Paris last year.

Nonetheless, that news hasn’t caught up with one local force in New Mexico, which says it can trace “more than 90% of illegal gun and drug deals” to Telegram. Albuquerque Police is focusing on the most serious forms of juvenile crime and its message to parents is stark. “If your kid has this app, just go ahead and delete it. Just wipe it off their phone and tell them I don’t want to see that app again.”

In response to APD’s statement, Telegram told me that it “cooperates with law enforcement agencies around the world to process legitimate requests. In the United States, in 2024 alone, Telegram cooperated with a total of 900 requests to share the phone number and IP address of 2253 users. Telegram has responded to several requests from Albuquerque law enforcement agencies.”

APD takes a different view, claiming Telegram “doesn’t respond to U.S. law enforcement,” and suggesting that an alarming recent incident with four students bringing handguns into school is likely down to Telegram’s marketplace.

Telegram says this is just speculation and disputes the lack of cooperation. “Local transparency reports are released quarterly. While our rapid growth has led to some growing pains, Telegram’s moderation efforts meet or exceed all industry standards. Each day, moderators empowered with custom AI and machine learning tools remove millions of pieces of harmful content, including the sale of weapons.”

In my experience, Telegram is working to clean up its act, albeit there’s lots to be done. They are responsive in a way that wan’t the case before, and there has been a u-turn on law enforcement collaboration that’s almost awkward given the nature of some of the user base. That said, an unregulated marketplace will always be a threat.

“Criminal activity exists on every platform,” Telegram told me, “despite efforts to combat it – just as crime persists in any big city, even with active policing. This does not detract from the significant efforts Telegram puts forth.”

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Cambodia Denies Presence of North Korean Businesses

NEWS: The Ministry of Commerce of Cambodia has completely rejected a report published by NK News on Feb. 26 suspecting that a company from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) is engaging in commercial activities by openly promoting its control of overseas joint venture restaurants located in China and Cambodia.

“There is no business registration for the company named Tongnam Trading Company or Tongnam Transport JV Co., Ltd,” the ministry clarified in a statement AKP received this evening.

Furthermore, it added, the ministry’s team has conducted research at Korean product markets in the capital city of Phnom Penh and found no business activities related to North Korean entities.

“The Ministry of Commerce has always strictly complied with the resolutions of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) and existing Cambodian regulations by delisting and shutting down 16 North Korean-related companies in 2019 and 2022,” read the statement.

The ministry also reaffirmed its continued close collaboration with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation and other relevant ministries and institutions, to enforce various sanctions as outlined in the UNSC resolutions.

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Cambodia, the Philippines to Promote More Direct Flights

NEWS: Huot Hak, Minister of Tourism, met with Flerida Ann Camille P. Mayo, Ambassador of the Republic of the Philippines to Cambodia, to discuss strengthening bilateral cooperation in the tourism sector, particularly by promoting more direct flights between major cities of the two countries.

The meeting was held on 24 January 2025 at the Ministry of Tourism.

Both sides also discussed the possibility of finalising the implementation program of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) during the official visit of the Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet to the Republic of the Philippines on 10-11 February 2025.

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Cambodia, China to Conduct Larger Golden Dragon 2025 Military Exercise

NEWS:The Royal Cambodian Armed Forces (RCAF) and the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) are planning to hold the Golden Dragon 2025 military exercise on a larger scale than previous years. The exercise will include operations on both land and sea, according to Thong Solimo, RCAF Spokesman, on Thursday (Jan. 23).

Thong Solimo stated, “The Golden Dragon 2025 exercise will surpass previous years in terms of scope, troop participation, and the use of advanced equipment, reflecting the growing and deepening cooperation between the two militaries in all areas.”

This marks the seventh large-scale exercise between Cambodia and China since its initiation in 2016. The exercise is a testament to the strong comprehensive strategic partnership between the two nations as they continue to build a community with a shared future.

A delegation from China’s Southern Theater Command of the PLA arrived in Cambodia on 19 January 2025 for discussions with Cambodian counterparts, led by Pen Sokretvithya, Director of Training Command. The delegation also met with Ith Sarath, Deputy Commander-in-Chief and Joint Chiefs of Staff of the RCAF, to finalize the agenda for the annual exercise.

During the initial meeting, both sides reviewed and discussed the schedule, location, and content of the upcoming exercise. A follow-up meeting is planned in China to finalise the details.

Thong Solimo underlined that during the initial meeting, both sides discussed and evaluated the schedule, location, and content of the exercise. A follow-up discussion to finalize the details will take place in China.

He further underscored, “The exercise will focus exclusively on joint counter-terrorism operations and humanitarian activities. Its primary aim is to enhance cooperation and facilitate the exchange of experiences between the two armies, strengthening security and preventing terrorism in both countries and the region. It is not intended to threaten or harm any nation.”

Cambodia and China have maintained diplomatic relations for 66 years. Over time, their partnership has evolved into a comprehensive strategic partnership characterised by an iron-clad friendship and diamond hexagon cooperation. The two nations continue to work together to build a China-Cambodia community with a shared future.
=FRESH NEWS