Falun Gong says seven followers die in China custody

BEIJING (Reuters) - Seven members of the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement have died following abuse in Chinese police custody, the group's U.S.-based information centre said.

The centre said the seven, from different provinces around China, had died from abuse in custody spanning hard labour, torture and beatings.

One follower died after police pushed him down four flights of stairs, the centre said in a statement seen late on Tuesday.

Chinese police contacted on Wednesday declined to comment.

China banned Falun Gong in 1999, branding it an "evil cult", after the quasi-religious group shocked leaders with a mass protest around the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing demanding official recognition of their movement.

Last week, 35 foreign followers unfurled a banner in Tiananmen Square to protest against the "violence and terror" inflicted on Falun Gong followers in China. The foreigners were deported the following day.

In another recent case, public security officials in the southern city of Guangzhou foiled an attempt by a 19-year-old Falun Gong follower to self-immolate in a sports stadium, the Guangzhou Daily newspaper said on Tuesday.

Falun Gong has said more than 50,000 adherents have been sent to prisons, labour camps and mental hospitals in China since it was banned.

The group, which Beijing says is trying to overthrow the ruling Communist Party, practises a mixture of Taoism and Buddhism and traditional Chinese physical exercises.

Chinese authorities have acknowledged several deaths of Falun Gong members in custody, but say most resulted from suicide or illness.

Beijing also says the group has caused the death of at least 1,800 people through suicide or the refusal to take medical treatment.