|
|
JULY 31, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 4
 |

Chien-min
Chung/AP.
Police arrest Falun Gong followers in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, on
the first anniversary of the government's crackdown and ban on the
group.
|
Silencing
Dissent
Jittery
over rising social unrest, China's leaders are once again trying to muzzle
liberal thinkers
By ANTHONY SPAETH
If someone were to call you a big Capital Economy Liberalization Element,
how would you react? If you were in China, you'd be wise to duck. That's
the label being applied to He Qinglian, a Shenzhen-based journalist whose
books and articles on economicsof all subjectsare bestsellers
throughout China. After publishing A Comprehensive Analysis of China's
Current Social Structural Evolution in March, He was slammed for propagating
dangerous ideas. Last month she was demoted from her position at the Shenzhen
Legal Daily and had her salary cut. Editors around the country were warned
not to publish her work. "As an intellectual in China," He says, "a mishap
could come"she snaps her fingers"just like this."
Beijing is once again cracking its whip on intellectuals and artists,
and large numbers are feeling the lash. Among those targeted are four
prominent members of the prestigious Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Li Shenzhi, a political scientist who advised former Chinese Premier Zhou
Enlai, was blacklisted from publishing for posting a critical article
on the Internet last December. Fan Gang and Mao Yushi, two high-profile
economists, were upbraided for publicly advocating privatization and banned
from teaching. Liu Junning, a political scientist and popular guest lecturer
at various Beijing universities, lost his post at the social sciences
academy, purportedly for granting interviews to foreign journalists. Liu
is better known for advocating more democracy in China. "We can only guess,"
Liu replies when asked why he was sacked. "One reason is because there
has been a real rise in liberal ideas in recent years."
 |
ALSO IN TIME
|
COVER: The Triumph of Style
We don't want more; we don't even want better. We want things
whose looks can kill. A new generation of designers brings style to
everything from toothbrushes to computers
JAPAN: Once Were Giants
A week after the fall of Sogo, the Seibu department store chain runs
into financial trouble. The good news: Japan may finally have learned
that propping up ailing behemoths is a bad idea
Spilled Milk: A
food scare points to regulatory apathy
CHINA: Muzzle Defense
Spooked by rising social unrest, Beijing tries to silence critics
Hong Kong: Did
the government lean on a pollster?
CINEMA: Show's Over
An era ends with the closing of the last Chinese movie theater in
New York City's Chinatown
SPOTLIGHT
MILESTONES
TRAVEL WATCH:
How to See Paradise with the Help of a Paddle
|
|
|
Unlike
China's political pogroms of the past, this crackdown is muted. Officially,
there is no campaign. No new slogans have been launched, though President
Jiang Zemin regularly rails against society's "poisonous weeds," which
can refer to any high-profile display of free expression, from articles
denouncing corruption to racy novels and films. The crackdown follows
a period of relative lenience, particularly for academics critiquing China's
economy and society. And that is the Chinese pattern. "Repression in China
flows in and out like the tide," says Liu Qing, who spent 10 years in
Chinese jails as a political prisoner and now runs the New York City-based
group Human Rights in China. "It's always present. It's just that sometimes
it's enforced gently and sometimes severely."
The tides always have political undercurrents, and there are several in
today's China. Most obvious is the leadership's jitters in advance of
the 16th Communist Party congress to be held 25 months from now, at which
Jiang's successor will probably be named. "Those who wish to remain in
power," says Liu, now a visiting scholar at Harvard's Fairbank Center
for East Asian Research, "want to show they're not breaking ranks from
the orthodox ideology and, in fact, are protecting it."
Another impetus for a crackdown is a feeling that free expression is getting
out of control in China. For the past year, Beijing has triedwith
limited successto smother the Falun Gong spiritual movement. Just
two weeks ago Beijing police had to drag 100 sect members from Tiananmen
Square to avoid disrupting the official reception for Russian President
Vladimir Putin. Protests by laborers have mushroomed across the country.
In the past two weeks alone, 1,000 workers surrounded a People's Liberation
Army uniform factory in Chengdu to protest a possible closure of the plant,
and 10,000 teachers threatened to take trains to Beijing to decry low
wages. "If you're a top official sitting in Beijing," says Ding Xueliang,
a social scientist at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology,
"and you get news that 10,000 workers are blocking a road, you consider
it a sign of big social trouble. You call up all the government monitoring
organs and ask them to send you lists of troublemakers."
Included on that list these days are journalists who expose dirty deals
and official malfeasance. Not long ago they were allies of Jiang's government,
which publicly vowed to root out official corruption. No longer. "They
simply raked up too much muck," says Sophia Woodman, Hong Kong-based research
director of Human Rights in China. "The government can't begin to clean
it all up." Creative artists are feeling the heat, including best-selling
novelist Zhou Weihui, whose racy work has been denounced as "decadent,"
and urban angst-chronicler Wang Shuo. Both have had their books proscribed,
although Wang takes that as a point of pride. "If your work hasn't been
banned," he shrugs, "maybe it's not good enough." Novelists aren't much
harmed by government bans, thanks to China's massive underground publishing
industry, which can churn out whatever the public wants. Some intellectuals
can ride out a crackdown too, especially if they are associated with privately
funded think tanks. "There are a handful of independent Chinese entrepreneurs
who like to support scholars who have fresh ideas," reports Andrew Nathan,
professor of political science at New York's Columbia University.
But Beijing's new cycle of repression is just beginningand it's
likely to get worse before it gets better. Huang Qi is now in jail in
Chengdu on charges of subversion. His crime: running a website that featured
topics not covered by the state-controlled media. At 5 p.m. on June 3,
the day before the 11th anniversary of the Tiananmen massacre, police
arrived at his office asking him to accompany them to the station house
for interrogation. Huang demanded a written summons and bought himself
about half an hour of freedom. He posted updates on his situation, reporting
that police were searching his premises. In real-time, he described them
confiscating notebooks, photos and computers. Then the arresting officers
arrived, and Huang typed his final message: "Thanks to everybody devoted
to democracy in China. They are here now. So long."
Reported by Jaime A. FlorCruz/Beijing, Isabella Ng and Susan Jakes/Hong
Kong
Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com
This
edition's table of contents
TIME Asia home
Quick Scroll: More stories from TIME, Asiaweek and CNN
|