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PETAL POWER Participants in the opening ceremony at the Yunlin County Tung Blossom Festival throw tung blossoms to the audience yesterday.
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CLEAN MACHINE Staff from the Taoyuan County Government's Environmental Protection Bureau and other agencies clean up the coast in Taoyuan County's Luchu area yesterday, gathering 5 tonnes of garbage in one day.
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Lien Chan
to meet Hu for fourth time
SYMBOLISM: The two will
reportedly share a moment in front of a giant statue given to the Chinese leader
by Lien two years ago and placed at the Olympic Park in Beijing
By Jenny W. Hsu,
Shih Hsiu-chuan, and Mo Yan-chih
STAFF REPORTERS
Sunday, Apr 27, 2008, Page 3
Former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) chairman Lien Chan (連戰) and Chinese
President Hu Jintao (胡錦濤) are expected to meet for the fourth time next week to
discuss cross-strait relations under the new administration, KMT Vice Chairman
Chiang Pin-kung (江丙坤) said yesterday in China.
Chiang, the chairman-designate of the Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF),
confirmed the Lien-Hu meeting would take place on Tuesday.
Media reports have speculated that Hu will take the opportunity to invite Lien
to attend the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympic Games in August.
The Chinese leader invited Lien for a visit shortly after president-elect Ma
Ying-jeou (馬英九) and his running mate Vincent Siew (蕭萬長) won last month’s
election.
“During his visit, Lien will most definitely seize the opportunity to discuss
with Hu the administration’s vision and Ma’s plans for cross-strait cooperative
efforts,” Chiang said.
Despite the political implications behind the meeting, Lien’s office was billing
the trip as a “personal visit.”
Some reports said Lien and Hu would shake hands at an unveiling ceremony for a
sculpture at the Olympic Park in Beijing.
The sculpture by a Taiwanese artist is reportedly a gift that Lien gave Hu when
the two met two years ago. It was reported at the time that Hu was enthusiastic
about the work and had it placed at the Olympic site.
“It will be a meeting of two old friends,” said Chang Jung-kung (張榮恭), director
of the KMT’s Mainland Affairs Division.
Lien’s office reportedly notified Ma’s camp of the trip and that minister
without profolio-designate Tsai Hsun-hsiung (蔡勳雄) would be in attendance.
Several leading Taiwanese businessmen, including Hon Hai Precision president
Terry Gou (郭台銘), Chinatrust Financial Holding chairman Jeffrey Koo (辜濂松), and
Runetex Group chairman Yin Yen-liang (尹衍樑) will accompany Lien.
Chinese Taiwan Affairs Office Director Chen Yunlin (陳雲林) and Jia Qinglin (賈慶林),
head of the People’s Political Consultative Conference, are expected to join the
Chinese entourage.
Lien is expected to conclude his trip by May 6.
Meanwhile, Ma’s spokesman Lo Chih-chiang (羅智強) declined to confirm that Lien had
informed Ma about the trip, but stressed that the two shared the same vision for
cross-strait relations.
“Communication between Mr Ma and Mr Lien has always been good as they share the
same vision for cross-strait relations,” Lo said yesterday while accompanying Ma
to an education forum in Taipei.
Although Lien has been maintaining direct contact between the KMT and the
Chinese Communist Party, Ma said that the SEF would handle cross-strait
negotiations following his inauguration on May 20.
Ma expressed his gratitude to Lien for providing him with ideas about how to
promote a “win-win” cross-strait relationship, but added that the SEF would be
the authorized body to seek formal agreements with Beijing on matters such as
how to protect Taiwanese investors in China. The party-to-party platform will
only serve as a supplementary channel of communication, he said.
After Lien’s visit, KMT Chairman Wu Poh-hsiung (吳伯雄) is expected to visit China
to maintain party-to-party contacts.
Meanwhile, Premier Chang Chun-hsiung (張俊雄) said yesterday that the public would
watch the Lien-Hu meeting carefully and expected any talks to be held only under
the precondition of mutual respect and equality.
“The government always believed in the importance of cross-strait dialogue and
establishing a peaceful and stable cross-strait relationship, but the nation’s
dignity and equality are also very important,” Chang said when approached for
comment.
Chang said cross-strait talks on technical issues regarding the opening of
Taiwan to Chinese tourists and cross-strait charter flights for passengers and
cargo were resolved under his leadership when he was the president of the
Straits Exchange Foundation and under his premiership.
He said Beijing had unilaterally ended the negotiations ahead of January’s
legislative elections and last month’s presidential election for political
reasons.
Five
arrested over Japanese torch run
SURROUNDED: Three men tried
to charge the relay before being apprehended by police, while one threw tomatoes
and another threw eggs at the torch
AP, NAGANO, JAPAN
Sunday, Apr 27, 2008, Page 4
Heavy security and a large contingent of pro-Chinese supporters thwarted
protesters who tried to disrupt the Japanese leg of the Olympic torch relay
yesterday.
Athens marathon gold medalist Mizuki Noguchi ran the final leg of the relay,
which saw only minor scuffles along the 18.7km route through the city that
hosted the 1998 Winter Olympics.
Police guards in track suits surrounded the torch bearers and another 100
uniformed riot police ran alongside six patrol cars and two motorcycles.
They were backed up by thousands of other police.
At the end of the relay at a Nagano park, Noguchi was greeted by a throng of
Chinese supporters, far outnumbering the pro-Tibet demonstrators who were
ushered to a hillside away from the celebrations.
“I’m so glad that I could safely light up the cauldron,” said Noguchi. “I ran as
I wished for the success of the Beijing Olympics and peace.”
China’s supporters waved Chinese flags and wore T-shirts that read “Welcome to
Beijing.” About 2,000 Chinese exchange students swarmed Nagano to show their
support.
Minor scuffling and protests broke out during the relay, but the event went
ahead without any major interruptions.
Five men were arrested.
Three men were apprehended after trying to charge the torch, the fourth threw
eggs and the fifth hurled tomatoes at the flame.
All were quickly pounced on by police, police official Akiko Fuseya said.
National broadcaster NHK reported a smoke-emitting tube was thrown at the relay,
but without effect.
Marchers yelling “Free Tibet” crowded the streets near the route. And four
people were slightly injured in different scuffles, fire officials said.
The starting point — a last-minute substitution after a Buddhist temple pulled
out — was closed to the public, as were all rest stops along the way.
The relay, making its 16th international stop, has been disrupted by protests or
conducted under extremely heavy security at many sites since it left Greece.
The protests are largely in response to China’s crackdown last month on protests
in Tibet, which it has governed since the 1950s, and to concerns over human
rights issues in China.
Many of China’s supporters in Japan said the protesters didn’t understand the
issues.
“You can’t solve the Tibet issue right away,” said Ji Aye, a Chinese student in
Japan. “A lot of these demonstrators have never been to Tibet or China and don’t
understand the issue. I’m sad they are doing this to our Games.”
The international route ends next week, with stops in South Korea today, North
Korea tomorrow and Vietnam on Tuesday. The flame arrives on Chinese soil on
April 30 in Hong Kong, for a long journey around the country before the Aug. 8
start of the games.
Coinciding with the start of the relay, which began under a light rain, a prayer
vigil was held at the 1,400-year-old Zenkoji temple.
Chinese
Netizens see both sides
By Hung Chin-fu 洪敬富
Sunday, Apr 27, 2008, Page 8
BBC World recently broadcast an item about the song Don’t Be Too CNN (做人不能太CNN)
that has gained a lot of popularity with Chinese Netizens. The rap song is aimed
mainly at the perceived vilification and distorted reporting by US cable TV news
station CNN on how the Chinese government has dealt with the violent incidents
in Tibet beginning last month.
The Chinese government is also angry about CNN’s reporting, saying it is partial
to the Tibetan movement and misleads Western viewers with its reports on how the
Chinese government cracks down on peaceful Tibetans.
China was especially angry about an incident on CNN’s show Situation Room, where
host Jack Cafferty commented on the many incidents during the international leg
of the Olympic flame relay, with human rights groups and pro-Tibetan protesters
often hindering the flame on its journey.
Cafferty said: “Well, I don’t know if China is any different, but our
relationship with China is certainly different. We’re in hawk to the Chinese up
to our eyeballs because of the war in Iraq, for one thing. They’re holding
hundreds of billions of dollars worth of our paper ... I think they’re basically
the same bunch of goons and thugs they’ve been for the last 50 years.”
China felt insulted and the statement set off a wave of protests, both from the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and from Chinese people at home and abroad,
against some Western media, like the BBC and CNN, for spouting “anti-Chinese”
opinions.
China’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu (姜瑜) and Liu Jianchao (劉建超),
director-general of the foreign ministry’s information department, separately
stated that the Chinese government was angry over the incident. The ministry
demanded that CNN “take back the vile remarks,” and issue a “sincere apology” to
the Chinese government and people.
During a meeting with a delegation from the two leading Japanese parties,
Chinese President and CCP Chairman Hu Jintao (胡錦濤) expressed the opinion that
Western countries who thought of boycotting the Beijing Olympics using the issue
of human rights in Tibet as an excuse were involved in a planned conspiracy.
The riots in Lhasa started on March 14 and sparked a wave of attacks against the
Olympic flame relay, setting off a show of cyber-nationalism by Chinese Netizens.
According to the most recent statistics from the China Internet Network
Information Center (中國互聯網絡信息中心), there are 210 million Chinese on the Internet,
making China the second most Internet-connected country after the US. This large
group called on the Chinese population to boycott the well-known French
supermarket chain Carrefour because it was rumored that one of the company’s
major shareholders was giving financial assistance to the Dalai Lama, who is
said to be “splittist” and wants to overthrow the Chinese government.
Other reasons given for boycotting the French supermarket were that the French
president and government, who reproached Beijing for the way it handled the
Tibetan issue, and that during its tour through France, the Olympic flame was
interfered with to the point that it was extinguished several times. US fast
food chain KFC is also on the list of targets for a boycott.
Chinese Netizens have set up the Web site Anti-CNN.com to strike back at CNN for
cropping photos of Chinese military quelling the riots and fabricating news.
Many MSN users have put a “red heart China” in their screen name. A patriotic
Internet petition calling on Chinese people from all over the world to oppose
“splittism” and protect the Olympic flame has been supported by more than 5
million people, showing the patriotism and unity of Chinese Netizens.
The Chinese government’s enthusiasm for the Beijing Olympics is to a certain
extent a projection of national sentiment wishing to wash off the historical
humiliation of being invaded and partially colonized by Western powers. The
Games are used by China to show how the Chinese people have stood up, and how
the country has risen using the same development strategy as rich and powerful
countries.
This rising sense of national self-respect and patriotic sentiment were meant to
flourish and shine when the Olympics are opened in Beijing this August, but
instead this sentiment has been hurt by those people and groups who advocate or
support the idea that China is a threat. Chinese nationalism found a place to
grow in cyberspace, and once again China’s intellectual classes and Netizens
have shown their care for their country and public affairs, and their will to
act on it.
This kind of bottom-up protests or protests developing from intellectuals down
to the proletariat has given the Internet an epoch-making and almost
revolutionary role in terms of political and public participation in connection
to many events.
Some examples are the May 1998 anti-Chinese riots in Indonesia, the NATO bombing
of the Chinese embassy in former Yugoslavia in May 1999, former Taiwanese
president Lee Teng-hui’s (李登輝) statement that relations between China and Taiwan
are on a “special state-to-state” basis in July 1999, the collision between a US
spy plane and a Chinese fighter jet over Hainan in April 2001 and former
Japanese prime mister Junichiro Koizumi’s visit to the Yasukuni Shrine.
Cyber-nationalism promotes and intensifies Chinese nationalism, but it is a
double-edged sword: On one hand, the Chinese government can use
cyber-nationalism to support its foreign relations, diplomacy and military
policy, and domestically as a political, economic and social support for
Beijing’s legitimacy.
On the other hand, the Internet also fosters reactionary speech and action
because online discussion and debate can spark offline political and social
movements. If the actions of China’s authorities don’t meet the expectations of
Netizens and the general public, then public power that began as a nationalistic
and patriotic force, wanting to defend China against the rest of the world,
could turn into a voice that isn’t satisfied with what happens within the
country. It could become a force that Beijing can’t control.
After the protests against Carrefour stores as well as the French embassy in
Beijing, the People’s Daily, the CCP’s official newspaper, published an article
saying that China should cultivate the attitude of a “great power.” The article
demanded that the public be rational, and said that taking care of one’s own
things is now the highest form of patriotism.
This shows that the Chinese government might be worried that the growing
protests would further harm a national image already damaged by trouble in
Tibet. The government is afraid that the image of a peacefully rising China it
has worked so hard to create will be increasingly questioned and that Westerners
will start to believe that it is in fact a non-peaceful rise that threatens the
economies, militaries and democratic values of Western countries.
According to a survey spanning the UK, France, Germany, Spain and Italy
published in a recent issue of the British Financial Times, 35 percent of
respondents saw China as the biggest threat to global stability, more than the
US’ 29 percent and more than Iran and North Korea.
Mark Leonard, executive director of the European Council on Foreign Relations,
said that: “The story of the last five years has been about economic
opportunities. The story of the last six months has been about China as a threat
in Darfur and in Tibet,” and as a result, the impression foreigners have of
China has changed.
Sports are never completely free from politics, and the modern Olympic Games,
which have been held for more than 100 years, are no exception. The 2008 Beijing
Olympics are China’s chance to do away with the humiliations of the past two
centuries and officially enter the global community, facing the world and
demonstrating the important political aspects of China’s rise. But it also
offers an important opportunity for China to look at the position and role of
the power of its people, especially its Netizens, in the top-to-bottom structure
of China’s government tradition.
Hung Chin-fu is an assistant professor
at the Department of Political Science and Graduate Institute of Political
Economy at National Cheng Kung University.