China
arrests 100 over June protests in Guizhou Province
AFP, BEIJING
Tuesday, Jul 15, 2008, Page 4
Police in southwest China have arrested 100 people for their involvement in a
major riot last month that highlighted social tensions ahead of the Beijing
Olympics, state press said yesterday.
A protest involving 30,000 people saw government buildings and cars torched on
June 28 in Wengan County, Guizhou Province, after crowds accused police of
covering up the alleged rape and murder of a 17-year-old girl.
The riots came at a particularly sensitive time for China’s communist rulers,
who have been trying to portray the nation as harmonious and stable ahead of
next month’s Olympics.
Police have repeatedly denied the accusations they covered up the real cause of
the girl’s death.
But sacked Wengan police chief Shen Guirong (申貴榮) last week admitted the riot
could have also been triggered by his former colleagues’ links to triad mobsters
and a history of crushing dissent.
Immediately after the unrest, authorities accused “gangsters” of inciting
protesters into rioting and began gathering video tape of the unrest.
According to yesterday’s Guizhou Daily, 100 people have been arrested for the
riots, including 39 who are suspected of being associated with mafia figures.
Other cases involving 570 suspects are still under investigation, the paper
said.
“Preparations to arrest others suspected of criminal activity are under way,”
the paper said. “Among these up to 90 of the suspects are linked to gangsters.”
Locals have insisted that most of the rioting was done by middle school
classmates of the dead girl, who had accused police of covering up her rape and
murder by the son of a local official.
But sacked police chief Shen said that the riots could have also been triggered
by anger over a corrupt police force and police brutality in quelling previous
unrest in Wengan.
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BACK ON HIS FEET Quarantine staff pose with sniffer dog Dalton at Songshan Airport yesterday. Dalton was released from hospital yesterday after being injured on a luggage carousel at the airport. Airport staff will decide whether to continue using Dalton after he has rested for three months.
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Consider
life under communism
By Li Thian-Hok 李天福
Tuesday, Jul 15, 2008, Page 8
‘Actually the “one China” principle that there is only “one China” and that
Taiwan is part of China is the only substantive part of the “consensus.” Beijing
has never acceded to the “different interpretation” notion, which is nothing but
a diplomatic fig leaf and which has no effect.’
In the less than two months since President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) was inaugurated
as the chief executive of Taiwan, the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) government
has implemented or proposed to adopt numerous measures designed to tie Taiwan’s
future to that of the People’s Republic of China (PRC).
Regular weekend direct flights between five cities in China and eight airports
in Taiwan have already commenced. The eight airports under the plan include
Hualien, Taitung and a few other dual use (military and civilian) airports,
despite objections by the military authorities about the weakening of Taiwan’s
national security.
While the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) keeps building up its capacity to
overwhelm Taiwan’s defenses with a multi-pronged blitzkrieg, Minister of
National Defense Chen Chao-min (陳肇敏) is reportedly considering cutting the
military force by 40,000 to as little as 200,000 in six years.
While the US government has decided to freeze the sales of an arms package to
Taiwan worth US$12 billion, including badly needed F-16C/D fighters and
helicopters, the Ma administration has failed to press the US State Department
for prompt notification to Congress, presumably in deference to Beijing’s
sensibilities.
These actions and inactions are symptomatic of a deliberate policy of unilateral
disarmament.
Measures to achieve rapid economic integration with the PRC — some are already
in force, others on the horizon — include the following: lifting the ceiling on
Taiwanese investments in China from the current 40 percent of net worth;
welcoming Chinese investment in Taiwan’s real estate, industry and even media;
listing China-based Taiwan corporate securities on Taipei’s stock exchange;
opening branches of Taiwan banks in China; allowing mutual funds sold in Taiwan
to invest as much as 10 percent of their assets directly in Chinese stocks, up
from the current 0.4 percent limit; recognizing PRC university credentials; and
admitting PRC tourists, up to 3,000 per day initially.
Such measures will facilitate the further exodus of Taiwan’s capital, technology
and trained manpower to China. The cumulative effect is to hollow out Taiwan’s
economy, reducing it to a satellite of the Chinese economy, make Taiwan
vulnerable to attack by the PLA, thus creating a de facto “one China” by
stealth.
There is another danger. Ma plans to negotiate a peace accord with the PRC based
on the “1992 consensus.” Actually the “one China” principle that there is only
“one China” and that Taiwan is part of China is the only substantive part of the
“consensus.” Beijing has never acceded to the “different interpretation” notion,
which is nothing but a diplomatic fig leaf and which has no effect.
Once a peace accord is signed, Taiwan will be annexed by the PRC in short order.
So there are ample reasons for the people of Taiwan to ponder what life under
the rule of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) may look like.
To assess how the Taiwanese will fare under communist rule, one only needs to
look at the violation of human rights in the PRC. First, there will no longer be
any free election of legislators and executive branch government officials, both
at the central and local government levels. Freedom of speech, assembly and
religion will disappear. Violent suppression of dissent, through execution,
torture or incarceration in the laogai (勞改營) or gulag camps can be expected.
China also has significant levels of many infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS,
typhoid, malaria, hepatitis A, avian influenza, etc. Many of these contagious
diseases will undoubtedly be imported into Taiwan. Crime rates may climb as
China’s massive number of unemployed migrant workers sneak into Taiwan in search
of better paying jobs.
In China, all land, whether rural or urban, belongs to the state.
While the Property Law of the PRC that took effect on Oct. 1 last year is not
currently applied to the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau,
such exemption may well be terminated once Taiwan falls under Chinese Communist
Party (CCP) control, since there will no longer be any plausible reason to
continue more favorable treatment of the residents of Hong Kong, Macau and
Taiwan. All people on Taiwan will then lose the ownership of their land
holdings.
The economic lot of the Taiwanese will certainly deteriorate. Per capita income
in China is less than US$2,500, compared with US$16,000 for Taiwan. Once the two
economies are fully integrated, the income levels on both sides will gravitate
toward the same amount.
While this will lift the income of the Chinese only slightly, the standard of
living in Taiwan will fall precipitously. The population of the PRC is 60 times
larger than Taiwan’s 23 million. Yet despite three decades of economic growth,
China’s GDP of US$3.3 trillion is only about 8 times larger than Taiwan’s GDP of
US$383 billion, last year’s IMF figures show. Obviously, Taiwan’s economy is
much more productive.
It is quite likely that the CCP will regard Taiwan as rich booty of the Chinese
Civil War. So just as what took place in 1945 to 1947 when the KMT took over
Taiwan, it would be difficult for the CCP leaders and princelings to resist the
temptation to plunder Taiwan’s economy for their own profit.
Taiwan has a lot of publicly owned land and enterprises, fruits of centuries of
toil by the Taiwanese and their ancestors. These will be the first to be
expropriated by the Chinese. Taiwanese businesspeople with investments in China
may face new hardships without a Taiwanese government to look after their
welfare, such as confiscation of their properties and imprisonment for failure
to meet new CCP regulations.
Beijing may initiate a policy of massive, forcible transfer of Taiwan’s
residents to less developed peripheries of China, and move favored CCP members
and their families to Taiwan. The PLA will also set up extensive air and naval
bases on the island, to serve as a springboard for China’s projection of power
into the Pacific and South Asia, and to pressure Japan and South Korea into
China’s sphere of influence.
Taiwan has operated a democratic form of government for roughly two decades
during 12 years of Lee Teng-hui’s presidency and the last eight years under
former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁). A majority of Taiwan’s citizens are
imbued with democratic values and a distinct sense of Taiwanese national
identity. They are also accustomed to a relaxed lifestyle free from PRC control.
The CCP leadership, on the other hand, abhors democracy. In the Tiananmen
papers, one of the eight CCP elders who decided to slaughter the thousands of
protesting students was quoted as saying that those who believe in democracy
should all die with no burial. In Chinese folklore, to die with one’s remains
abandoned to the elements is the height of ignominy. So mass expulsion of the
Taiwanese who have been tainted with democratic values or Taiwanese
consciousness will help consolidate the CCP’s grip on Taiwan.
There is another advantage to such policy. Taiwan is rich in medical doctors,
engineers, teachers and other professionals. Dispersing such skilled manpower to
China’s hinterland such as Heilongjiang, Xinjiang and Tibet will help in the
economic development of such areas.
Under CCP rule, millions of Chinese perished during the ill-conceived Great Leap
Forward and the Cultural Revolution. In 1989, several thousand students and
citizens were slaughtered at Tiananmen Square. Since the invasion of Tibet in
the early 1950s, scholars generally agree that Beijing has caused the death of
1.25 million Tibetans though massacres and starvation, or about one quarter of
the population.
There is no assurance that the Chinese annexation of Taiwan will be peaceful and
without a large number of deaths among the people of Taiwan. The PLA could
launch a massive assault on Taiwan and inflict large casualties. Even if the KMT
government attempts to surrender Taiwan’s sovereignty peacefully, the armed
forces now dominated by the native Taiwanese in the rank and file may put up
resistance.
Another scenario is Ma Ying-jeou requesting PLA reinforcements in the face of
massive street demonstrations against his move to sign a peace (read
capitulation) accord. The result will be a repetition of the March massacre of
1947 by Chiang Kai-shek’s (蔣介石) troops, although in this instance the number of
deaths will be much greater.
All of the disadvantages and potential calamities outlined above will apply
equally to the pan-blue pro-unification Mainlanders who, deluded by a
wrong-headed idea of Chinese nationalism, believe that unification will either
improve their fortune or contribute to the rise of China as the dominant world
power. Neither outcome is likely to pass. The CCP will suspect Mainlanders of
being contaminated by democratic values and habits.
Once Taiwan falls, Beijing will have little reason to treat their former enemy —
the KMT and its cohorts — with kid gloves. China’s expansionist ambitions could
falter under the weight of its numerous domestic problems: rampant official
corruption, grave environmental degradation, glaring income inequality, poverty
in the rural areas, a rapidly aging population and a growing number of violent
demonstrations against the government.
Most leaders of the KMT all have permanent residency and assets in the US or
other countries. They can escape and enjoy a life of comfort after surrendering
Taiwan. But the rank and file KMT members, military officers, bureaucrats and
ordinary citizens will have to stay and endure the CCP’s harsh rule.
It is high time for the people on Taiwan to ponder what life under communist
rule would be like and whether this is the future they choose for themselves and
their offspring.
Freedom is like air. You may not appreciate its importance until you lose it.
The day of reckoning is near. Will the Taiwanese people wake up in time to put a
brake on the KMT’s suicidal dash to disaster to preserve their life, liberty,
property and dignity?
Li Thian-hok is a freelance commentator
based in Pennsylvania.