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China¡¦s oligarchy versus Liu Xiaobo
By Sushil Seth
Much has been written about the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Liu Xiaobo
(¼B¾åªi), who is serving an 11-year prison sentence for his advocacy of democracy
in China. We know that he is China¡¦s leading political dissident and was one of
the authors of Charter 08, a call for political reform and democratization.
However, the more one knows about him the more one understands why China¡¦s
oligarchy is so deadset against him.
First, the charter succinctly exposes the contradictions of the existing
political system ¡X a cruel Orwellian joke on its people.
¡§The political reality, which is plain for anyone to see, is that China has many
laws, but no rule of law; it has a Constitution, but no constitutional
government,¡¨ the charter says
Not surprisingly, ¡§The stultifying results are endemic official corruption ¡K
weak human rights, decay in public ethics, crony capitalism, growing inequality
between rich and poor, pillage of the natural environment ¡K and the exacerbation
of a long list of social conflicts,¡¨ it says.
Which leads to the logical conclusion that: ¡§The decline of the current system
has reached the point where change is no longer optional.¡¨
Charter 08 then goes on to propose the enactment of a new Constitution based on
the democratic principles of separation of legislative, judicial and executive
power as well as enshrining a guarantee of human rights, freedom of expression
and a whole lot more.
Such a prescriptive charter would be the death knell of the political monopoly
of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). No wonder, China¡¦s rulers went ballistic
against Norway and the committee that awarded the prize, while at home they
rounded up activists.
Beijing has stopped dialogue with Norway on furthering trade relations and
demanded an apology from the Nobel committee for awarding the peace prize to a
¡§criminal,¡¨ thus showing disrespect for China¡¦s legal system.
These days China is big on demanding apologies. Japan too was asked to apologize
over the detention of the captain of a Chinese fishing trawler that collided
with Japanese coast guard boats in the East China Sea, but that is another
story.
However, Liu is one of those rare people who will not back down from fighting
for his beliefs. The party would like to see the back of him if he were to leave
China for comfortable pastures abroad, where he has had academic stints in
prestigious universities in the US and elsewhere.
However, he keeps coming back to pursue his passion and commitment to change his
homeland. Though his current 11-year stint in jail is the longest so far, he is
not new to such persecution at the hands of his country¡¦s communist oligarchs.
He was jailed for 20 months in 1989 when he went on hunger strike to support the
democracy movement. Beginning in 1996, he spent another three years at a
re-education camp for his criticism of the party¡¦s monopoly on power.
After serving his current sentence at the pleasure of his country¡¦s communist
cabal, he will have spent 16 years in jail.
Still, Liu remains unbowed with his indomitable will to pursue the cause of
political reform for his country. If -democracy has to succeed in China at some
point, men like Liu are the ones who will keep the torch alive.
Speaking at his trial on Dec. 23, he recalled, ¡§[After] I was imprisoned [in
1989] for ¡¥counter-revolutionary propaganda and incitement to crime¡¦ ¡K I was
never again allowed to publish or speak in public in China ¡K but I still want to
tell the regime that deprives me of my freedom ¡K I have no enemies and no hatred
¡K For hatred is corrosive of a person¡¦s wisdom and conscience.¡¨
Speaking on a note of hope, he said, ¡§I hope to be the last victim of China¡¦s
endless literary inquisition, and that after this no one else will be jailed for
their speech.¡¨
¡§Freedom of expression is the basis of human rights, the source of humanity and
the mother of truth,¡¨ he said.
From a perusal of the text of his statement at the trial last year, Liu comes
out as a towering personality of immense courage and compassion.
It is hard to believe that he is regarded as a ¡§criminal¡¨ in his own country for
exercising his right to free speech and saying things that some of China¡¦s top
leaders have also said at times.
For instance, Chinese President Hu Jintao (JÀAÀÜ) reportedly said in 2003 that the
CCP faced ¡§inevitable extinction¡¨ if it did not increase press freedoms.
More recently, Premier Wen Jiabao (·Å®aÄ_) told CNN that: ¡§Freedom of speech is
indispensable for any nation. China¡¦s Constitution endows the people with
freedom of speech.¡¨
¡§The demands of the people for democracy cannot be resisted,¡¨ he said.
If so, why is Liu in one of Wen¡¦s jails for exercising his right to free speech
under the Chinese Constitution? Or is it all a charade?
Liu¡¦s Noble Peace Prize created a bit of excitement among some CCP elders and a
group of academics who made renewed calls for democratic reforms.
In an open letter, 100 Chinese academics urged that ¡§China should join the
mainstream of civilized humanity by embracing universal values.¡¨
¡§Such is the only route to becoming a ¡¥great nation¡¦ that is capable of playing
a positive and responsible role on the world stage,¡¨ they wrote.
All this activity urging political reforms was probably intended to influence
the deliberations of the CCP plenum just held, but it was ignored, as has
happened in the past.
The only passing reference to this in the communique read: ¡§Great impetus should
be given to reform of the economic system, while vigorous yet steady efforts
should be made to promote reform of the political structure.¡¨
Which is neither here nor there.
Some China-watchers were heartened by Wen¡¦s support for political reforms.
However, Wen¡¦s background as an aide to Zhao Ziyang (»¯µµ¶§) during the tumultuous
days preceding the 1989 Tiananmen Massacre and his conversion thereafter
testifies to his great instinct for political survival and coming out a winner.
Therefore, one shouldn¡¦t read too much into his rebirth as a political reformer.
However, Liu and his band of political dissidents could one day become the
rallying point of a popular movement against the party¡¦s corrupt and politically
suffocating rule.
Sushil Seth is a writer based in Australia.
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