PRC dissidents urge
democracy
DEMOCRATIC EXAMPLE: Taiwan should make the
democratization of China the top prerequisite for cross-strait talks, Chinese
activist Wang Dan said
By Chris Wang / Staff reporter
Exiled Chinese dissident Wang
Dan, left, and Democratic Progressive Party Chairman Su Tseng-chang yesterday
take part in a forum in Taipei on China¡¦s human rights. The forum was held to
mark the 24th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times
Safeguarding democracy is the only
strategic advantage Taiwan has against a rising China and it would serve the
nation¡¦s interests to help promote democratization in China, Chinese dissidents
said yesterday on the 24th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
¡§Taiwan¡¦s close attention to the Chinese democratic movement would promote its
international image, be welcomed by the US and help win the hearts of the
Chinese people. I see all pluses and no minuses in it,¡¨ Wang Dan (¤ý¤¦), an exiled
leader of the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests who is now a visiting
assistant professor at National Tsing Hua University in Hsinchu, told a forum
organized by the Democratic Progressive Party on human rights in China.
Wang presented an eight-point list of things Taiwan can do to advance democracy
in China, with making the democratization of China the top pre-requisite for
political negotiations across the Taiwan Strait.
Wang also encouraged Taiwan to help promote the development of Chinese civil
society, with the aid of its more experienced non-governmental organizations,
through Internet communication, by welcoming more Chinese students to Taiwan to
experience democracy first-hand and by offering more support to Chinese
dissidents abroad.
Taiwan could leverage the 1 million businesspeople it has in China by having
them support the development of Chinese civil society and making China¡¦s
democratization the priority mission of the quasi-official Taiwan Foundation for
Democracy, he said.
Wang added that by encouraging closer engagement with Chinese students in
Taiwan, rather than ignoring them, Taiwan would be in a better position to
engage China in the long term because those students would be China¡¦s future.
¡§While the Chinese Communist Party rules China now, it is not necessarily
China¡¦s future. Any Taiwanese politician with a vision should look at the long
term,¡¨ Wang said.
With respect to the Tiananmen Square Massacre, a ¡§watershed moment in modern
China¡¦s history,¡¨ the clash between state power and human rights had intensified
over the past two decades, he said.
¡§The moment that clash reaches the boiling point would be the beginning of
democratization in China,¡¨ Wang said.
While closer bilateral engagement is welcomed, Qi Jiazhen (»ô®as), an
Australia-based Chinese writer who served a 13-year jail term in China in the
1960s, warned Taiwanese that the Beijing regime ¡§is now a wolf in sheep¡¦s
clothing, but at the end of the day, it is still a big, bad wolf.¡¨
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