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    Greater China
     May 3, 2008
China runs at its own pace
By Fong Tak-ho

HONG KONG - Seven years ago, as part of the understanding for Beijing to hold the 2008 Summer Olympic Games, Chinese authorities promised democratic reforms and human-rights improvements. Today, human-rights violations are still frequently reported and many rights activists feel disappointed and infuriated, and many are criticizing the Chinese government for failing to honor its words.

On the other hand, running the international sports event does push Beijing to start or consider gradual reforms to make the country more open. And calls for political reforms are burgeoning, although the fragile buds may still not be strong enough to survive political storms.

In 2001, Beijing Olympics organization committee official Liu


 

Jingmin said the Games would be "an opportunity to foster democracy, improve human rights, and integrate China with the rest of the world". Rights activists were keen to watch how Beijing would take real actions to reassure a suspicious world that the Games would be good for China.

Indeed, should they hold high expectations, frustration is inevitable. Human-rights violations in China are still frequently reported. In 2006, Chen Guangcheng, a blind activists in Shandong province, was sentenced to more than four years in jail for sabotage.

Hu Jia, an outspoken Beijing-based volunteer for AIDS victims, received a three-and-a-half-year jail term for calling for "Olympics with a human rights touch". Both Chen and Hu were harassed for at least several months by thugs, allegedly plain-clothed police, before their arrests.

However, it must also be noted that the Chinese leadership is not as unanimous as it seems. There are calls from high-ranking officials for more aggressive political reforms. Among the reform-minded officials, Politburo member and newly-appointed Guangdong Communist Party chief Wang Yang is seen as the champion. Wang openly called for more reforms on his arrival in Guangdong, which was the stronghold of economic reform and openness in the 1970s. He told Guangdong officials they should further "emancipate their minds" to allow Guangdong to continue to lead other provinces in reforms.

Before Wang's initiative, Yu Keping, deputy director of the Central Translation Bureau, had already advocated political reforms. A member of a think-tank for the Hu Jintao-Wen Jiabao leadership, Yu, published an article in Beijing Daily, the official newspaper of Beijing municipal party committee, in October 2006, arguing that "democracy is a good thing" for China. Given that democracy has been seen as a hypersensitive topic among the Communist Party's protocol since 1989, his special relations with the top leaders, along with his high profile remarks, have attracted a lot of attention.

Many analysts believe that Premier Wen Jiabao is probably backing reform-minded officials in China. Wen, widely seen as mentor of Wang Yang, published an article on the party's flagship newspaper, the People's Daily, on February 26, 2007, stressing that civil rights protection, anti-corruption, along with "expansion of democracy" and pressing ahead political reform, were priorities on the agenda of his cabinet.

Wen's remarks were echoed by a high-caliber taskforce led by Zhou Tianyong, director of policy research center of the Central Party School, the training center of top officials. Zhou is a key figure in drafting the Central Party School's so-called "political reform roadmap" which was published in February 2008. The "comprehensive political system reform plan" Zhou helped draft argues for steady liberalization to build what he calls a "modern civil society" by 2020 and "mature democracy and rule of law" afterwards. The study warns that China risks dangerous instability unless it embraces democratic reforms to keep the power of the ruling Communist Party under check and supervision.

It should be noted that the political reform they are talking about is not quite the type perceived by many Western scholars or overseas China watchers. Because late leader Deng Xiaoping so overtly objected to Montesquieu's idea of "separation of powers" and "multi-party democracy", no leaders in China dare to depart from his position. Instead, reformers now harbor hope for a "division of powers", so that there will be more checks and balances for the government.

Even talk of such mild reforms can become the subject of controversy in China. Wu Bangguo, chairman of the National People's Congress (NPC) and No 2 leader of the party, openly warned that there are "bottom-lines" for political reforms. According to Wu, "multi-party democracy" is out of question, "separation of powers", too, is a taboo, and he also vetoed the introduction of a bicameral system in parliament. He admitted, though, that "China must positively draw experiences from civilizations including political civilizations created by human societies."

In addition, some Chinese officials are attempting to make use of the Beijing Olympics to gain more "room for maneuver", if not total freedom, for the press. In December 2006, Chinese authorities announced a new regulation allowing foreign journalists to travel across the country for news coverage without prior approval from local authorities. For China, where foreign media have always under restrictions and tight surveillance, this was a very significant "compromise" in terms of "security concerns". The state-run Xinhua News Agency praised the regulation as "a landmark in China's reform toward openness".

The new regulation has been promulgated following President Hu Jintao's order on October 1, 2006, for greater transparency in the construction of Olympics venues.

The regulation stipulated it that it would "automatically become ineffective from October 17, 2008" - after the end of the Beijing Olympics. But on December 28, 2006, Cai Wu, director of the State Council's Information Office, revealed to journalists what the real intention of China's reformists might be. "If such a provisional regulation would prove to be good in practice with its implementation in the coming one year or so, I think there is no need for a good policy to be changed again," Cai Wu said.

In China, even such a mild reform can backfire. The new press policy has been more enthusiastically carried out in places like Guangdong, but there are have been reports suggesting many other regions have been turning a blind eye to the central government's policy. On October 15, 2008, foreign reporters trying to cover the Tibet riots were stopped in cities of Lhasa, Beijing, Chengdu, Xining, and several places in Gansu province. The Foreign Correspondents' Club in China said they received more than 30 complaints. On March 17, 2008, at least six Hong Kong media outfits were ordered to leave Tibet immediately. On April 20, police in Anhui province also confiscated reporters' credentials who tried to report protests against the French supermarket chain Carrefour.

It is fair to say that China's reform efforts have not met Western expectations in many aspects, but that doesn't mean there is no momentum pressing ahead for democratic reform in China's own way. It is a paradox that many accusations by the West, some of them not completely objective, have only resulted in the reining in of China's reformers.

Fong Tak Ho is managing editor of the Chinese edition of Asia Times Online.

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