winning press freedom
conference
Keynote Speech of the "Beijing Olympics 2008: Winning Press Freedom"
Paris Conference
By Dr. Merle Goldman
China’s leaders had hoped that holding the August 2008 Olympics in
Beijing would draw attention to China’s great achievements that have taken
place since the death of Mao Zedong in 1976. The occasion would mark China’s
arrival as a world power and show off China’s physical modernization and
dynamic economy.
But in the lead-up to the Olympics, China actions have produced just the
opposite impact. They have focused attention on China’s repressive policies
in Tibet and the Tibetan areas in China’s provinces, and in the Moslem areas
in the northwest province of Xinjiang. In the past few weeks, China’s
policies in these areas have sparked protests and violent repression.
The protests of Buddhist monks in Burma a few months earlier focused
attention on China’s support of the repressive, militarist regime in Burma.
In addition, Steven Spielberg’s resignation as the director of the
opening ceremonies for the Beijing Olympics has drawn world attention to
China’s activities in the Sudan, where in addition to developing energy
supplies and infrastructure, China has also been supplying Sudanese agents,
the Janjeeweed militias, with arms with which they attack the Darfur region,
that has led to the killing of over 200,000 people.
Moreover, in the process of building the facilities for the Olympics in
Beijing, it is estimated that over a million people have been evicted from
their homes with little compensation to make way for stadiums, sports
facilities and new roads. These events have diverted attention from the
image China’s leaders seek to project to the outside world of its economic
achievements and a society living in “harmony.”
While the above events have received the most attention, there are other
important events going on in China on the issue of human rights that have
not received much attention and that even more contradict the image China
seeks to portray. In the negotiation for the Olympics, China’s Foreign
Minister, Liu Jianchao, promised to improve China’s human rights record.
Yet, in the run up to the Olympics, China has cracked down on a number of
critics of the party. This internal crackdown has received much less
attention in the media as the events in Sudan and Tibet and the interrupted
journey of the Olympic torch have overwhelmed the airways. But this
phenomenon of internal dissent in the long run may be more important in
determining what happens in Tibet and the Sudan than the anti-Chinese
demonstrations going on all over the world.
In the past year, China cracked down on journalists. In fact, while
foreign journalists may have gained more freedom to report in China, just
the opposite is happening to Chinese journalists in China. There has been a
tightening of media controls and increasing harassment of journalists,
political activists and human rights advocates. As one of your sponsoring
organizations, Reporters Without Borders, has pointed out, 29 Chinese
journalists, others say 50 journalists, were arrested in 2007, more than
anywhere else in the world.
Comparison with the Mao Zedong Era
Nevertheless, China today is not the China of Mao Zedong, (1949-1976),
where people were persecuted for who they were, not just for what they said
and did. Thus, Mao purged writers in 1955, intellectuals in 1957 and members
of his own Communist Party in the Cultural Revolution (1966-76), whom he
believed were conspiring against him. In the post-Mao period, there is more
personal, economic, artistic and intellectual freedom, but there is no
political freedom. Anyone who publicly criticizes the party’s political
policies or tries to organize with others to make a political statement or
take a political action is persecuted and jailed.
A new phenomenon, however, has developed in China’s post-Mao era that may
have increasing influence on political events, including events in Tibet and
Xinjiang. It is the emergence of a middle class. Most members of China’s
rising middle class are not a bourgeoisie, a class that first appeared in
Paris. They are not independent actors. Most of China’s middle class are
rising entrepreneurs, who are quickly inducted into the party. This
partnership works well for both the party and the entrepreneurs. Party
membership gets the entrepreneurs’ compliance with party dictates, at the
same time that it provides entrepreneurs with access to land, resources and
markets. The entrepreneurs are unable to conduct their business without
connections to the party. Nevertheless, this rising middle class made
possible by China’s move to a market economy in the post-Mao period has
spawned on its fringes other members -- public intellectuals, journalists
and defense lawyers -- who act more independently. Despite the fact that
unlike the rising entrepreneurs, they do not have the protection of the
party, a small number of them have spoken out on sensitive political issues,
have helped defend those who are accused of “political” crimes and have
joined with ordinary people in their protests against the party’s corruption
and confiscation of their land for modernization projects. For the first
time in the People’s Republic, intellectuals are joining with ordinary
people in protests against injustice, which I describe in last book “From
Comrade to Citizen: The Struggle for Political Rights in China.”
Because of China’s move to the market has made it possible for
journalists, lawyers and public intellectuals to earn incomes independent of
party control, it allows these groups more freedom to speak out and act
publicly on political issues than during the Mao era. For example, in the
post-Mao era, most newspapers were no longer totally supported economically
by the state. They had to find their own commercial support and to do that,
their editors and journalists have made great efforts to enliven their
newspapers in order to gain readership. One of the most successful in these
efforts has been the Southern Weekend (Nanfang Zhoumo) in Guangdong. Its
investigative and daring articles have upset the party and several of its
editors and journalists have been purged and some imprisoned, but the paper
continues it independent stance and maintains its popularity.
The appearance of defense lawyers is a new phenomenon in the People’s
Republic. Before the post-Mao era, anyone accused of political crimes had no
one to defend him and usually was forced to defend himself. As lawyers in
the post-Mao era were able to make money in commercial transactions, they
could afford to take on political cases. But they are still at great risk
because they, too, are detained and sometimes arrested. Nevertheless, there
are now a score of famous lawyers who will take on sensitive political
cases. Public intellectuals are another new phenomenon in the post-Mao era.
Because they can now earn money as freelance writers and by publishing in
Hong Kong and elsewhere, they speak out publicly on political issues without
losing their means of livelihood, which would have happened in the Mao era.
Among the 29 intellectuals who signed the petition protesting China’s
crackdown in Tibet were a few academics, but most of the signatories were
public intellectuals who in the past have spoken out on a number of
controversial issues.
A number of human rights activists have been recently arrested. Among
them is Hu Jia, a computer specialist, who was sentenced to three and
one-half years supposedly for “subverting the state.” He has been a major
figure in the effort to make the nation aware of the spread of HIV/Aids, and
called attention to its spread through the use of unsanitary needles in the
process of drawing blood. He also publicized China’s civil rights abuses and
had written an open letter in September 2007 pointing out that China had
failed to live up to it Olympic promise to improve human rights. Instead of
improving its human rights situation as promised, the party in anticipation
of the Games has carried out a harsh and growing crackdown on domestic human
rights defenders, who have been detained, intimidated, punished and jailed
in the party’s effort to ensure that their actions will not tarnish the
China’s image in the outside world. It is unlikely that the volatile
situation in Tibet and Xinjiang can be resolved until China’own human rights
defenders are able to achieve their rights and continue their work. There
needs to be a change in the political system before areas, such as Tibet and
Xinjiang can gain autonomy.
Foreign journalists can play a major role in helping to bring about these
political changes in China. China’s leaders desire a positive international
assessment of their country, especially during this moment of unprecedented
scrutiny. Mao did not care what the rest of the world thought of him or of
China; he was totally fixated on transforming China into a Communist state,
based on his own ideological ideal. But China’s present leaders do care
about their image in the outside world. They want to be an active
participant in the world community and desire international respect.
Although in the early years of the post-Mao era, China had initially refused
to sign onto the UN Covenants on Human Right, by 1997 China acceded to
international pressure and signed the UN Covenant on Economic and Social
Rights and its National People’s Congress ratified it one year later. In
1998, China signed the UN Covenant on Political Rights, but that Covenant
has not yet been ratified by its Congress. Nevertheless, because China wants
to be seen as playing by the rules of the world community, journalists as
well as the international community can play a major role in holding China’s
leaders to their commitments. They are embarrassed by world-wide criticism;
they are very much aware of foreign journalists’ writings about happenings
in China and do not want to be depicted as a pariah nation.
Thus, my advice to you is to continue to do what you have been doing, but
even more so. Focus not just on China’s repressive policies toward the
Tibetans or the Uighurs, but toward their own people. Call on China’s
leaders to live up not only to their international commitments, but also to
the stipulations in China’s own constitution, in which Article 43 calls for
freedom of speech and press. Continue to question Chinese officials about
your journalist colleagues in prison. China’s leaders do not want to be
shamed before the world community, let alone their own people. You as
journalists can have a great impact on what happens in China, much more than
professors, whose books are read by a few other professors and maybe our
students. You, who are read by millions, can be a powerful force in the
struggle for human rights in China. At the same time that you report on
China’s growing economic, military and international stature, you should
also describe the discontent, repression and environmental degradation that
have accompanied China’s economic development and that have worsened in
China in recent years.
Reporters at the Olympics in Beijing should not only point out China’s
rise as a modern great power, should not only describe the athletic
achievements, and not only report on China’s denial of freedom to the
Tibetans and Uighurs, they should write about the denial of freedom to their
own citizens. In this age of globalization, the international media has a
major role to play in showing that no matter how powerful the country may
become, its human rights violations against minorities and especially its
own people cannot be hidden. The media’s exposure of China’s human rights
violations can help exert international pressure on China to live up to its
own international commitments.
China does respond to outside pressure as seen with its signing the two
UN covenants. We should continue to engage with China, participate in the
Olympics, and speak in a moderate voice, but we should also continue to
criticize China’s human rights abuses. We should emphatically point out the
failure of China’s government to fulfill its own voluntarily made promises
to improve rights in order to win the bid to host the Olympics.
There is a danger that China’s tight controls and suppression of human
rights advocates imposed to ensure stability and peace for the upcoming
Olympics may once the games are over become the “new norm.” Even more
worrisome is that the worldwide protests against China’s policies in Tibet
and Xinjiang have sparked a virile form of nationalism among China’s youth,
who have vociferously expressed public antagonism toward China’s foreign
critics and efforts to boycott the Olympics. Of the public intellectuals who
signed the petition against China’s policy in Tibet, not one was below age
thirty.
Despite the explosion of antagonism expressed by Chinese youth against
China’s Western critics, we have to accept the fact that China has once
again become a major power and we should do all we can to incorporate China
into the world community, not only economically, but politically and
culturally. The West must stay engaged in dialogue with China’s leaders, not
matter how tense the relationship may become, because instead of the 2008
Olympics marking China’s recognition as a modern power, it may mark China’
hostility to the modern world it so wants to join.
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