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WSWS : News
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: China
The Falun Gong crackdown: a crisis in China's corridors of
power
By James Conachy
3 August 1999
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The crackdown initiated on July 19 against the quasi-religious
Falun Gong sect is the most serious act of state repression in
China since the Tiananmen Square massacre in June 1989. Some 5,000
adherents have been arrested over the last fortnight. Falun Gong
videos and literature are being collected and destroyed across
the country. Around 200,000 books were reportedly burnt in the
city of Wuhan alone. Its web-sites have been shut down or firewalled
from Chinese viewers and any practice of its beliefs made a criminal
offence.
Since it was officially declared illegal on July 22, denunciations
of Falun Gong and repudiations of it by former members have dominated
the state media. News broadcasts on the state-run TV have been
extended to as long as two hours to provide for lengthy segments
of anti-Falun Gong propaganda. The movement has been accused of
causing suicides and insanity, charlatanism and plotting to bring
down the Communist Party government. Attempts are being make to
extradite its leader-in-exile, Li Hongzhi, who currently resides
in New York, to face trial.
The crackdown has been widely interpreted as a response to
the Falun Gong demonstration in Beijing on April 25. About 10,000
members assembled at the Zhongnanhai compound, the location of
the private residences and offices of China's highest leadership,
to protest against defamation of the sect by state-run media.
In the midst of heightened security due to the approaching 10th
anniversary of Tiananmen Square, the demonstration came as a sharp
shock to the Beijing hierarchy. It reportedly sent Chinese president
Jiang Zemin into a rage.
During the 1990s, Beijing has not opposed religious movements.
In fact, in response to the widespread anti-government protests
of 1989, the regime pursued a deliberate policy of encouraging
the revival of religion as a safety valve for social discontent.
The Taoist, Buddhist and Christian faiths that were suppressed
in other periods have rebuilt a worshipper base of some 100 million
people. Government departments also facilitated the spread of
Falun Gong after it was founded in May 1992.
Incorporating aspects of the traditional Chinese religions,
Falun Gong is derived from popular fitness exercises known as
qigong. Holding out the hope of mental and physical well being,
it advocates adhering to an austere lifestyle and performing specific
types of qigong movements unique to the sect.
Until 1996, government bodies gave the sect assistance to publish
and distribute its ideology, to lecture around the country and
internationally and to establish teaching centres in most major
Chinese cities. The most enthusiastic support was provided by
a foundation associated with the Police Ministry, which sponsored
lectures and healing sessions. Numerous government
and party officials adopted Falun Gong. Just last week, Li Qihua,
a former general, a veteran of the Long March and an associate
of Mao, was forced to confess his mistakes and renounce
his allegiance to the sect.
If the figures given by the Chinese government in April are
at all accurate, Falun Gong experienced a meteoric rise, gaining
a membership numbering in the millions in the space of several
years and opening 39 teaching centres, 1,900 places of instruction
and over 28,000 group exercise areas.
Its growth is rooted in the economic and social upheaval China
has passed through. Twenty years of market reforms have produced
a country polarised by region and social class. While top government
bureaucrats and new capitalist elements have made great fortunes,
most people have faced a steady undermining of their economic
and social situation.
Most Falun Gong adherents come from the urban centres of China's
former industrial heartland, the north eastern and central provinces,
which have been hard hit by retrenchments and factory closures.
Price reforms, the stagnation and cutback of state-owned industries
and the loss of social security provisions have all contributed
to a growing social crisis in municipalities such as Changchun,
Dalian, Shenyang, Shijiazhuang, Tianjin and Wuhan. Unemployment
has become endemic and living standards are far below those of
the coastal provinces that have experienced massive inflows of
foreign capital.
Dalian, for example, has an average monthly income of 474 yuan
($US59) compared to 813 yuan in Shanghai. Changchun, the birthplace
of the Falun Gong, has an average monthly income of 394 yuan,
less than half the 974 yuan average in Guangzhou, the southern
city near Hong Kong.
There is little belief by the mass of the population, or by
Communist Party members, in the occasional speeches by state leaders
that a better society is being built. The eruption of discontent
at the government in 1989 was cruelly repressed, fueling the grievances
and bitterness. Distrust and outright hostility to government
institutions is widespread; yet all avenues for its political
expressionwhether through political parties or labour organisationshave
been blocked.
In this environment, it is not difficult to understand how
Falun Gong was able to thrive by exploiting the fears, insecurities
and profound alienation produced by widespread unemployment, poverty
and hardship. For those who no longer had access to state-funded
health care, the Falun Gong offered an alternative form of healing.
Its conservative philosophy, based on disdain for both government
and science, provided the confused and the disoriented with a
mystical explanation for the deterioration in society.
Falun Gong's rapid growth has clearly created a major political
crisis for the Stalinist bureaucracy, despite repeated assurances
by the sect's leadership that it has no political objectives and
does not intend to challenge Beijing's power. The first conflicts
emerged in 1996 when the movement refused to accept the formation
of Communist Party branches within its centres or other forms
of state supervision, and reacted to official criticism by staging
protests. The initial acts of state repression began in July last
year.
This official reaction reveals the extreme nervousness and
even paranoia of the Chinese leadership toward any form of opposition.
Suddenly confronted with a mass organisation, over which they
had little direct control, the Beijing bureaucrats have resorted
instinctively to brutal police repression. Undoubtedly the top
leaders recall the great eruptions of discontent of last century
against imperial rule and foreign domination. Both the Tai Ping
rebellions of 1850-1861 and the Boxer Rebellion of 1900 took the
form of vast religious movements that suddenly emerged and swept
across China. Their fear is that the apparently innocuous Falun
Gong has the potential to become a dangerous vehicle for the opposition
of broad layers, who have no other outlet for their hostility.
Thus the ossified bureaucracy, increasingly isolated from the
masses and utterly incapable of meeting their needs, has resorted
to crude police state methods and an extraordinary Maoist-style
ideological campaign of denunciations and self-confessions. Party
members and the public are exhorted to turn to Marxism and dialectical
materialism to combat religion, mysticism and the Falun Gong in
particular. But the entire exercise is completely farcicalfew
people believe that the top leaders in any way uphold socialism
or Marxism or even the traditions of the Chinese revolution to
which they appealed in the past.
The main aim of the upper layers of the Stalinist hierarchy
is to enrich themselves, hold onto to power and transform themselves
into the leading representatives of the emerging Chinese capitalist
class. They are keenly aware of their precarious position and
the slender social and ideological supports on which they depend
as all the elements of a social explosion accumulate. To meet
the demands of international finance capital, the bureaucracy
has no choice but to press ahead with its economic restructuring
and the closure or privatisation of state industries. But these
policies, under conditions of economic slowdown, will only exacerbate
the already widespread unemployment and poverty in rural and urban
areas and thus the discontent and hostility to the regime.
See Also:
Beijing accelerates market
reforms as economic growth and investment slows
[20 May 1999]
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