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Ten years since the Tiananmen Square massacre
Political lessons for the working class
By James Conachy
4 June 1999
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The news broadcasts on this day 10 years ago were filled with
the images of tanks, blood and death on the streets of Beijing.
As the night fell on June 3, 1989, 40,000 soldiers of the 27th
Peoples Liberation Army moved into China's capital with orders
to crush six weeks of demonstrations and protests by the country's
students and workers, and end their demands for political change.
In the preceding weeks, China, and Beijing in particular, had
witnessed extraordinary events. A student occupation of Tiananmen
Square became the focus for a rising working class movement. Independent
Workers' Autonomous Federations were active in numbers of cities.
From May 20 the movement continued in defiance of martial law
and the central government was divided and paralysed.
The paralysis was short-lived. Accounts by witnesses testify
to the calculated terror employed by the military as it reclaimed
the capital:
...at one command, the soldiers raised their guns and
fired one round at the residents and students, who fell to the
ground. As soon as the gunshots stopped, other people rushed forward
to rescue the wounded. The steps of a clinic near Xidan were already
covered in blood. But the struggle at the intersection did not
stop. Armoured vehicles ran over roadblocks, knocked over cars
and buses. The unarmed people had only bricks... What they got
in return was bullets... People dispersed and ran for their lives.
Soldiers ran after them, guns blazing. Even when residents ran
into courtyards or into the shrubbery, the soldiers would catch
up with them and kill them. [1]
...Thick smoke and tear gas were bringing tears to everyone's
eyes. I met F. who told me how the first tanks had crushed the
barricades, knocking people off the tops of buses that soon caught
fire. By now the way was clear for trucks to move east one by
one, the slowness of their advance suggesting that there must
be battles somewhere ahead. The whole city of Peking seemed in
a state of outrage and extreme agitation. On the side-streets
off Changan Avenue, thousands of us rhythmically shouted in the
intervals between gunfire: 'You animals!' 'Li Pengfascist!'
and 'Go on strike!' But the troops shot back, killing those who
were not swift enough to squat down or move away or who simply
took no heed of bullets. People were constantly falling to the
ground and being taken to a nearby hospital, but the mood of indignation
completely overwhelmed any feelings of fear.[2]
...many hundreds of people (not only students) appeared
on the street. They ran after the trucks and shouted protest slogans.
A few stones were thrown. The soldiers opened fire with live ammunition.
The crowd threw themselves on the ground, but quickly followed
the convoy again. The more shots were fired, the more the crowd
got determined and outraged. Suddenly they started singing the
Internationale; they armed themselves with stones and threw
them towards the soldiers. There were also a few Molotov cocktails
and the last truck was set on fire.[3]
Such testimonies could be recounted a thousand-fold by the
working class of Beijing. In their tens of thousands they used
their bodies to reinforce the barricades and roadblocks that they
had erected to defend their city and their political aims. Hundreds
were gunned down on the streets, crushed beneath armoured vehicles
or beaten or bayoneted to death as they sought to stem the advancing
troops. Casualties were highest in the working class residential
suburbs to the east and west of the Tiananmen Square. The exact
number killed that night has never been tallied, but estimates
range up to 7,000, with over 20,000 wounded.
To this day the Chinese government justifies its actions with
the same contemptible lie put forward at the time by the 85 year-old
"paramount leader" of Chinese Stalinism, Deng Xiaoping.
In a speech on June 9, 1989, he denounced the movement his regime
had drowned in blood as a reactionary "counter-revolutionary
rebellion" aimed at the overthrow of the socialist system.
However there is no historical or factual substance to the
claims that the Tiananmen Square massacre was the result of a
confrontation between a communist government and a pro-capitalist
movement. They can only be made by ignoring both the true nature
of the Stalinist regime that ruled China and the complex character
and demands of the movement that developed in China through the
month of May 1989.
While there is no question that the vast majority of students
and workers had illusions in Western-style democracy, they also
held deep allegiances to the principles of social equality and
social justice.
The movement of 1989 expressed the long pent-up discontent
and hatred of a corrupt Stalinist bureaucracy that for 40 years
had betrayed the hopes of the Chinese people for a truly just
society, and for over a decade had been imposing a market economy
on China, giving rise to unprecedented inequality and a burgeoning
new capitalist elite.
The new bourgeoisie
Underlying the social tensions in 1989 was the economic and
political impasse at which the Stalinist perspective of national
self-sufficiency or "socialism in a single country"
had arrived.
Leon Trotsky described the ruling bureaucracy of the Soviet
Union as the policemen of inequality. The description
is just as applicable to the bureaucracy spawned by Mao Zedong's
peasant movement after the establishment of the Peoples Republic
of China.
Regulating the state-controlled production of a backward economy
and protecting it from competition or penetration by the industry
and commodities of the advanced capitalist centresand ruthlessly
suppressing any challenge to their grip on power from the working
classwas a sizeable social caste of party and state officials.
Their rule was based primarily on the peasant Red Army, and they
were able to derive material privileges and benefits that, while
not resting on any ownership of property, elevated them above
the rest of society.
The 1980s witnessed the turn by the Stalinist bureaucracies
in the USSR, Eastern Europe and China, confronting economic stagnation
and collapse, to preserve their material interests through the
restoration of private property relations and the re-integration
of their countries into the world capitalist marketa perspective
accomplished through the systematic destruction of the social
gains and conditions of the mass of the population.
The prospect of capitalist restoration was celebrated throughout
the capitalist west. Figures such as Mikhail Gorbachev, the head
of the Soviet Union, and Deng Xiaoping in China, were feted as
great visionaries and reformers. The Russian expressions perestroika
(economic reform) and glasnost (political reform) were
repeated in the mass media so often that they became household
words. In 1985 both Time magazine and the National Review
named Deng "man of the year".
From 1979, Deng oversaw a stream of market reforms that opened
up large parts of the country to the activities of transnational
corporations and other private firms in Special Economic Zones,
broke-up collective farms and reinstituted private control of
land in the countryside, and abandoned central economic regulation
and planning.
By the mid-1980s prices for a wide array of industrial and
consumer products were being set by market forces and a "free
market" of labour was in the process of being created through
the ending of full employment guarantees, the undermining of life-time
employment to workers employed by state-owned enterprises and
the growth of the non-state sector of the economy.
The effect of the reforms was to enable a frenzy of wealth
accumulation by the state and party bureaucrats, who were in a
position to allocate land and contracts to themselves, establish
business niches or engage in wholesale bribery and theft. Utilising
their political power and connections, the "cadre" of
the Communist party established themselves as an incipient capitalist
class by the end of the 1980s.
A 1984 survey in one rural province, for example, found that
party members made up 43 percent of the "prosperous"
households, a figure that did not include their friends or associates.
[4] A glimpse into how the party cadre became prosperous during
the parceling-out of collective property is recounted in the study
Chen Village:
As party secretary, Qingfa got the lion's share. There
was a large grove of giant bamboo along the river; and rather
than put it up for bidding, the [Party] committee agreed to let
Qingfa take it for ten yuan. The grove was worth a hundred times
that amount. He allocated to himself, free of charge, a hillock
of honeysuckle planted in earlier years for the health clinic.
He had the brigade rent bulldozers to relevel the land occupied
by an unfinished dyke. Awarding himself the major portion of this
land, he hired field hands to till it for him". [5]
The spawning of a new rural bourgeoisie was overshadowed in
the urban areas by far more lucrative opportunities, especially
in ties and partnerships with foreign capital in the Special Economic
Zones. Over 10,000 companies had what the British Economist
journal described as privileged links with party bureaucrats.
Of these 134 can boast top officialsministers or their equivalentson
their payroll.
Most conspicuous were the children of the highest ranking government
officials, who were soon given the title of the "crown princes".
The sons of Deng Xiaoping and of Zhao Ziyang, the premier of China,
were only the most prominent "crown princes" who by
the late 1980s were associated with trading corporations that
used state-derived funds for real estate speculation or the purchase
and re-sale into the domestic economy of scarce consumer goods
produced in or imported into the Special Economic Zoneswith
the profits flowing to highly-praised "socialist entrepreneurs".
Facilitating the process was an orgy of borrowing by both national
and regional governments, which pushed China's foreign debt from
next to nothing in 1979 to over $US50 billion in 1990.
Liu Binyan, a Chinese investigative journalist, described 1988the
year in which all of China's coastal provinces were opened to
the activities of private capital and bank credit controls were
liftedas the time when members of the bureaucratic
stratum, high and low, who had a firm grasp on their special privileges,
initiated an unprecedented plundering of the Chinese economy,
arrogating billions in public assets to themselves. [6]
The impact of market reforms
As the bureaucracy enriched itself, most of China's population
suffered the erosion of income security, social supports and purchasing
power.
The breakup of the collectives and the odious allocation of
property led to millions of former peasants being made landless.
By 1989, unable to find employment in rural areas, more than 50
million people, mainly younger workers, were on a massive internal
migration to the urban areas and Special Economic Zones for work.
By the late 1980s grain production had begun to fall to crisis
levels as entrepreneurs in the countryside converted land to other,
more profitable uses.
The ending of central planning and price controls wrought havoc
upon the Chinese working people. In a climate of rampant profiteering,
hoarding, speculation and the uncontrolled growth in the money
supply, the country was plagued with permanent inflation and shortages
of foodstuffs and essential items.
In March 1988, party head Zhao Ziyang declared that the Chinese
people had to learn to swim in the sea of the commodity
economy. By the end of that year it was clear they were
drowning.
The money supply had increased a staggering 50 percent in less
than 12 months. The official inflation rate reached 19 percentover
30 percent in the citiesand unemployment was growing. Industry
was beset with shortages of energy and raw materials, leading
to frequent shutdowns of plants and equipment. Agricultural production
had fallen for the third year in a row, requiring the massive
import of grain. National debt was spiraling out of control.
Faced with record budget and trade deficits as the direct result
of its own policies, the central government imposed emergency
austerity measures in the last months of 1988, which reversed
the easy credit policies and slashed public spending. Across China
the debt-driven boom of construction and industrial development
collapsed, firms laid off workers and sought to cut wages and
benefits, and governments at all levels reduced funding on education
and social services.
In wide layers of the population this was the final blow to
any lingering illusions in the market reforms or confidence in
the regime. As 1988 ended, police reports were warning of alarming
increases in workers' strikes and public gatherings. All
that was needed for a general social movement against the regime
was the spark provided by the student movement of April 1989.
Origins of the 1989 student movement
The major influences that shaped the student movement of 1989
can be traced back a decade earlier. After vigorously suppressing
intellectual layers that attacked Stalinism from the left, the
regime encouraged public debate that drew pro-market conclusions
and lent ideological support to the reforms being undertaken.
The general policy pursued by the state apparatus in the 1980s
was to draw under its wings the educated and professional layers
with the promise of improved living standards and heightened prestigebut
not democracy.
Acutely conscious that the market reforms would heighten the
ever-present conflict between the bureaucracy and the working
class, the dominant factions within the Stalinist party were resolute
that any undermining of dictatorial rule would produce a power
vacuum that could be filled by a challenge to its rule from below.
The Solidarity movement in Poland during 1980-81 reinforced their
fears.
Yet for considerable elements of the professional and intellectual
petty-bourgeoisie, the market reforms did not deliver on the promises.
Many had joined the ruling party, yet the parceling out of wealth
took place amongst the established bureaucracy far faster than
they could climb its ranks, and the inflation and economic turmoil
affected all social layers.
Though genuinely outraged at the rampant enrichment of the
upper echelons of the bureaucracy, the hopes for political reforms
that emanated from the middle strata were intimately bound up
with aspirations for a greater stake in the direction and benefits
of capitalist restoration. The objective content of calls for
freedom of the press and association were to establish weapons
with which to curb the ability of the state apparatus to monopolise
control over the emerging market economy and force it to open
the door for other layers.
The demands for democracy were not therefore directed toward
mobilising the Chinese masses, who in the final analysis the democrats
feared as much as the regime, but to factions within the bureaucracy
that sympathised with their aims and would promote their cause.
This intellectual and political outlook exerted a heavy influence
upon the students in 1989, the vast majority of whom were the
children of either party officials or the professional petty-bourgeoisie.
The death on April 15, 1989 of the former party leader Hu Yaobang,
who had been removed from office two years earlier after lending
support to student protests for reform, provided the impulse for
the expression of social grievances.
The one who should not die, died. Those who should die,
live, became a popular slogan on the university campuses
where the discontent about the direction of society was most radically
expressed. Memorial meetings extolling the virtues of Hu Yaobang
as compared to his counterparts, soon gave way to calls for increases
in the education budget, a free press, the right to form student
associations independent of the Communist Party and the rehabilitation
of intellectuals discredited for various digressions.
The means for expressing the demands almost naturally became
daily rallies in the symbolic centre of political protest in Chinathe
massive Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing, which was the
site of state monuments and around which the major government
buildings were located.
After days of protests, and in defiance of an edict prohibiting
the public from the Square on April 22 for the funeral of Hu Yaobang,
tens of thousands of students filled the grounds of Tiananmen
bearing banners demanding democratic reforms and an explanation
as to why Hu Yaobang had been removed as party secretary-general.
Their demands were ignored. Increasingly radicalised, student
representatives from 21 universities and colleges met the following
day and formed the Autonomous Federation of Beijing University
Students. A student strike was declared and a call made for the
people to join them in demonstrations at Tiananmen Square until
the government recognised and met with the student organisation.
Workers Autonomous Federation
Alongside the students, the embryo of another movement had
emerged, of a very different character and with very different
political aims. Among the 100,000 people who assembled in Tiananmen
Square on April 22 for Hu Yaobang's funeral were the groups of
young industrial workers who on April 20 had founded the Beijing
Workers Autonomous Federation ( Gongzilian).
The appearance of an independent workers' organisation was
announced in two leaflets distributed in the Square on that day.
They directly addressed the class divide that separated the ruling
regime and the working class.
One leaflet attacked the personal wealth of Deng Xiaoping's
children, among other condemnations of the privileges of the bureaucracy,
and called for an explanation of the shortcomings
of the economic reforms. The other denounced the steady
decline of the people's living standards which it blamed
on the long term control of a dictatorial bureaucracy
and demanded the stabilisation of prices. It concluded with the
demand that would resonate widely amongst China's workersthat
the true wealth and incomes of government officials, and the sources
of that wealth, be made public.
The appearance of the Workers Autonomous Federation, calling
for a frontal assault on the privileges and positions of the apparatus,
posed the very real threat to the regime in China of the Polish
modela mass working class movement challenging the
very existence of Stalinist rule.
All party heads agreed that the student marches and demonstrations
had to be brought to an end, especially the tentative efforts
to bring into political activity wider layers of society. The
cracks in state control and authority made by the students were
early warnings of a flood of working class discontent.
On April 26 the government banned all demonstrations and rallies
without approval, outlawed the making of speeches and the distribution
of leaflets, and warned students against going to factories,
rural areas and schools. The editorial in the state mouthpiece,
the Peoples Daily, defended the government stance with
the headline: It is necessary to take a clear stand against
disturbances. The editorial, which some claim was personally
dictated by Deng Xiaoping, specifically referred to the accusations
made against party leaders in the workers' leaflets of April 22
as a "planned conspiracy" to overthrow the government,
"taking advantage" of the genuine mourning of Hu Yaobang
by the students.
The government decrees and the insinuation that the students
were the puppets of other forces was met with anger and further
defiance. Over 80,000 students from dozens of campuses marched
to Tiananmen Square on April 27. In answer to the warning against
going to the factories, student groups dispersed from the Square
into the residential suburbs and staged street rallies late into
the evening. Calls were made for a mass rally on May 4 to demonstrate
for the demands of the student organisation.
A new element appeared in the march of April 27. Not only did
large crowds of enthusiastic residents of Beijing line the streets
to applaud and show support, but tens of thousands of workers
marched alongside or behind the students. The events stunned the
central governmentboth the defiance of the students and
the sheer scope of the popular support they had been able to harness
so rapidly. Their effect was to divide the regime as a raging
internal conflict broke out over how best to diffuse the situation.
One faction, personified in Deng Xiaoping, called for the deployment
of troops to restore order, a position that did not win immediate
support. Layers of the state bureaucracy, led by the secretary-general
of the Communist party, Zhao Ziyang, advocated making concessions
to the students and the middle classes in order to build a base
of support against the mounting opposition to the market reforms
within the industrial working class.
Their model was Russia where Gorbachev, through the promises
of glasnost, or political reforms, had consolidated the
support of Russian intellectuals and professional layers for the
restoration of the market. With Gorbachev scheduled to arrive
in China on May 15 in the first visit of a Soviet leader for 30
years, Zhao Ziyang's call for negotiations with the students prevailed.
The regime not only met with student representatives, but informed
the media it had the freedom to cover the student movement. A
debate between a high-ranking official and a student leader was
televised live on national television. University budgets were
increased. In a token gesture to placate the anger over official
corruption, the import of limousines was banned. The issues raised
by the students were elevated to the centre of political discussion
in China.
The one demand on which the regime would not give any ground
was that of recognising autonomous student organisations. To do
so would legitimise the movements in the working class to establish
independent trade unions and political associations.
In undertaking its concessions, the Stalinist bureaucracy based
itself on the fact that in the main the students were the children
of, and heirs to, the bureaucratic elite or the middle classes
that aspired to enjoy similar privileges. From the standpoint
of their class interests, a sizeable layer of students viewed
with concern the increasing political activity of the working
class.
Among intellectuals and students, Zhao Ziyang was being hailed
as the possible Chinese Gorbachev. The march to Tiananmen Square
on May 4 therefore had the character of a victory celebration
gone wrong. The fact that 250,000 workers joined 60,000 students
produced turmoil in the student movement. Distraught at the growing
appearance on the streets of the working class, who drew no distinctions
between different elements of the bureaucracy and directed their
slogans against the social inequality caused by the market, a
section of the students withdrew from political activity.
Hunger strike
From May 4 a clear split took place among the students. New
personalities came to the fore, such as Wang Dan, Chai Ling and
Wuer Kaixi. Just as Zhao Ziyang believed he could use the students,
they believed that the mass support of the population could be
used as a lever to extract greater concessions and recognition
from the state.
As the means of applying the maximum pressure and gaining the
maximum exposure, the students adopted the proposal of psychology
graduate Chai Ling who modeled herself on Mahatma Gandhi. She
proposed a hunger strike by students at the monument to the Heroes
of the Revolution in the centre of Tiananmen Square, where Gorbachev
was scheduled to lay a wreath on May 15 under the full gaze of
the world media.
On May 13, 500 students marched into Tiananmen Square and set
up tents at the monument to begin their public hunger strike.
In doing so they initiated what has been called the Beijing
Spring and compared by some with the Paris Commune of 1871.
As the broader student movement began to dissipate, the working
class of China adopted the student hunger strike as the focus
for mass anti-government protest. By May 15 half a million students,
workers and other Beijing residents had rallied in the Square.
The character of the political movement in China qualitatively
shifted to the left and was defined by the mass actions of the
industrial working class and the growing role of the Workers Autonomous
Federations.
From the time of its inception, the Beijing or Capital Workers
Autonomous Federation, as it renamed itself, had conducted agitation,
visiting factories to win support and recruit members. It had
participated in the marches of April 27 and May 4, but out of
caution, had not done so under an independent banner.
The decision by the students to occupy Tiananmen Square enabled
the Federation to begin a public life in relative safety. Establishing
a tent headquarters in the Square's north-east fringe, it engaged
in continuous propaganda among the ever-growing numbers of workers
who came into the Square seeking political discussion and organisation.
The week of May 13-20 saw the largest demonstrations in China's
post-war history. On May 17 it is estimated that up to two million
people marched through the centre of Beijing; the majority being
workers and their families who walked beneath the banners of their
work unit or enterprise; students from across China; peasants
from nearby rural regions; teachers, public servants and journalists.
Thousands of workers joined the Workers Federation. A steady
stream of delegates from factories and work units came to its
headquarters to collect literature and donate funds. By the end
of May it had 150 full-time organisers in Tiananmen Square, had
adopted a constitution, elected leadership committees, established
a workers guard to protect the students, was operating a printing
facility and had erected a public broadcasting system that each
evening drew massive crowds to hear political speeches. A treatise
distributed in that week sums up the political outlook they expressed:
The tyranny of the corrupt officials is nothing short
of extreme...The people will no longer believe the lies of the
authorities for on our banners appear the words: science, democracy,
freedom, human rights and rule by law... We have conscientiously
documented the exploitation of the workers. The method of understanding
exploitation is based on the method of analysis given in Marx's
Das Kapital... We were astonished to find that the 'peoples public
servants' have devoured all surplus value created by the people's
blood and sweat. The total value of this exploitation comes to
an amount unmatched in history! Such ruthlessness and replete
with Chinese characteristics'." [7]
The document called for an investigation into the material
consumption and use of palatial retreats by, among others,
Deng Xiaoping, Zhao Ziyang, Li Peng, Chen Yun, Wan Li and Jiang
Zeminand their family members. Their assets should
be immediately frozen and subjected to the scrutiny of a National
Peoples Investigative Committee, it stated.
The people have acquired political consciousness,"
it concluded. "They have recognised that there are only two
classes: the rulers and the ruled... and that the political movements
of the last 40 years have served simply as a political means of
oppressing the people."
As a byproduct of the Beijing events, Workers Autonomous Federations
formed in major cities around China, including Changsha, Shaoyang,
Xiangtan, Hengyang and Yueyang.
Martial law
Within the bureaucracy the mass entry of the working class
into struggle ended the debate over whether or not to use force.
On the evening of May 20, Premier Li Peng declared martial law
and Zhao Ziyang was placed under house arrest. One hundred thousand
soldiers from the Beijing Military Region were ordered into the
city.
The working class met martial law with mass action. Over a
million citizens of Beijing assembled in the city centre on May
21 to protect the hunger strike, and again on the following days.
Summoned by the Workers Federation, the student groups and
other independent bodies, workers barricaded the streets of Beijing
leading to the Square. Youth on motorbikes were formed into early
warning sentries. Mobile "dare-to-die" squads were established
to move quickly to problem areas. When troops entered the outskirts
of the city on May 23, thousands of workers and students marched
out to meet the troops and explain what was happening in the city.
According to one account of the day: The martial law
that Li Peng and his gang has issued has thus far been rendered
as useless as a blank sheet of paper. The soldiers are being persuaded
by excited people and students; some of the persuaders are choking
with sobs, while some soldiers shed tears in return. Quite a number
of soldiers have driven their trucks away." By May 24 the
Beijing military units had been completely withdrawn from the
city. The government feared they would join the workers. Mass
demonstrations were taking place across China in support of Beijing.
Within Beijing itself all visible government authority had
disappeared. Students and workers took over directing traffic,
co-ordinating essential services and protecting property from
criminal elementsthough even the Beijing pickpockets declared
a sympathy strike with the students. Production virtually halted
as workers stayed away from work to take part in mass rallies.
On May 25 the Workers Federation and student groups organised
a political demonstration of close to one million workers. The
insurrectionary tone of the slogans and sentiments of the workers'
organisation had become more clearly expressed. A statement issued
on May 26 read:
Our nation was created from the struggle and labour of
we workers and all other mental and manual labourers. We are the
rightful masters of this nation. We must be heard in national
affairs. We absolutely must not allow this small band of degenerate
scum of the nation and the working class to usurp our name and
suppress the students, murder democracy and trample human rights.
Another statement declared:
The final struggle has arrived...We have seen that the
fascist governments and Stalinist dictatorships spurned by hundreds
of millions of people have not, and indeed will not, voluntarily
withdraw from the historical stage... Storm this 20th century
Bastille, this last stronghold of Stalinism! [8]
By this time the student movement was wracked by infighting
over how long to continue the occupation of Tiananmen. Many Beijing
students had returned to their campuses after the declaration
of martial law and their organisation proposed withdrawing from
the Square, a decision initially supported by Chai Ling and only
overturned by the intervention of student bodies from outside
the capital.
With each passing day, more and more of China was being drawn
into political struggles. The almost accidental leaders of the
students were overwhelmed by the scope of what was unfolding.
However courageous, these were not people who had prepared politically,
or psychologically, to lead a revolution.
There is no question that the actions of students like Chai
Ling and Wang Dan in launching the hunger strike on May 13 were
a critical factor in subsequent events. Yet their political perspective
was based on hopes that a compromise would be forthcoming from
the Stalinist state. Instead, a bloody confrontation loomed.
Sharp tensions came to dominate relations between the Workers
Federation and the student organisations in Tiananmen Square.
The students correctly sensed that the dominance the working class
and its social demands now exerted in the political movement made
discussions with the regime impossible, yet they were unwilling
to support the limited measures the Federation suggested to extend
the anti-government movement. On May 28, as the army closed in
on the city, the student bodies rejected a proposal by the Workers
Federation for a national general strike call.
Instead the central demand advanced by the student movement
was that an emergency National Peoples Congress be held to discuss
the student demands for political reforms. This was a body comprised
entirely of top party bureaucrats, whose material interests were
bound up with the ongoing suppression of the Chinese masses.
Crisis of political perspective
For two weeks Beijing was in the hands of its citizens. The
regime, however, did not sit on its hands. With the concessions
of Zhao Ziyang failing to rein in the students, Deng Xiaoping
used the time to reassemble the nerve and unity of the Stalinist
state for a bloodbath against the Beijing workers. Some 280,000
troops of the 27th Army, a unit based in peasant provinces and
totally loyal to Deng, moved to the capital, arriving on June
1.
Inexperienced politically and lacking a political perspective
outside of opposition to the existing regime, the workers' leaders
advanced no alternative to, and deferred to, the student bodies.
The workers of China knew in their life experience what they were
againstStalinism and capitalismbut they were not able
to articulate any perspective for an alternative social order.
Decades of domination by Stalinism and the active suppression
of genuine Marxism in China meant there was no revolutionary socialist,
that is Trotskyist, tendency in the working class. No organisation
within the country could spontaneously advance the program that
was implicit in the actions and sentiments of the Chinese working
classa political revolution to overthrow the Stalinist regime
and introduce major reforms into the economy for the benefit of
the working class.
Posed before the working class was the necessity to take political
power through the establishment of a workers' government and to
extend its authority and influence throughout the country. A statement
issued by the International Committee of the Fourth International,
the world Trotskyist movement, on June 8 elaborated this perspective:
The Chinese Stalinist bureaucracy has already proceeded
far down the road of capitalist restoration and therefore the
political revolution in China today will have major social implications,
first and foremost the necessity for the working class and its
revolutionary party is to expropriate the class of capitalists
sponsored by the bureaucracy, together with the foreign multinationals...
What remains of China's planned economy must be reorganised
from top to bottom... Production must be placed under the control
of factory committees, freely elected by the workers, and the
quality and pricing of commodities should be put in the hands
of a democratically organised consumers' cooperative.
Such a political revolution...would create the greatest
shock waves of social revolution throughout Asia and internationally.
Breaking the Stalinist straight-jacket of socialism in one
country' and linking up its forces to those of the workers of
Asia and internationally in the common struggle to put an end
to imperialism, the Chinese workers would create the real foundations
for developing socialism in China as part of the development of
world socialism. [9]
The aftermath of Tiananmen Square
While defiant to the end, without an independent perspective
it was only a question of time before the politically and physically
disarmed workers of Beijing would confront the full brunt of state
reaction.
The first tanks that entered Tiananmen Square on the morning
of June 4 targeted and crushed the tent headquarters of the Workers
Autonomous Federation, killing the 20 or more leaders still co-ordinating
resistance to the military.
The military subjugation of the capital was the signal for
a reign of terror throughout China. Spontaneous demonstrations
that erupted across the country, as the news of Beijing spread,
were dealt with in brutal fashion, with hundreds more workers
and students killed.
Some 40,000 people were arrested in June and July alone, the
majority being members or contacts of the Workers Federations.
Dozens of workers were sentenced to death and executed, in some
cases by public firing squads. Hundreds of workers remain in detention
today. The repression extended to the deepest levels of Chinese
society with all citizens of Beijing required to participate in
"self-criticisms", recounting their "mistakes"
during April and May.
The majority of students were treated somewhat differently.
The hunger strikers and several thousand students who had remained
at the monument to the Heroes of the Revolution as the troops
stormed through Beijing were negotiated with and permitted to
return to their campuses physically unscathed. The majority of
the student leaders were then smuggled into exile. Those students
who were arrested were generally given relatively light sentences.
Beijing University enrolments were cut for several years but then
returned to normal.
The class content of the Tiananmen Square massacre is most
graphically demonstrated however by the response of the western
politicians, media and corporations. The wave of condemnation
and revulsion expressed in June and July of 1989 soon gave way
to the far more practical considerations of profit.
Once it was clear the Stalinist regime had stabilised the political
situation, the demonstration that it would pursue its market reforms
by utilising the most repressive measures against the working
class was positively welcomed in the émigré Chinese
business community and the major corporate boardrooms around the
globe. Tiananmen Square was like a global advertisement for investmentin
China, no opposition to exploitation and oppression is tolerated.
From 1990 on, investment flowed into China at exponential levels.
In 1994 more investment entered the country than in the entire
decade from 1979-1989.
The most literal example of the crocodile tears shed for the
victims of Tiananmen came from the then Australian prime minister
Bob Hawke. He burst into tears on national television in 1989
at the scenes in Beijing. His departure from politics several
years later saw him emerge as a leading consultant for corporate
investment into China, fully exploiting his intimate personal
ties to leading Stalinist officials.
With the working class subdued and a generation of young leaders
killed, imprisoned or in exile, the regime has been able to accelerate
the restoration of the capitalist market, relatively free of mass
political opposition. The 1990s have seen the virtual completion
of the processes initiated in 1979. The bulk of state-owned firms
will have been restructured as private concerns or closed down
by the end of next year. Processes well underway will soon see
the majority of economic activity opened to foreign competition
and ownership. The 1999 National Peoples Congress elevated private
property to equivalent status with state-owned industry. It was
the final constitutional act of restoring the primacy of capitalist
social relations and ending the fiction that China is some form
of communist society.
A new upsurge of the Chinese working class against the new
bourgeoisie is however inevitable and there are numerous social
indicators that it is brewing. In this struggle workers will have
to confront the same essential political issue that emerged in
1989the necessity for an independent political perspective
from that of the petty-bourgeois democrats. Courage and determination
are not enough. A revolutionary socialist party must be built
in the Chinese working class. Its basis is to be found in the
heritage of Leon Trotsky and the International Committee of the
Fourth International.
See Also:
Deng Xiaoping
and the fate of the Chinese Revolution
[12 March 1997]
Notes:
1. Beijing's Unforgettable Spring,
Liu Binyan and Xu Gang, describing events at the Xidan intersection,
2 km west of Tiananmen Square, pp. 59-60
2. Beijing Diary, by Lu Yuan, p. 16
3. Amnesty International Report, August 30, 1989
4. The Deng Xiaoping Era: an inquiry into the fate of Chinese
socialism 1978-1994, by Maurice Meisner, p. 315
5. Chen Village: The recent history of a peasant community
in Mao's China, Anita Chan, Richard Madsen and Jonathon Unger,
cited in The Deng Xaioping Era p. 316
6. China's Crisis, Liu Binyan, p. 79
7. The Deng Xiaoping Era: an inquiry into the fate of Chinese
socialism 1978-1994, by Maurice Meisner, p. 446
8. Cited in Workers in the Tiananmen protests: The politics
of the Beijing Workers Autonomous Federation, by Andrew G.
Walder and Gong Xiaoxia, first published in the Australian
Journal of Chinese Affairs, No. 29, Jan 1993 Available at
http://www.nmis.org/gate/links/Walder.html
9. Victory to the Political Revolution in China! Statement
of the International Committee of the Fourth International,
published in Fourth International magazine, Vol 16 No 1-2,
June 1989, p.8
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