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A show of force by the Chinese military in Hong Kong
By John Chan
5 August 2004
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For the first time since Beijing took over the former British
colony in 1997, the Chinese military held a parade of troops and
armoured vehicles through the streets of Hong Kong on August 1.
The spectacle was nominally organised to mark the 77th anniversary
of the founding of Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) but its purpose
was more sinistera show of force designed to demonstrate
that Beijing was firmly in control.
About 3,000 soldiersnine infantry columns and two armoured
columnswere involved. Twelve military helicopters flew overhead
while the Chinese national and army anthems blared out in order
to create an atmosphere of patriotic fervour. Among the audience
were high-ranking officials of the Hong Kong government, including
Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa.
Wang Jitang, the PLA commander in Hong Kong, declared that
the military parade displays the armys strength and
determination to maintain Hong Kongs prosperity and stability.
He also emphasised the PLA would actively support the Special
Administrative Zone government headed by Mr Tung to implement
its policy according to the law.
The message came across loud and clear: if need be, the PLA
will intervene in Hong Kong to head off political unrest and prop
up the Tung administration. The timing of the parade was blatantly
political. After all, no Chinese troops marched through the streets
of Hong Kong two years ago to mark the more significant 75th anniversary
of the PLAs founding.
The turnout to watch the parade was estimated at 27,000a
tiny fraction of the hundreds of thousands who joined the Hong
Kong protest on July 1 to demand democratic and social reforms.
Moreover, while many of those who observed the military parade
last week had been prodded and cajoled into attending, those who
participated in the protest did so in defiance of official attempts
at intimidation.
On July 1 last year, a huge rally of half a million people
gathered to oppose the Tung governments draconian anti-subversion
bill. The demonstration provoked rifts in the Hong Kong administration
and eventually forced it to modify, then finally withdraw, the
legislation. July 1originally a public holiday to mark the
anniversary of Hong Kongs handover to Beijinghas now
become a day of political protest.
This years demonstration was called in response to the
decision of the Standing Committee of the National Peoples
Congress in Beijing in April to rule out any direct election of
the post of Chief Executive in 2007 and for the entire Legislative
Council in 2008. The attendance was estimated at between 200,000
and 500,000, despite attempts by opposition legislators to reach
a compromise with Beijing.
Significantly, a number of Democratic Party politicians accepted
invitations to attend the military parade last weekend. In Hong
Kong, the Chinese military is associated with the brutal crackdown
on anti-government protestors in Tiananmen Square in June 1989.
The massacre provoked a massive protest demonstration by more
than one million people in Hong Kong and the anniversary continues
to be marked each year by a rally.
Democratic Party chairman Yeung Sum declared that he had been
impressed by the PLAs military display. He told
the media that he wanted to sit down with central government
officials to talk about residents concerns, such as political
reform. He expressed the hope that opposition legislators
would be invited to Beijing for discussions after the Legislative
Council elections in September.
To date Beijing has shunned any dialogue with Democratic Party
leaders, a number of whom are banned from travelling to China.
The Democratic Party, however, is more than willing to reach an
accommodation with the Chinese leadership in order to head off
social and political unrest. Yeung and others expressed their
dissatisfaction at not being able to meet with Beijing officials
or speak at the military parade.
Beijing is clearly worried about the outcome of the Legislative
Council elections. In district-level elections last November,
pro-Beijing parties were defeated in a massive landslide. The
Democratic Party and its allies expect another easy win in next
months contest for half of the 60 Legislative Council seats.
While pro-Beijing appointees will fill the remainder of the seats,
Chinese authorities are concerned that political unrest in Hong
Kong will spill over onto the mainland.
Under the agreement between Britain and China, the Hong Kong
special administrative zone was to operate under the principle
of one country, two systems and to move toward a fully
representative form of government. But any granting of even limited
democratic rights in Hong Kong will only fuel demands for similar
reforms elsewhere in China.
Following last years protest, the Chinese authorities
allowed residents from some 20 Chinese cities to visit Hong Kong
as tourists to boost its depressed economy and create more jobs.
But the measure has created political problems as thousands of
mainland visitors have not only seen the tourist sites but spoken
to local residents and even taken part in protest rallies.
At the same time, the growing use of mobile phones and the
Internet has made it increasingly difficult for the Beijings
propaganda machine to retain its monopoly. News of political unrest
in Hong Kong has filtered into China and emboldened protesters
there to voice their grievances over rampant official corruption,
growing poverty and employment, and the lack of basic democratic
rights.
An article in the New York Times, for example, warned
on August 1 that despite being the worlds fastest-growing
economy, the social divide between rich and poor and between
urban areas and rural provinces, is making China one of the worlds
most unequal societies.
The countryside simmers with unrest. Farmers flock to
cities to find work. The poor demand social, economic and political
benefits that the Communist Party has been reluctant to deliver...
Even in a country that ruthlessly punishes dissent, some three
million people took part in protests last year, police data show.
Most were farmers, laid off workers and victims of official corruption,
who blocked roads, swarmed government offices, even immolated
themselves in Tiananmen Square in Beijing to demand social justice.
The article focused on the frustration felt among hundreds
of millions of rural peasantstraditionally a bellwether
of social stability. Not only are they suffering under heavy taxation
and official corruption, but are treated as second-class citizen
in cities where they are denied the rights of residents and access
to basic services.
It also noted that matters were getting worse. This year,
the number of destitute poor, which China classifies as those
earning less than $75 a year, increased for the first time in
25 years. The government estimates that the number of people in
this lowest stratum grew by 800,000, to 85 million people, even
as the economy grew by a robust 9 percent.
The New York Times does not, of course, draw the obvious
connection: as in the US, the economic growth that has enriched
a tiny layer of the Chinese elite has been at the expense of the
vast majority. And as elsewhere in the world, the program of market
reform and economic restructuring is deeply popular in China.
Noting the recent surprise election defeat of the Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) in India, Chen Xiwen, an adviser to Premier
Wen Jiabao, told the newspaper: India does show that if
this problem [of growing social inequality] cannot be managed
rationally, it could become a danger.
The response of the Stalinist bureaucracy to protest and discontent
in China has been repression. It will be no different in Hong
Kong. Last weekends military parade was meant as a warning
that continued opposition to Beijing and demands for democratic
rights will be met with police state methods.
See Also:
Huge protest rally in Hong
Kong demands democratic and social reform
[6 July 2004]
Beijing shuts the door on democratic
reform in Hong Kong
[29 April 2004]
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