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Beijing detains SARS doctor for raising questions about Tiananmen
Square
By John Chan
17 July 2004
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A 72-year-old former military surgeon, Dr Jiang Yanyong, has
been arrested in China and is currently being forced to undergo
indoctrination. His alleged crime appears to be the serious
political mistake of sending an open letter to the Chinese
leadership in February demanding a reassessment of the June 4,
1989, Tiananmen Square massacre.
After several months of visits by party and military officials,
as well as weekly criticism meetings at his workplaceNo.
301 Military Hospital in Beijingthe doctor and his wife,
Hua Zhongwei, were taken away on June 1 when they attempted to
apply for a visa at the US embassy in Beijing. Prior to their
arrest, the couples movements, phone calls and email had
been under close police surveillance.
According to sources cited by the Washington Post on
July 5, Jiang is now detained and under 24-hour surveillance at
an undisclosed location in Beijing. He is forced to write daily
statements of self-criticism and to watch videotapes
related to the June 4 events to raise his political
understanding. Jiangs wife was eventually released
on June 15, after her son and daughter gave interviews to the
foreign press.
The doctor first came to public prominence last year. He received
widespread media coverage in China after he wrote an email to
Time magazine, providing details of the spread of SARS
that punctured the official cover-up of the epidemic. While Jiangs
efforts eventually helped to curb the SARS crisis, they caused
considerable embarrassment to the government. President Hu Jintao
was compelled to sack the Health Minister and the Beijing mayor
to quell public outrage over government inaction.
No move was made against him at the time, but Jiang was clearly
a marked man. According to the Washington Post, top Chinese
leaders decided in a meeting of the Politburo Standing Committee
late last year to investigate the doctor in the name of maintaining
political stability. Their concern was that the doctors
actions would encourage public criticism of other government policies
and further expose the Beijing bureaucracys lack of any
significant base of support.
In February, Jiang directed a letter to the top Chinese Communist
Party (CCP) bodies calling for an official reassessment of the
Tiananmen Square massacre. The issue is an extremely sensitive
one for the Stalinist leadership which ordered the cold-blooded
murder of hundreds of unarmed protesters using tanks and heavily
armed troops. They justified their actions as a necessary response
to a counter-revolutionary rebellion.
Jiangs detentionjust days before the 15th anniversary
of the June 4 eventswas part of a police crackdown in Beijing
and throughout China to ensure that there would be no protests
to mark the occasion. Sections of the regime were, however, nervous
about the public reaction to the arrest. An unnamed senior military
official told the Washington Post that Jiang has broad
support inside the Communist Party and that it would be increasingly
difficult for the leadership to detain him as news of this arrest
spread.
Jiangs letter, which was leaked to the foreign press
in March, contains a detailed account of his personal experiences
as a head surgeon in a military hospital in Beijing. He witnessed
first hand the slaughter of students and workers and described
the situation as the worst he had encountered in his 30 years
experience.
I was totally lost after seeing the Peoples Army
using weapons given to it by the people, to shoot their own people,
right here in the capital. Yet I did not have time to thinkmore
intensive bursts of gunfire broke out and bloodstained people
kept arriving, lying on wooden planks or tricycles, carried by
the neighbouring residents. While I attended the wounded I also
requested my coworkers to call all doctors and nurses in my department
to get to the surgery rooms as soon as possible.
There were 18 surgery rooms in my hospital and that night,
we used every inch of them for rescue work. From 10 p.m. to midnight,
our emergency unit admitted 89 people wounded by guns and seven
later died. All night, doctors divided into three teams to operate
on the patients in all the 18 surgery rooms, trying to rescue
as many people as possible. Some victims remain in my memory and
they will remain there forever.
Factional divisions
Jiang is a longstanding member of the Communist Party and his
views reflect a layer of the bureaucracy that is seeking a cautious
easing of the present police state restrictions as a means of
dissipating the immense social tensions building up in the country.
A reassessment of the Tiananmen Square massacre, which Jiang blames
on individuals not the partys policies, is a component of
this agenda.
Pointing to the debate inside the Communist Party, he wrote
in his letter: The Partys mistake must be corrected
by the Party and sooner and more comprehensive it is, the better.
I believe a reassessment of June 4 is supported by all people
and will not affect Chinas stability. The so-called stability
should come first idea, introduced after June 4 has in fact
been making the situation worse. Every year when June 4 is approaching,
certain people would feel very uncomfortable, for they do not
know how much power and effort they need to put into suppressing
the peoples dissatisfaction. The uneasiness has not gradually
diminished just because June 4 incident has become farther and
farther away. On the contrary, the people become increasingly
disappointed and angry.
The two sides of the internal debate reflect the political
dilemma confronting the Stalinist bureaucracy. Those like Jiang
argue that a reassessment of the June 4 massacre and a more liberal
form of rule, based on the emerging capitalist elite and middle
class layers, are essential if the regime is not to be swept away
by mounting dissatisfaction. They accuse their opponents of creating
political instability through their blind insistence that stability
must come first.
However, the dominant factions in Beijing point to the 1989
massacre as the reason why no concessions can be made. They blame
the political reforms promoted former party secretary
Zhao Ziyang in 1989, with support of middle class and liberal
intellectuals, for encouraging the students occupation of
Tiananmen Square to spiral out of control. They point to the fact
that the demonstrations were drawing in layers of workers and
the urban poor and taking on the character of a popular revolt.
The leadership, headed by former president Jiang Zemin, which
came to power following the bloodbath is completely opposed to
any reassessment of the events. From their experience,
any loosening of social controls or democratic concessions would
only lead to more demands and rapidly undermine the entire regime.
Jiang Zemins orientation was summed up in his three
represents theory to legitimatise private property and allow
the capitalist elite into the Communist party, while maintaining
a tight police state control over the majority of the population.
These inner party differences are tactical in character. Both
sides are preoccupied with shoring up an increasingly precarious
regime and are terrified at the prospect of a working class rebellion.
In the debate about political reform, both sides are
adamantly opposed to granting any genuine democratic rights to
masses of ordinary working people.
Fifteen years after the crackdown, the social and political
tensions that led to the protest movement have only sharpened.
The massacre sent a signal to international capital that Beijing
would use whatever means necessary to crush the opposition from
workers. As a result, billions of dollars in investment flooded
to the country.
Free market reforms have completely undermined the welfare
measures that constituted the basis of Beijings false claim
to be building socialism. To clear the way for private
capital, large sections of state-run industry have been restructured
or shut down altogether. The associated iron rice bowl
that provided workers with guaranteed employment, healthcare,
housing, free education and pensions has been destroyed.
The rising social discontent also extends to the countryside,
which was the main social base for the regime after the victory
of Mao Zedongs peasant armies in 1949. But the peasantry,
which largely remained loyal to Beijing even through the worst
years of famine and economic disaster, now constitute one of the
most unstable and rebellious layers of the population. The vast
majority of small farmers have been hard hit by market reforms,
heavy taxation and endemic corruption at all levels of government.
While unemployment has reached epidemic proportions in the
old industrial regions, tens of millions of rural Chinese have
been forced into sweatshops in the countrys coastal areas.
Not only do these workers confront unsafe conditions, long hours
and low pay inside the factories, but as migrant workers
in urban areas they lack the same basic rights and access to services
as other residents.
These appalling social conditions have created a time bomb
for which Beijing has no solution other than police repression.
These methods, however, threaten to create unrest. As a result,
various liberals and democrats argue that
the regime needs a democratic face to help defuse the tensions
and cultivate a social base among layers of the middle class.
Jiangs letter to the Chinese leadership is one of a number
of indications of concern that time is running out. An editorial
in the June issue of Cheng Ming, the Hong Kong-based journal
of the democracy movement, called on Beijing to reassess
June 4 before it was too late. History would not unlimitedly
provide you such an opportunity. There are signs that people are
losing patience, it declared.
The article cited the growing incidence of suicide protests
and angry petitions by desperate laid-off workers. It pointed
to a dissident essay circulated on the Internet calling for armed
uprisings to completely root out Communist Partys
reactionary forces in China. It warned that Beijings
policy of repression was turning Chinas poor and oppressed
towards a violent revolution and urged quick action
before the program of peaceful evolution lost further
ground.
We always insist peaceful transformation,
i.e., peacefully march to constitutional democracy through reform
of political institutions. But this is dependent on positive interaction
between the ruling party and opposition. If the regime closes
its eyes and disregards the rest of the world, then things may
change. If turmoil erupts as a result, the entire society is going
to pay a severe price. This is a consequence no one wants to see.
These comments underline the common fear in the Beijing bureaucracy
and amongst their democratic critics that a rebellion
is brewing in China that threatens to sweep away not only the
present autocratic regime but the system of capitalist exploitation
it has fostered and encouraged for the last two decades.
See Also:
Ten years since the
Tiananmen Square massacre
Political lessons for the working class
[4 June 1999]
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