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Chinese police dragnet marks 15 years since the Tiananmen
Square massacre
By John Chan
12 June 2004
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This year marked the 15th anniversary of the brutal repression
of anti-government protests in Beijings Tiananmen Square
on June 4, 1989. Hundreds, if not thousands, of unarmed Chinese
students and workers were killed when the Stalinist bureaucracy
headed by Deng Xiaoping broke up the mass demonstrations with
tanks and troops.
A decade and a half later, none of the issues that sparked
the protests have been resolved and the Beijing leadership remains
deeply fearful of any signs of political unrest. In the leadup
to the anniversary, the Chinese authorities mobilised the full
force of the state apparatus, particularly in Beijing, to prevent
any public observance to mark the tragic events.
In the past three months, some 16,000 Internet cafes across
the country have been shut down to prevent them being used to
organise demonstrations. Some 10,000 members from paramilitary
police units specialising in suppressing urban riots were called
into an unprecedented training session in Beijing. In addition,
ministerial officials in the capital were ordered to watch a documentary
justifying the 1989 crackdown.
Across China, dozens of leading dissidents were rounded up.
According to the BBC, former military surgeon Jiang Yanyong, who
exposed the official cover-up of the SARS epidemic last year,
was one of those arrested. He wrote a letter to the top Chinese
leadership in February calling for a reassessment of the Tiananmen
events. Ding Zilin, the leader of Tiananmen mothersan
organisation of women who lost their sons or husbands in 1989told
the media that she was under 24-hour police surveillance.
On June 4, extra police, including armed paramilitary units,
were on duty in Tiananmen Square. Plain-clothes security officials
moved among the crowds. The media reported that at least 16 people
were seized by police and dragged away. An Associated Press photographer
was detained briefly for photographing the arrests. CNN broadcasts
to the major hotels and apartment blocks for foreigners were repeatedly
blacked out when footage was shown of the 1989 crackdown.
The only major protest to mark the Tiananmen Square events
occurred place in Hong Kong where between 50,000 and 80,000 people
took part in a candlelight rally at Victoria Park. The gathering
was the largest in years, reflecting continuing anger over the
1989 repression, as well as mounting hostility to Beijings
anti-democratic moves in the former British colony.
Protesters, many of them dressed in funereal black or white,
carried placards and banners, declaring Remember June 4,
Return power to people and March on July 1.
On July 1 last year, more than half a million people protested
in Hong Kong against attempts to introduce repressive new security
laws. Another protest is planned on the same day this year to
demand democratic reforms.
Many of those at the rally openly wept when footage of the
Tiananmen Square massacre was shown on a large screen. The crowd
then began chanting slogans demanding an end to Beijings
dictatorial rule and the release of detained dissidents.
Significantly, a number of people from mainland China took
part in the rally. A man from Wuxi commented to the Los Angeles
Times: Fabulous! Its just wonderful. Ill
tell my relatives and friends once I get back, and they will tell
others too, Im sure. An office manager from Guizhou
province told the Washington Post: In China, I had
only heard about the [Tiananmen Square] incident. Hong Kong people
are lucky. They can know the truth... I admire their courage.
The comments underscore the fears in Beijing that political
agitation over democratic rights in Hong Kong will spill over
onto the mainland. A Chinese source, who spoke with former president
Jiang Zemin when he toured Guangdong province in February, told
the Washington Post: They are afraid of democracy
in Hong Kong. Theyre afraid if people in the mainland see
that Hong Kong can elect its own leaders, they will ask why they
cant do the same.
Since the July 1 mass protest last year, Chinese authorities
have taken a series of measures to intimidate the Hong Kong population.
In late April, Beijing ruled out any direct election for the post
of chief executive in 2007 and, in a show of force, sailed eight
warships into Hong Kong harbour. Three popular and outspoken radio
commentators have resigned over the last month, saying they had
received death threats. Hong Kong residents have reported receiving
phone calls from relatives on the mainlandapparently after
official intimidationurging them to vote for pro-Beijing
parties in the Legislative Council elections in September.
Democracy and capitalist exploitation
Fifteen years after Western leaders shed crocodile tears for
the dead in Tiananmen Square, any remaining restrictions on doing
business in China are being rapidly lifted. The European Union
(EU) has announced that it will lift its arms embargo imposed
on China after the 1989 events. The US recently rejected calls
for economic sanctions based on claims that the wages of Chinese
workers were being artificially repressed. Together with the EU,
the US is considering declaring China to be a market economya
move that would effectively end 200 anti-dumping cases against
China.
In brushing aside the crimes of the Stalinist bureaucracy,
the claim is made that the market economy in China will inevitably
bring democracy. New York Times columnist Nicholas D. Kristof
summed up the argument: So, 15 years after Tiananmen, we
can see the Communist dynasty fraying. The aging leaders of 1989
who ordered the crackdown won the battle but lost the war: China
is no longer a Communist nation in any meaningful sense... after
the Chinese could watch Eddie Murphy, wear tight pink dresses
and struggle over what to order at Starbucks, the revolution is
finished. No middle class is content with more choices of coffees
than of candidates on a ballot.
The first point that has to be made is that China was never
socialist or communist. Mao Zedong established a regime, based
on his peasant armies, that was hostile to the working class from
the outset. Its highly regulated national economy, based on the
nationalisation of key industries, was akin to that of many so-called
Third World countries such as India. Like all forms of national
economic regulation, the insulated Chinese economy was completely
undermined by the processes of integrated global production.
The initial opening of the Chinese economy to international
capital in the 1970s became a flood after the events of Tiananmen
Square. The crackdown was aimed not so much at the students but
the workers who began to join the protests in droves to voice
their class grievances over growing unemployment and poverty.
International capital recognised the signal: the Stalinist bureaucracy
was prepared to do whatever was necessary to ensure there would
be no opposition to capitalist exploitation.
Far from creating the conditions for democracy, the last decade
and a half of market reforms has only deepened the
immense social gulf between the ruling elite and the vast bulk
of the population. While it is certainly true that a small, relatively
well-off middle class has been created, it has been at the expense
of millions of workers who have lost their jobs and tens of millions
of farmers who face increasing taxes, falling prices and a lack
of basic services. As the measures in force on June 4 testify,
the Beijing bureaucracy is terrified of allowing the Chinese masses
any genuine political say or democracy rights.
Chinas booming coastal regions depend on the continuing
massive inflow of foreign direct investment, which in turn requires
a ready supply of a cheap, regimented labour. Facing unemployment,
lack of welfare and appalling poverty, millions have been driven
from the countryside and old industrial areas to seek work in
the new sweatshops, where all the evils of primitive capitalist
accumulation are evident. Excessive hours, inadequate safety,
non-payment of wages, forced peonage and physical intimidation
are all enforced by an extensive system of police state repression.
The privileged Beijing bureaucracy, which is busy integrating
itself with the emerging Chinese capitalist class, is well aware
that it is sitting atop a social time bomb. The working class
has almost trebled in size from 120 million in 1978 to 350 million
in 2000. All the grievances that led to the 1989 protests have
only intensified over the past 15 years. There is a common saying
today among the Chinese masses: After decades of bitterness,
things are what they were before Liberation [in 1949].
The same fears are felt in international ruling circles. At
a poverty reduction conference in Shanghai in May, World Bank
President James Wolfensohn bluntly warned that Chinas growing
social unrest would lead to a political explosion. He urged Chinas
rich to build a bridge to the underclass. That
way, he said, unlike the French [aristocrats], you
will not be taken to the guillotine on July 14.
The June 10 issue of Far Eastern Economic Review pointed
to the extent of existing social discontent. According to the
magazine, at least 10 million people took part in protests in
China last year over lay-offs, official corruption or rural tax
burdens. The central government received 600,000 individual petitions
complaining of social injustices.
The International Herald Tribune reported on June 3
that recent Chinese police statistics show demonstrations by workers
and peasants rose from 8,700 in 1993 to 32,000 in 1999an
increase of 268 percentand reached 40,000 in 2000. Sichuan,
Chinas largest province, witnessed a growth in protests
of almost 20 percent last year. In northeast China, where large
sections of state-owned industries have been downsized or shut,
there were 9,559 protests involving more than 863,000 people between
January 2000 and September 2002.
The newspaper noted: For Chinas stability, a greater
concern than these raw numbers is the changing style of protest.
Police concede the demonstrators are gradually outgrowing the
deliberately small-scale, self-contained tactics they adopted
in 1990s to avoid repression. Protests are expanding in average
size, becoming more organised and confrontational, and increasingly
link demonstrators from several workplaces or neighbourhoods.
The real lesson of the past 15 years is that the expansion
of the capitalist market in China has not brought democratic rights
and decent living standards but the opposite. Workers, intellectuals
and others seeking a means of waging a political fight against
the oppressive rule of the Beijing bureaucracy and the misery
of capitalist exploitation need to turn to the international Trotskyist
movement, which alone has conducted a continuous struggle for
genuine socialism against all the crimes and betrayals of Stalinism
in China and elsewhere.
See Also:
Beijing shuts the door on democratic
reform in Hong Kong
[29 April 2004]
Political crackdown
in China as leadership prepares mass privatisations
[26 November 2003]
Chinese capitalism:
industrial powerhouse or sweatshop of the world?
[31 January 2003]
Chinese Communist
Party to declare itself open to the capitalist elite
[13 November 2002]
Ten years since the
Tiananmen Square massacre
Political lessons for the working class
[4 June 1999]
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