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Anti-Japanese protests erupt in China
By John Chan
8 April 2005
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Proposed UN reforms that could place Japan on the Security
Council have become the target of a wave of protests across China.
Along with a widespread Internet petition, demonstrations have
taken place in a number of cities outside Japanese retail stores.
Initially encouraged by the state-owned media as a means of whipping
up nationalist sentiment, the movement is now also turning on
the government for failing to take a sufficiently tough line against
Japan.
Several overseas Chinese organisations initiated the campaign
in late February with a petition urging UN secretary-general Kofi
Annan to exclude Japan from the UN Security Council. The petition
gathered momentum late last month when Annan formally announced
his UN reform plan. Major Chinese websites posted the petition,
and, according official Xinhua news agency, 22.2 million signatures
had been gathered by late last week.
The Financial Times reported: Via the Internet,
the petition has been distributed through universities and workplaces
with a stirring patriotic message and a user-friendly format to
attract signatories. The anti-Japanese sentiments reflect
deeply-felt anger over Japans reluctance to apologise for
the atrocities of the Japanese military during World War II in
which an estimated 35 million Chinese were killed, and fears of
about Japanese remilitarisation.
Changes to the UN Security Council are just one aspect of Annans
reform package, which is due to be discussed in the UN in September.
A number of countries, including Japan and Germany, are vying
for a permanent seat on the Security Council which is currently
limited to the US, Russia, China, Britain and France. China, which
as a permanent Security Council member has a veto, is yet to decide
its stance on Japan.
The issue flared up again this week after Tokyo approved the
publication of a new high school history textbook that openly
whitewashes Japans wartime record, describing the Japanese
army as a liberator in China and other Asian countries.
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has encouraged the falsification
of history in line with his governments more aggressive
stance towards China and in the region.
News of the textbook triggered a boycott of Asahi Breweries,
Japans major beverage maker, in the northeastern Chinese
city of Changchun. The protest organisers accused the company
of supporting the new book. Other Japanese goods, including beauty
products and shampoo, have been affected as the boycott spread
to other cities. Similar protests have taken place in South Korea
where the government has openly opposed Japans membership
of the UN Security Council.
Comments have appeared on the Internet denouncing the Beijing
regime for failing to take a tougher stand. Senior diplomat Wu
Jianming has been a particular target. He publicly argued that
China should decide on Japans membership of the UN Security
Council in a rational manner, pointing out that China
was now Japans largest trading partner.
One comment read: How can China stand firm when its state
leaders are all impotent. If China gives approval this time, the
state leaders have no right to sit in their current positionslet
them go home and embrace their kids.
A petition organiser Tong Zeng told the New York Times
on April 1: China must vote no and not just abstain. The
government may not want to take the lead, but the Chinese people
have taken the lead...There has never been a petition campaign
of this magnitude in China. It will be much harder for the government
to suppress in the future.
Last Saturday 10,000 protestors in Chengdu, the provincial
capital of Sichuan, massed outside two Japanese-owned department
stores and smashed windows. The following day, anti-Japanese protests
and riots erupted in several other cities. In Guangzhou, 10,000
people signed a 10-metre red banner bearing anti-Japanese slogans.
In the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone, at least 3,000 people marched
with anti-Japanese banners and chanted slogans such as For
the downfall of Japanese imperialism and Boycott Japanese
goods.
Hundreds of police, including riot squads, were sent to Shenzhen
to protect two major Japanese department stores which the protestors
tried to storm. The police presence angered the crowd which was
joined by sympathetic onlookers. To placate protestors, the police
allowed them to hang a Chinese flag from the Seibu store. An open
letter called on Japan to apologise for its massive atrocities
against the people of Asia and declared all peace-loving
and tolerant Chinese must not allow this.
A double-edged sword
Beijing is deeply concerned that the protests will escalate
out of its control. Having openly embraced the capitalist market,
the regime is ideologically dependent on Chinese nationalism as
a means of diverting hostility and anger over the countrys
deepening social divide. The government deliberately cultivates
backwardness and nationalism among layers of youth as expressed
in last years riot by Chinese fans at the Asian Soccer Cup
final when China lost to Japan.
At the same time, Beijing is fearful that a protest on any
issue can rapidly become the focus of anti-government resentment
and hostility. The same dilemma confronted the regime in 1999
after NATO warplanes provocatively bombed the Chinese embassy
in Yugoslavia. After initially giving the green light to protests
outside the US embassy in Beijing, the leadership rapidly cracked
down on demonstrations as tens of thousands joined and the movement
threatened to get out of control.
While blaming the Japanese government for the recent protests,
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang appealed for calm,
declaring: We hope the Chinese people will express their
positions in a rational manner. Even before Tokyo called
for the protection of Japanese businesses in China, police had
begun to move against protesters. In Taizhou city in eastern Zhejiang
province, for example, plainclothes police attacked a group of
anti-Japanese protestors and injured four people last Sunday.
According to the Hong Kong-based Open magazine last
September, former Chinese leader Jiang Zemin was alarmed by the
soccer riot of extreme nationalists who, he argued,
were not targeting the Japanese but the central government.
He warned that the so-called anti-Japanese patriotic movement
would threaten political stability. The comments foreshadowed
a crackdown in universities against anti-Japanese
activities.
Beijing is well aware of the historical precedents such as
May 4 movement in 1919, which was sparked by the decision at the
Versailles peace conference to hand Germanys colonial concessions
in China to Japan. Mass protests of students and workers not only
targetted Japan but Chinas corrupt government for accepting
the conference decision. This anti-imperialist struggle anticipated
the founding of the Chinese Communist Party and the revolutionary
eruption in 1925-27.
The Communist Party long ago abandoned its founding principles
of international socialism. While promoting nationalism, Beijing
acts as a comprador or middle-man for transnational corporations
and enforces the brutal exploitation of Chinese workers through
police-state measures. The oppressive conditions of the Chinese
working class today are often compared with those of workers in
1920s and 1930s when child labour and sweatshop conditions were
widespread.
Beijing continues to open up the economy to foreign investors.
Last month, for instance, the state-owned Shanghai Electric GroupChinas
largest heavy electric-machinery makerwas in Tokyo trying
to sell its 28 plants to major Japanese corporations. China is
now Japans largest export market as Japanese companies sell
machinery and parts and set up operations to exploit the vast
pool of cheap labour. In northeastern China, Japanese firms are
establishing call centres to take advantage of a low-cost, Japanese-speaking
workforcea legacy of Japans colonial rule over the
region in the 1930s.
As a result, Beijing is concerned about the economic impact
of anti-Japanese protests. Zhu Yehon, a Shenzhen-based economist,
warned in the Hong Kong-based Standard: If we boycott
all Japanese goods, our economy will be paralyzed immediately.
Chinese companies are under pressure to reconsider joint ventures
with Japanese firms. These include a planned $US1 billion project
by Nissan with state-owned Dongfeng Automobile, and a $920 million
operation involving Nippon Steel and Chinas largest steel
maker, Baosteel.
Beijing is attempting to walk a fine line. To placate resentment
over Japans new history textbook, Beijing protested that
the publication seriously hurt the feelings of Chinese people.
But it is hoping to avoid taking a clear stand on Japans
membership of the UN Security Council and thereby offending Tokyo.
Through these manoeuvres, the government is seeking to head off
an eruption of protests, not only against Japan, but over the
economic and social crisis that it has created.
See Also:
China's "anti-secession
law" adds to tension in North East Asia
[16 March 2005]
Chinese president preaches
the need for "a harmonious society"
[12 March 2005]
Mass demonstrations
in China express outrage at NATO bombing
[10 May 1999]
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