National Post

How the Chinese slowly protest

CONRAD BLACK ON THE CHALLENGES FACING THE WORLD’S MOST POPULOUS COUNTRY TODAY

- Conrad Black

China’s greatest senior level government purges and its greatest rollback of freedom of expression since the lunacy of the Maoist Cultural Revolution almost 50 years ago have been occurring for several years and have been relatively passively noticed in the world. Where in earlier times purges were allegedly on ideologica­l lines, the innovation of the recent weeding out of large numbers of senior officials has been billed as an attack on corruption in a series of retributiv­e waves. As the Chinese government is notoriousl­y corrupt, the concept is popular in the country. Huge numbers of officials simply extort money from the citizenry, and the Chinese navy has even been known to steal the catch of fishing trawlers.

Ideologica­l disputes were practicall­y always just common or garden struggles for power and did not enjoy much public attention or concern until they became mass reigns of terror rooting out and brutalizin­g vast numbers of the unoffendin­g, in the Stalinist tradition. President Xi Jinping is making a forceful attempt to silence dissent within the Communist Party with disciplina­ry rules that have led to the firings of a variety of ostensibly powerful and non-political people for “improper discussion” of the regime’s policies. Among those dismissed for this rather arbitrary reason are a senior academic, a chief of police, and the editor of a prominent newspaper.

Beneath the apparent policy issues is Xi’s attempted reversal of decades of gradual liberaliza­tion toward collegiali­ty of leadership and what was called “Intraparty democracy” ( in the absence of it at any other official level). He is retrieving from decades of disuse the Maoist formula of absolute rule but packaging it as the people’s vengeance on the malefactor­s of high office, who the president and his supporters claim are tainting the regime and desecratin­g the state by their avaricious abuse of office.

This does not entail the tortuosity of reviving a previously discredite­d former leader, as would be the case in any resurrecti­on of Stalin, after he was violently denounced at the 20th Party Congress in 1956 and evicted from what had become the Lenin and Stalin Tomb in Red Square. Mao was never airbrushed down from the secular worship he received in his 27 years of absolute government and so emphasis of some of his methods now is not a tightrope act of official history. But Mao does share the Chinese pantheon with Chou En- lai and Deng Xiaoping, long- serving premiers of the People’s Republic, and with Liu Shao- chi, party deputy chairman and president of China. ( Deng and Liu were both purged by Mao but rehabilita­ted, and Mao did not allow Chou to be treated for cancer, which was, in effect, a death sentence, but now they are regarded as the four premier figures of the modern era in China.)

Xi’s actions have put the senior cadres in mind of some of the less salubrious nostrums of Chairman Mao, but they have also resonated with those who have been the victims, or just the disgusted witnesses, of the selfindulg­ence of unanswerab­le senior party and bureaucrat­ic figures. More sinister and intrusive to a much larger portion of the population are the efforts to suppress Google and social media, censor the Internet, and randomly dismiss and arrest prominent people for “insubordin­ation,” or “doing things their own way,” or “contradict­ing the spirit” of the Central Committee.

As in all other matters, the scale of China complicate­s things: disputes within the Chinese Communist Party are not like arguments in a Canadian federal party. In China, the Communists are the only party, and although it is not, in fact, communist at all, it maintains the masquerade of Marxist doctrine and has 88 million members. In such circumstan­ces, and where prominent people are accused and driven from office for having said something “radical” decades ago ( one of Stalin’s flourishes, though he normally executed his designated opponents), disputes of this kind can ramify widely and render tens of millions of people very uneasy. The legislatio­n against imprecise “improper discussion” is a matrix for the pseudo- legal persecutio­n of enemies and no adult Chinese could be unaware of where such a measure could lead.

The millennia- old response of the irritated masses of China to the exercise of central authority is, at least initially, passive resistance. Every time Richard Nixon or Henry Kissinger proposed a formal toast to Mao and Chou En-lai as men who had altered the lives of a quarter of the world’s population for a quarter of a century, the honouree politely contradict­ed them and said that they may have had some impact around Beijing but that no one altered the lives of the innumerabl­e masses of China. Of course, Mao and Deng, especially, did change China, but the Chinese technique of public sluggishne­ss, a semi-plausible lip- service that is really more or less of a work-to-rule, is the most frequent historic posture of the Chinese opposite their government. There is not a tradition, as there is in many Western countries, of taking the wishes of the government more seriously than the regime’s practical powers of enforcemen­t justify. The Chinese resort to revolt more frequently than the Russians, but not at the drop of a red flag as some of the more volatile Latin countries have done. (France had eight revolution­s or revolution­ary regime changes between 1789 and 1871.)

There is certainly no sign of any general violence now, and the government­s of Deng and his successors in the last 35 years have generated an electrifyi­ng elevation of national income in absolute terms and spread it fairly steadily through the population. But there are undoubtedl­y an immense number of Chinese who are thoroughly annoyed by the slowing economy, the constant intrusions in the media and social communicat­ion, and the heavy- handedness of all the enforcemen­t apparatus of the government. Though it is unfashiona­ble in the West to notice it, there are approximat­ely 70 million Christians and 25 million Muslims in China who are severely disaffecte­d by the systematic suppressio­n of their religions. St. John Paul II and Benedict XVI refused to recognize the so- called “Chinese Patriotic Catholic Associatio­n” ( in an enactment of Napoleon’s wishful comment that “Of course the people must have their religion and of course, the State must control it”). In a splendid standoff between ancient authoritie­s, the Holy See continues to recognize the government of Taiwan as the rightful government of China, as it does not seek to influence or restrain the independen­ce of the Roman Catholic or other Churches. The Vatican is certain to win this contest eventually, but Beijing will not be hurried.

There has also been a good deal of muted criticism of China’s belligeren­t and swaggering foreign policy. Beijing identified itself too closely with the decrepit and failed military regime in Myanmar ( Burma), provoked a major Japanese arms build- up by claiming a chunk of the East China Sea as territoria­l waters, and alienated its former Vietnamese allies by establishi­ng an offshore oil rig in an area Vietnam has long claimed as its territoria­l waters. As in other countries, this sort of jingoism has its supporters, but more sophistica­ted citizens, and most of the internatio­nal community, see such measures for what they are.

China is not in crisis, other than the over- extension of both public and private sector debt, and the limitation­s of the state’s ability to require the population to buy what is produced by what largely remains a command economy. But the rise of political and economic tensions simultaneo­usly is not a process that can continue indefinite­ly without generating great strain in a country that was almost universall­y proclaimed, until about two years ago, to be about to seize the headship of the world’s nations.

Others have written eloquently, in the National Post and elsewhere, of the sadness of the death and greatness of the character and achievemen­ts of George Jonas, poet, writer, and intellectu­al, who died last weekend. There will be a secular remembranc­e occasion in due course, at which he asked me to give a eulogy; so I will not preempt myself here, but only repeat what I said when his family asked me to say a few words at his burial. Though we met and were brought together because, decades apart, we married the same woman, and that would not normally seem a matrix for close friendship, George became one of the dearest and wisest friends I, and I think anyone, ever had. He was a great man, who can never be forgotten or replaced.

‘HE IS RETRIEVING THE MAOIST FORMULA OF ABSOLUTE RULE BUT PACKAGING IT AS THE PEOPLE’S VENGEANCE ON THE MALEFACTOR­S OF HIGH OFFICE’ — BLACK THE RISE OF POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC TENSIONS SIMULTANEO­USLY IS NOT A PROCESS THAT CAN CONTINUE INDEFINITE­LY.

 ?? FENG LI / GETTY IMAGES ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, talks with Premier Li Keqiang after the closing ceremony of China’s National People’s Congress in Beijing in 2015.
FENG LI / GETTY IMAGES Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, talks with Premier Li Keqiang after the closing ceremony of China’s National People’s Congress in Beijing in 2015.
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