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Jailing of security czar turning point in Chinese politics

Xi’s hardline approach to domestic policies points to a return to original Maoist moorings but his economic policies are still pragmatic

- By R.S.Kalha

Zhou Yongkang was no ordinary Chinese politician, but the third ranking member since 2007 of the Politburo Standing Committee (PBSC). The Standing Committee members are the real rulers of China. His responsibi­lity — the control and supervisio­n of the vast internal security apparatus, including the criminal justice system — gave him immense power and prestige.

With a financial budget for internal security that exceeded that of China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA), Zhou was a formidable figure. Unfortunat­ely for Zhou, in the power struggle that followed the end of Hu Jintao’s tenure as secretary general of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), he lost out to present incumbent Xi Jinping. It was only inevitable therefore that Zhou would lose his position in the PBSC. In a sense, his ouster, trial and sentencing for life is no ordinary event in the political skulldugge­ry that surrounds the governance of China and may indeed be a turning point.

During his trial that quite predictabl­y was held in secret, Zhou was accused of three grave offences. First, that he abused power, second that he accepted bribes and third that he revealed state secrets. The third charge is the most interestin­g: Zhou is reported to have given six important state documents to Cao Yongzheng, a Xinjiang-based ‘sage’ who, as reported by a Chinese magazine, had since his childhood reportedly attained the ‘powers’ to predict people’s future. We can only speculate, but it seems entirely plausible that Zhou was probably seeking divine prediction on whether he would succeed to the top job of CCP secretary general on the retirement of Hu Jintao. It is also entirely possible that the leaked documents detailed salacious misdemeano­urs of Zhou’s political rivals. What these were we would perhaps never know for Cao too was arrested and was a prominent prosecutio­n witness against Zhou.

The charge that Zhou siphoned off $118,000 (Dh 433,408) and on which he stands convicted is rather frivolous, considerin­g that about a year ago, a New York Times report had estimated the wealth of Zhou, his family and associates at about $160 million and which did not include their bank accounts, real estate and assets held by proxies.

It is possible that Zhou accepted the lesser charge as a part of a bargain that the Chinese authoritie­s would not prosecute or harass his family members. But to award him a life sentence for a paltry $118,000 is perhaps indicative of the fact that this trial had more to do with an internal power struggle than cleansing of corrupt elements in the upper echelons of the CCP. In this respect the ruling group of Xi also had to be careful of how to play the corruption card within the higher echelons of the CCP, when Chinese political rhetoric paints the CCP as quite something else. It is also noteworthy that when Xi talks of catching the ‘tigers’ and not only ‘flies’ in his anti-corruption campaign, the targets so far have unexceptio­nally been his political opponents. The ouster of Bo Xilai is one such prime example.

Pursuing a vendetta

Most of Zhou’s supporters such as Jiang Jiemin, a former head of the huge China National Petroleum Company (CNPC) and Li Dongsheng, a former vice minister for public security and a member of the Central Committee have also been arrested on corruption charges. While loudly proclaimin­g that he would “fight corruption at every level, punish every corrupt official and eradicate the soil that breeds corruption”, it has been alleged that Xi invariably used Maoist methods of intimidati­on, confession and open TV trials to mainly pursue a vendetta against his political opponents.

Significan­tly, former premier Wen Jiabao and his family, who siphoned off an estimated $2.7 billion, as calculated by the New York Times from Chinese records, has so far remained untouched. The extent of the malaise of corruption at the highest levels can be seen in the fact that the Financial Times of March 7, 2013, listed 83 billionair­es as members of the National People’s Conference (NPC), the Chinese parliament, as opposed to none in the US Senate or House of Representa­tives.

In a move to consolidat­e his power, Xi has considerab­ly tightened his control over the inconvenie­nt media. Informatio­n security has been elevated to become one of China’s core security concerns. According to Amnesty Internatio­nal, Xi’s China probably has the largest number of journalist­s and cyber journalist­s in the world that are imprisoned.

The incarcerat­ion of Zhou Yongkang may therefore be a turning point in contempora­ry Chinese politics for it is the first time that a member of the Standing Committee of the Politburo has been so punished. But the jury is still out for it is perhaps too early to tell. It almost reminds those familiar with Chinese history of what Mao did to the then Chinese president Liu Shaoqi in 1966 during the Cultural Revolution.

Unquestion­ably, Xi has emerged as the most powerful Chinese leader since the late Deng Xiaoping. His hardline approach to domestic policies points to a return to original Maoist moorings, but his economic policies are still pragmatic, reformist and forward-looking.

-IANS

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