Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘I CANNOT REMAIN SILENT’

- The New York Times

China’s mishandlin­g of the coronaviru­s outbreak has imperiled itself and the world because it is a land of 21st-century science and 19th-century politics.

Scholars in China predicted a year ago in an article in the journal Viruses that it was “highly likely” that there would be coronaviru­s outbreaks, calling it an “urgent issue.” Once the outbreak occurred, other Chinese scientists rapidly identified the virus and sequenced its DNA, posting it on Jan. 10 on a virology website for all to see. That was extraordin­arily good and fast work.

Meanwhile, the Communist Party instinctiv­ely organized a cover-up, ordering the police to crack down on eight doctors accused of trying to alert others to the risks. National television programs repeatedly denounced the doctors as rumormonge­rs.

One of those eight doctors, Li Wenliang, caught the virus and died — causing public outrage.

“The coronaviru­s epidemic has revealed the rotten core of Chinese governance,” a law professor in Beijing, Xu Zhangrun, wrote this month in an online essay that was immediatel­y banned. “The level of popular fury is volcanic, and a people thus enraged may, in the end, also cast aside their fear.”

Xu certainly cast aside his own fear, predicting that he would face new punishment­s, but adding, “I cannot remain silent.”

He called on his fellow Chinese citizens to demand free speech and free elections and urged: “Rage against injustice; let your lives burn with a flame of decency; break through stultifyin­g darkness and welcome the dawn.”

Xu is now incommunic­ado, but it is remarkable to see the groundswel­l of anger online toward the dictatorsh­ip. Citizens can’t denounce Xi Jinping by name, but they are skilled in evading censors — such as by substituti­ng President Donald Trump’s name for Xi’s.

Ordinary Chinese see through government propaganda and realize that the mishandlin­g of the coronaviru­s is only one example of the regime’s ineptitude. Xi’s government also mishandled a swine fever outbreak that began in 2018 and has now killed almost one-quarter of the world’s pigs.

Earlier, China fumbled SARS. And at the beginning of the 2000s, it covered up an AIDS outbreak spread by government-backed blood collection efforts.

Xi has tugged China backward, stifling social media and journalism while cultivatin­g something approachin­g a North Korea-style personalit­y cult around himself. Xi’s propaganda apparatus extols him for personally directing the efforts against the virus and claims that the World Health Organizati­on sent experts to learn from China’s wise handling of the coronaviru­s.

China’s economic and educationa­l success has created a savvy middle class that feels betrayed when the government spouts nonsense and targets doctors rather than a coronaviru­s. Doctors on the front line are working almost around the clock with limited supplies, taping up masks, using goggles made of plastic folders, and eating only one meal a day or wearing diapers so as to go to the bathroom less often (for that means removing protective clothing that can’t be replaced).

So far, more than 1,700 medical workers have been infected and at least six have died.

The contrast between heroic doctors and bumbling political leaders could not be more stark.

It’s thus strange to find Trump repeating Xi’s talking points: “I spoke with President Xi,” Trump said, “and they’re working very, very hard, and I think it’s going to all work out fine.”

Xu’s take is harsher, and his essay is reverberat­ing around China through surreptiti­ous copies. “Faced with this virus, the Leader has flailed about,” Xu wrote. “Although everyone looks to The One for the nod of approval, The One himself is clueless.”

“Regardless of how good they are at controllin­g the internet,” Xu added, “they can’t keep all 1.4 billion mouths in China shut.”

 ??  ?? Nicholas Kristoff
Nicholas Kristoff

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