25 May, 2012 AsiaNews.it Twitter AsiaNews.it Facebook         

Help AsiaNews | About us | P.I.M.E. | | Newsletter




Voli Low Cost Roma
Voli Milano




mediazioni e arbitrati, risoluzione alternativa delle controversie e servizi di mediazione e arbitrato

e-mail this to a friend printable version


» 09/25/2009 13:09
CHINA
Give power back to the people, says Bao Tong on the PRC’s 60th anniversary
A former aide to Zhao Ziyang, held by the authorities for 20 years, talks about how Chinese leaders are preparing to celebrate their so-called power, whilst hiding the country’s real problems: corruption, lack of freedom and civil rights, and pollution. He insists that all the people of China want is more democracy and freedom.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) – “"How should patriots show their love and concern for their country? By returning power to the people and building a republic,” wrote Bao Tong, a former party official as he commented the 60th anniversary of the proclamation of the Communist state.

In an essay that reached Radio Free Asia, Bao said that this anniversary was not a happy one because “All of the great mistakes at a national level with far-reaching consequences were committed under the planning and leadership of the Communist Party.”

"The People's Republic of China is not a republic at all,” he said. It “is a sort of pathology. [. . .] It consists in the systemic erosion of the rights of citizens to all sorts of things, including elections and private property, by the Party leadership over the last 60 years.”

As a close aide to former Communist Party chief Zhao Ziyang (pictured, Bao showing a  photo of Zhao), Bao fell from grace for supporting greater democracy and opposing the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.  For this reason, he was sent to prison for seven years and has been under house arrest after his release.

He is highly critical of the parading of “prosperity” and “rise of China” that leaders want to project on this anniversary, forgetting the “rampant official corruption and an ever-widening gap between rich and poor.”

“Hidden troubles shouldn't be allowed to remain packaged up in talk of 'great and mighty results,' for the sake of our children, our grandchildren, and all their descendants,” he said.

For Bao, China’s so-called progress has been reached through “the plunder of natural resources and the laying waste of the environment”.

Worse still, the government's emphasis on stability has led to the "collapse of personal freedoms, religious freedom, ethnic autonomy, and freedoms of speech, protest and demonstration”. On the contrary, “democracy, openness, competition and meritocracy” are goals to be pursued.

That Is why, “returning power to the people and building a republic” is necessary for the sake of China. “The legitimacy of a republic rests on universal, direct elections. It is the sacred duty of every patriotic citizen to promote universal, direct elections in which there is true competition between candidates,” Bao wrote.

No political party should be given the right to field an approved list of candidates, or to interfere with the right of any candidate to enter the field or to take up their post if they are elected.

Instead, Beijing does exactly the opposite. In order to enforce security ahead of the 1 October celebrations, the authorities have shut down important websites and online discussion forums, arresting those who complain about unjust deeds by the authorities.

Ethnic tensions are swept under carpet; dissidents and civil rights advocates are silenced; warnings are issued against protesting or demonstrating against the government; all this done in order not to unsettle the image of power and harmony that the world will pretend to believe.


e-mail this to a friend printable version

See also
01/29/2005 CHINA
About 2,000 people attend Zhao's funeral
12/12/2008 CHINA
Arrests continue for signers of Charter 08
01/24/2005 CHINA
Doubts linger over Zhao's funeral
05/15/2009 CHINA
Zhao Ziyang’s memoirs reveal new “secrets” about the Tiananmen Square massacre
04/28/2009 CHINA
Falun Gong members commemorate 10 years of persecution in China
CHINA
Celebrating 60 years of (censored) history in China
CHINA
The military parade of 60 years: Only socialism can save China
CHINA
60 years of the PRC: Christian churches say the Party is not God
CHINA
60 years in the PRC: From Mao to now, the corruption of power
CHINA
60 years of the People’s Republic of China: the Party against the people

Editor's choices
VATICAN - CHINA
"Porta Fidei": the Pope's Apostolic Letter for the Year of Faith now in ChineseA tool to renew the "joy" and " enthusiasm of our encounter with Christ", written shortly before the World Day of Prayer for the Church in China (May 24). The Day and "Porta Fidei" emphasize the importance of understanding the faith and to witness it in public, in unity with the pope.
VATICAN
Pope calls on Chinese Catholics to be faithful to Church and consistent in their faithAt the Regina Caeli, Benedict XVI says that with the ascension, Jesus "has separated from us." A remembrance for victims of attack on Brindisi school and the earthquake in Emilia. An encouragement for the pro-life movement.
CHINA
Chen Guangcheng and Beijing's failure to reform
by Willy Wo-Lap LamIndividuals activists are not China's real challenge, social stability and keeping the Communist Party in power are. Chinese leaders run the risk however of losing control of the huge, expensive and ever-expanding security apparatus they are building. As illustrated by the Bo Xilai case, this could lead to unexpected and disastrous consequences. Here is the analysis of one of the foremost experts of modern China.

Dossier
by Gheddo P. Fazzini G.
pp. 336
by Buono Giuseppe, Pelosi Patrizia
pp. 432
by Giulio Aleni / (a cura di) Gianni Criveller
pp. 176
by Lazzarotto Angelo S.
pp. 528
by Bernardo Cervellera
pp. 240
Copyright © 2003 AsiaNews C.F. 00889190153 All rights reserved. Content on this site is made available for personal, non-commercial use only. You may not reproduce, republish, sell or otherwise distribute the content or any modified or altered versions of it without the express written permission of the editor. Photos on AsiaNews.it are largely taken from the internet and thus considered to be in the public domain. Anyone contrary to their publication need only contact the editorial office which will immediately proceed to remove the photos.