China threatens France over Dalai honour

Posted by stuart on May 7th, 2009
2009
May 7

An assertive China is one thing; a global playground bully is quite another. The playground comment is entirely appropriate because China’s leaders are behaving like children again:

BEIJING (AFP) – China warned Paris Thursday not to make more “errors” on Tibet amid news the Dalai Lama may be made an honorary citizen of the French capital, just as frosty ties between the two nations had improved.

“We urge the Paris side to stop doing things that interfere in China’s internal affairs and make no further errors on the Tibet-related issue.”

“If the Paris city government does make this award, it will definitely meet once again with the Chinese people’s firm opposition,” foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu told reporters.

The characterisation of the proposed Honour as an “error” is a typically aggressive Chinese response to anything that isn’t consistent with the CCP’s love affair with obedience: do what we say, or get punished.   

Read more here.

The line ‘interference in China’s internal affairs’ has been tiresome for years. It’s also full of crap. Beijing simply doesn’t like the fact that His Holiness is regarded throughout the world (with one petulant exception) as a decent peace-loving man. Honours for such individuals are entirely appropriate and are not, I would boldly suggest, matters for China to ‘interfere’ with.

Unfortunately, irresponsible despots have no qualms about using economic blackmail to get their petty way on this and other issues. Appeasing China by backing down, as South Africa did recently, is going to lead the world to a bad place. China must grow up to the fact that not everyone shares their world view. 

I sincerely hope that the French government and people stand up to China on this, and that other world leaders offer their support for that position. Not to do so will only embolden China’s leaders to make increasing demands of the countries they do business with.

Give the Dalai Lama his honour, not to annoy China, but because you were going to do it anyway and because France feels that it is deserved. DO NOT BACK DOWN.

Update

While France ponders, the Dutch, it appears, are showing signs of courage.

Chai Ling: then and now

Posted by stuart on May 5th, 2009
2009
May 5
Chai Ling: then and now

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/

Timesonline reports that Chai Ling, the contemplative figure on the left in this thought provoking photo taken in 1989, is suing the makers of a film about the massacre in Tiananmen Square. What makes this move so startling is that Chai Ling was one of the leaders of the ill-fated student uprising in Beijing that same year. Her critics are arguing that she has abandoned the principle of free speech, one of the very freedoms sought by the 1989 movement.
 
Beside her in the picture is a youthful looking Phillip Cunningham, who conducted a famous interview with Chai shortly before troops were ordered to fire on their own people. In that interview Chai Ling spoke ominously of what was to follow shortly after: 

“Only when the square is awash with blood will the people of China open their eyes. Only then will they really be united. But how can I explain this to my fellow students?”

“The students kept asking, ‘What should we do next? What can we accomplish?’ I feel so sad, because how can I tell them that what we are actually hoping for is bloodshed, for the moment when the Government has no choice but to brazenly butcher us?
Chai Ling: then and now

http://www.jenzabar.net/

Prophetic, chilling words.

Those that looked to her for leadership at that time, those loyal followers that protected her from the authorities and plotted her escape to the west, must be feeling a little abandoned at this moment. Assuming, that is, they survived the punitive backlash in the months that followed.

I think they could accept Chai Ling’s willingness to move on or her viewing the student uprising differently with the benefit of two decades’ reflection, but adopting a sweep-it-under-the-carpet approach more reminiscent of the CCP has got to leave a bitter taste.

Worse still, Chai Ling’s betrayal of her ideals helps to paint a false picture of the Tiananmen ringleaders as self-serving individuals who placed personal ambition before the people’s needs. Fortunately, other prominent student leaders of the time speak more openly about 6/4, as in the excellent recent article by Isabel Hilton at The Observer (well worth a read).

And what of Phillip Cunningham’s forthcoming book Tiananmen Moon? Cunningham was right there, in the thick of it, and perhaps more so than any other foreigner in Beijing at that time, as evidenced by his interview with Chai Ling that foretold of the coming tragedy. He hasn’t always endeared himself to the Sino-blogging community, and his obvious friendship with CCTV’s unctuous Yang Rui is off-putting, but I fancy we can rely on him to deliver a well-balanced analysis from 20 years ago in Tiananmen Moon (excerpts can be read at chinabeat).

It should also be a fascinating read given his proximity to the most important players in an event that shaped China’s last two decades like no other, as well as serving a timely reminder to Chai Ling that hundreds, possibly thousands, did not escape to the comfort of a free society.

China’s indifference to suffering in Sri Lanka

Posted by stuart on May 2nd, 2009
2009
May 2
Chinas indifference to suffering in Sri Lanka

http://transcurrents.com/

This should come as no surprise for a government that views human life (especially non-Chinese life on distant shores) as ultimately expendable in the pursuit of resources, regional strategic influence, and, dare I say, global dominance.

The latest in a long line of ‘pragmatic’ foreign policy initiatives that have impacted directly on the lives and deaths of countless thousands in Darfur, Zimbabwe, and Burma (to name a few prominent examples), has now been revealed as the underlying cause of the Sri Lankan government’s defiance in the face of international calls for humanitarian restraint in dealing with the Tamils: they have Beijing’s backing and they know it.

Timesonline  reports today:

On the southern coast of Sri Lanka, ten miles from one of the world’s busiest shipping routes, a vast construction site is engulfing the once sleepy fishing town of Hambantota.

This is where China is building a $1 billion port that it plans to use as a refuelling and docking station for its navy, as it patrols the Indian Ocean and protects China’s supplies of Saudi oil. Ever since Sri Lanka agreed to the plan, in March 2007, China has given it all the aid, arms and diplomatic support it needs to defeat the Tigers, without worrying about the West.

It certainly seems that President Mahinda Rajapaksa is firmly in Beijing’s pocket given the alacrity with which he’s appeasing his benefactor’s regional goals by pursuing what appears increasingly like a cleansing policy. The CCP’s mouthpiece China Daily has the gall to talk of the unfolding humanitarian crisis and UN efforts to allow aid to the affected region:

A top UN official pressed Sri Lankan leaders yesterday to let aid into the northeastern war zone, as the ruling party won a sweeping victory in an election seen as a referendum on its fight against ethnic Tamil rebels.

The government has pushed deep into the Tamil Tigers’ strongholds in the north in recent months, surrounding the beleaguered rebels and vowing to end the quarter-century war. But reports have grown of starvation and casualties among the tens of thousands of civilians trapped by the fighting.

Well, isn’t that lovely! Beijing once again gives the appearance of having its finger on the humanitarian pulse while simultaneously applying enough pressure to squeeze the life out of thousands of suffering people.

Is there a whiff of hypocrisy about this recent wave of concern? This analysis certainly suggests as much:

None of this diplomatic posturing should be taken at face value. All of a sudden Washington has begun to express concern about the plight of tens of thousands of civilians caught in fighting as the Sri Lankan army closes in on the remaining pocket of territory held by the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Until recently, however, the US has quietly backed President Rajapakse, the war and the military’s gross abuse of democratic rights. But as the army made rapid advances into the LTTE’s remaining territory from early January and the defeat of the LTTE appeared likely, the US made a tactical shift.

These matters are invariably more nuanced than their face value, but it doesn’t excuse China’s disregard for human rights in the way it pursues its global goals, which, thus far, have little connection with its self-proclaimed ‘peaceful rise’.

To summarise the latest transgression of morality then, Chinese support via its seat at the UN and growing clout as the world’s financier has enabled Sri Lanka to laugh in the face of international criticism, and to look forward to a positive outcome to the $1.9 billion IMF loan the government is seeking. China is effectively saying to Sri Lanka, “give us our naval base and we’ll counter criticism when you start killing an ethnic minority indiscriminately; finish the job and we’ll make sure you get the funds to clean up the mess.”

It all sounds alarmingly familiar. Because it is.

Update

The bloodbath continues. And China’s role in the unfolding slaughter becomes clearer.

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