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- <text id=94TT0316>
- <title>
- Mar. 21, 1994: Farewell My Trade Status?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CHINA, Page 47
- Farewell My Trade Status?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In a dispute over human rights, Beijing tells Washington to
- mind its own business
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Sandra Burton/Hong Kong, Jaime A. FlorCruz/Beijing,
- and Ann M. Simmons with Christopher
- </p>
- <p> "History has already proven that it is futile to apply pressure
- against China." Though the words evoked the decrees issued by
- once proud dynasties that long ago turned to dust, they had
- a particular bite last Saturday as intoned in Beijing by Premier
- Li Peng. "China will never accept U.S.-style human rights,"
- he said after an afternoon of chilly talks with U.S. Secretary
- of State Warren Christopher. But what if Washington revokes
- China's most-favored-nation trade status? What if America restrains
- trade? The Chinese leader sniffed, "China can live without it."
- He noted that the Chinese expect to import $1 trillion worth
- of goods annually by the year 2000. If America wants to opt
- out, he said, "the U.S. will suffer no less than China."
- </p>
- <p> The Chinese have always bristled at Washington's threat of revoking
- MFN, but last week Beijing insisted more emphatically than before
- that it did not care if the U.S. used trade as a weapon. Beijing
- contended that the entire human-rights argument was an unjust
- cultural ploy to put China on the defensive. Said a spokesman
- for the Chinese Foreign Ministry: "The Chinese government cares
- deeply about human rights. There are no saviors on the question
- of human rights. The Chinese people will save themselves." The
- Americans disagreed. "It's not a matter of talking about American
- values or Chinese values," said Winston Lord, Assistant Secretary
- of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs. "We're not telling
- China to be like America. We're talking about universal rights.
- And arbitrary arrests or torture. It's got nothing to do with
- normality. There are universal rights in the U.N. charter."
- </p>
- <p> Human rights are not an abstract notion to Wang Dan. He risked
- death when he stood up for them in Tiananmen Square in 1989
- and then spent 43 months in prison for his leadership role in
- the pro-democracy movement. Undaunted and unrepentant, the student
- activist was released last year. Two weeks ago, the police were
- back: they picked him up, questioned him for 24 hours and told
- him to get out of Beijing. Wang ignored them, and last week
- he was hauled in again. Police warned him that his political
- activities were antisocialist and illegal.
- </p>
- <p> Wang responded by publishing an open letter to the National
- People's Congress, the parliament that assembled last week for
- its annual two-week session. He assured the NPC that "a democracy
- movement is not a movement to overthrow the government," and
- he called on parliamentarians to debate "the protection of individual
- political rights and innate human rights." Wang says he will
- begin investigating rights abuses, and is prepared "even to
- be arrested and sentenced."
- </p>
- <p> That could easily happen now that Beijing is in the midst of
- a pre-emptive crackdown on anyone who it deems is out to embarrass
- China. It is almost routine for security police to take leading
- activists out of circulation when high-visibility political
- events are scheduled, and last week there were two of them:
- the opening of the NPC and Christopher's arrival. During the
- Secretary of State's visit, the Chinese posted uniformed and
- plainclothes police around the homes of dissidents and their
- sympathizers.
- </p>
- <p> The current crackdown, however, displays more than the usual
- steely vigilance. Authorities swept up at least 16 well-known
- dissidents over the past two weeks. Hundreds of others are under
- close surveillance. Beijing is reacting to the first stirrings
- of a revived democracy movement. Not only are dissidents seeking
- public attention during a period in which the U.S. is demanding
- that China improve its human-rights record and Deng Xiaoping,
- China's senior leader, is fading, but the hard-line government
- fears a newfound boldness among the activists. The men in power
- detect signs that their real nightmare--an alliance of workers
- and intellectuals along the lines of Poland's Solidarity that
- could bring together a popular force mighty enough to topple
- them--may be taking shape. After all, the increasing number
- of workers who supported the students in Tiananmen played an
- important role in Beijing's decision to send in the tanks.
- </p>
- <p> Last week petitions circulated in many parts of the country
- urging the creation of worker and peasant unions and demanding
- the right to strike. Dissidents also distributed a draft charter
- for a League for the Protection of the Rights of the Working
- People of China. Liu Nianchun, a labor activist, defiantly applied
- for formal registration of the unofficial league, claiming 120
- founding members. At least one of them, Yuan Hongbing, was arrested.
- These organizing efforts are still small, but they worry the
- Chinese leadership because they could ignite major unrest, especially
- among urban workers. Inflation is running at 23% in the big
- cities, and the economic reforms that will privatize huge state-owned
- industries will add to the unemployment rolls. The last thing
- China's leaders want to face is a newly militant labor movement,
- even if it is interested primarily in job security.
- </p>
- <p> No doubt the Chinese would have preferred not to move against
- rights campaigners on the eve of Christopher's visit, but they
- went ahead anyway. The Secretary of State arrived in Beijing
- Friday night with an unequivocal message: China must improve
- its human-rights record or lose the low-tariff benefits of most-favored-nation
- trading status. President Bill Clinton had vowed that he would
- not renew MFN--a boon that allowed China to roll up a $23
- billion trade surplus with the U.S. last year--if Beijing
- did not demonstrate tangible improvement by June, when the decision
- on extending MFN comes due. Nor did roundups like those of last
- week help China's fading prospects for support in Congress.
- Beijing's bosses obviously place a higher priority on maintaining
- the country's stability--by which they mean doing whatever
- it takes to hold on to political power.
- </p>
- <p> When Premier Li Peng opened the parliamentary session last week,
- he told the 2,800 delegates that balanced economic development
- was the government's top priority and said that "social stability
- is an indispensable prerequisite for economic development."
- He conceded that a "dialogue" with other countries on human
- rights was possible "on the basis of mutual equality" but warned
- that China "will never allow anyone to interfere in its internal
- affairs under any pretext."
- </p>
- <p> Christopher spoke out more sharply than usual on the dissident
- arrests. "It would be hard to overstate the strong distaste
- we all feel over the recent detentions and hostile measures
- taken by the Chinese," he said. The moves would certainly "have
- a negative effect on my trip to China." A Foreign Ministry statement
- responded that the government had full authority to take in
- ex-convicts for questioning and that no foreigners have "the
- right to make irresponsible remarks or interfere."
- </p>
- <p> Chinese authorities insisted that relations between Washington
- and Beijing were on the mend until Assistant Secretary of State
- John Shattuck met with dissident Wei Jingsheng two weeks ago.
- Last week Christopher was unapologetic. "We cannot accept any
- restrictions on meetings between our diplomats and officials
- and Chinese citizens who are not accused of crimes," he said
- through a spokesman. "We cannot accept punishment and intimidation
- of those Chinese who choose to meet with us."
- </p>
- <p> Washington was mildly encouraged two months ago when President
- Jiang Zemin told a visiting U.S. congressional delegation that
- China would "make an effort" to deal with American concerns
- on human rights. But, as the monitors of Asia Watch reported
- last month, "political repression is increasing, not decreasing,
- and it extends to virtually every province in China." Unofficial
- political and religious activity is illegal, and thousands are
- in prison for vaguely defined "counterrevolutionary" crimes
- like subverting the government or splitting the motherland.
- Detainees are held in prolonged isolation, and many are mistreated
- or tortured to force confessions.
- </p>
- <p> Some Western analysts believed that Beijing would come down
- hard on the resurgent activists only to relent by the June deadline
- to demonstrate enough improvement to merit renewal of MFN. Or,
- the experts said, the tough old communists expect Clinton to
- back down and compromise. Either way, they are making it extremely
- difficult for themselves to meet the U.S. demand for "overall
- significant progress." Last week they were not even trying.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-