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- <text id=89TT1661>
- <link 90TT1425>
- <link 89TT3014>
- <title>
- June 26, 1989: China:Deng's Big Lie
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 26, 1989 Kevin Costner:The New American Hero
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- CHINA
- Deng's Big Lie
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The hard-liners rewrite history to justify arrests and bury
- democracy
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe
- </p>
- <p> News Bulletin: the bloodiest urban massacre in Communist
- China's history never took place. Thousands of troops never stormed
- the perimeters of Tiananmen Square. Hundreds, probably thousands,
- of students never died. Photographs depicting bloodied faces and
- battered bodies, news footage documenting the clatter of gunfire
- and the crunch of army tanks, foreign press reports detailing the
- pileup of dead and wounded bodies at hospitals -- none of it
- happened.
- </p>
- <p> Instead, what transpired was this: as army convoys moved toward
- Tiananmen in the early-morning hours of June 4, troops were
- viciously attacked by rioters brandishing fire bombs and guns
- financed by "overseas reactionary political forces." The reluctant
- soldiers exercised maximum self-restraint, but were finally
- compelled to open fire. Even then, General Li Zhiyun insisted last
- week at a press conference, "it never happened that soldiers fired
- directly at the people." In the end, nearly 100 soldiers and
- policemen were killed putting down the "counterrevolutionaries."
- Civilian casualties totaled no more than 100 dead, perhaps a
- thousand wounded. That's the official story.
- </p>
- <p> Can it really be that easy? Can memory be so short? Can history
- be rewritten by proclamation of the Beijing Communist Party
- propaganda department? Eerily, China's top leaders apparently
- believe that if they repeat the lie enough times, it will turn into
- truth. More chilling still, Chinese citizens outside the capital,
- with little access to independent information, seemed to accept the
- government's sanitized version of events. Perhaps they are relieved
- to be no longer teetering on the brink of civil war. Perhaps they
- find a military occupation, 1,000 arrests and a revision of history
- a small price to pay for restoration of order. Perhaps, suggests
- a university professor in Shanghai, "the truth is too painful to
- accept."
- </p>
- <p> It is the sheer enormity of the untruth, however, that is so
- stunning. Certainly there is nothing subtle about the Chinese
- leadership's tactics. Tell the lie again and again. Broadcast mug
- shots of wanted "hooligans." Lionize citizens who cooperate by
- ratting on alleged culprits. Parade arrested students before
- cameras, their heads shaved and bowed, their wrists cuffed, signs
- detailing their crimes strapped around their necks. Hour after
- hour, run their "confessions" of wrongdoing on national television.
- Construct a new reality, one that checks democratic aspirations by
- preying on fear and paranoia. The result? "A week ago we were free
- to say anything," says a university professor. "Now I suspect
- everybody."
- </p>
- <p> The breathtaking lie is manipulated by officials with the
- doggedness of Orwell's Ministry of Truth. A long-haired man is
- marched before Chinese television cameras, looking dejected.
- Viewers have just been told that two vigilant women in Dalian, east
- of Beijing, spotted the errant man buying cigarettes and informed
- authorities, who then arrested him. His crime? "Rumormongering."
- His deed? Appearing in pirated American television footage
- estimating casualties in the Tiananmen massacre at up to 20,000
- people. "I am a counterrevolutionary," the man now says. "I admit
- my crime."
- </p>
- <p> Authorities made clear that the testimony of strangers is not
- enough. It is a citizen's duty to betray his own kith and kin. The
- Zhou clan, willingly or by coercion, did its duty. Zhou Fengsuo,
- 22, a physics student at Qinghua University in Beijing, was among
- the 21 student leaders named by officials last Tuesday as the
- country's most-wanted criminals. The next night on television, Zhou
- was shown being led into a police station for interrogation. The
- scene then shifted to the home of Zhou Yanrong, the student's
- sister. Dandling a baby on her lap, her husband at her side, the
- woman explained that after seeing the wanted notices for her
- brother, she contacted security officials.
- </p>
- <p> If a witch-hunt is required to make scoundrels of the student
- heroes, then a campaign of glorification is required to make heroes
- of the army scoundrels. Over and over, Chinese television replays
- shots of soldiers cleaning the streets and distributing food
- supplies. China's leaders troop through the hospitals visiting
- wounded soldiers. "You have done an excellent job," an official
- tells troops in Beijing.
- </p>
- <p> In Beijing, where most of the carnage took place, citizens are
- not yet foolish enough -- or desperate enough -- to buy the
- government's line. But they are toeing it, as a sullen normality
- descends on the city. Although most of the tanks are gone, the
- streets still teem with helmeted soldiers, AK-47s poised at their
- sides. The handwritten broadsheets that served as a free press have
- been peeled from walls, but perhaps some cyclists are heartened as
- they spot one last declaration chalked on the Forbidden City: THE
- FASCIST GOVERNMENT OPPRESSES THE ENTIRE PEOPLE OF THE COUNTRY. It
- is impossible to know what the people are thinking; they have
- lapsed into silence.
- </p>
- <p> The government's efforts to bury the shattered remains of the
- democracy movement and to provide a justification for the brutal
- military suppression near Tiananmen Square play far better outside
- the capital. There memories of the dunce caps, denunciations and
- deaths of the Cultural Revolution may be more vivid than the fuzzy
- reports of recent events in Beijing. Even in Shanghai, China's
- largest city and a hotbed of pro-democracy activity just two weeks
- ago, the spy-on-your-neighbor campaign is having the intended
- effect. Says a Shanghai cabdriver: "Bad elements took over the
- student movement. The army bravely carried out its duties."
- </p>
- <p> Local authorities are having no problem recruiting thousands
- of neighborhood informants and auxiliary police to revive the once
- pervasive system of spying. Last Monday evening, when an ABC news
- crew went into a private home to film a family watching Chinese
- television reports, a neighbor notified the local police. Within
- minutes, security officials rounded up the journalists and detained
- them for two hours. The next day the crew's correspondent and
- producer left Shanghai after warnings that covering the news
- without permission was "dangerous."
- </p>
- <p> The real danger, however, was that foreign press crews might
- continue to disseminate truthful information, blackening the
- Chinese government's careful whitewash. At midweek officials
- charged two American correspondents, Alan Pessin of the Voice of
- America and John Pomfret of the Associated Press, with violating
- martial-law restrictions, and gave them 72 hours to leave China.
- </p>
- <p> The expulsion of Pessin was particularly telling, since the VOA
- is an arm of the U.S. Government and its broadcasts played a key
- role in keeping millions apprised of developments in Tiananmen
- Square. Pessin was charged with distorting facts and stirring
- turmoil. Many interpreted the harsh charges as a deliberate whack
- at the Bush Administration. For now, China's leaders portray the
- U.S. as a meddler, but there are hints that China might yet find
- Washington a convenient scapegoat to shoulder a larger
- responsibility for the student strife.
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration responded to the expulsions with
- indignation. "Actions such as these," said White House spokesman
- Marlin Fitzwater, "will not succeed in keeping the truth about what
- is going on in China from being heard in that troubled land or
- throughout the world."
- </p>
- <p> Washington continued to thwart China's efforts to silence two
- prominent dissenting voices, those of astrophysicist Fang Lizhi
- and his wife Li Shuxian. Consultations between Secretary of State
- James Baker and Han Xu, Ambassador to the U.S., failed to resolve
- the wrangle over Fang and Li, who have taken refuge in the U.S.
- embassy in Beijing. Baker suggested that the couple be sent to a
- third country. At week's end China had not responded.
- </p>
- <p> The fate of the Fangs plainly rankles Chinese officials. Almost
- a week after the couple took refuge, the government issued arrest
- warrants charging them with treasonable offenses. Foreign observers
- did not rule out a violent attack on the embassy to retrieve the
- couple; a week earlier, Chinese troops sealed off one of the
- compounds where foreigners live to search for someone, perhaps
- Fang.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, unconfirmed rumors circulated that the Australian
- embassy in Beijing was harboring one of the 21 sought student
- activists, Chai Ling. A psychology student at Beijing Normal
- University, Chai, 22, managed to smuggle out of China a 40-minute
- tape-recorded message recounting the terrible hours before and
- after the assault on the square. "Please think, these youthful
- children, hand in hand and shoulder to shoulder, sitting quietly
- beneath the monument (to the People's Heroes), saw (the) murderer
- with their own eyes," her message says. "We are still alive. But
- many more remain in the square and in Changan Avenue. They'll never
- come back. Never."
- </p>
- <p> It is unlikely that Chai's poignant appeal will ever reach a
- Chinese audience. As authorities sought to curb the reporting of
- foreign journalists, officials were also clamping down by
- surveilling material sent into China by fax machines. Imported
- newspapers are growing scarce, as customs officers at international
- airports use their X-ray scanners to ferret out all forms of
- printed matter.
- </p>
- <p> Much as they would like to, however, Beijing's leaders cannot
- curtail the flow of information beyond China's borders. They know
- their campaign of intimidation is not playing well in the West,
- where present and future investors are gauging the viability of
- continued relations with China. All last week the Chinese press
- carried upbeat articles intended to reassure foreign businessmen.
- "Many foreigners with foresight have invested a great deal in China
- over the past and have got considerable profit," said Foreign Trade
- Minister Zheng Tuobin.
- </p>
- <p> Such statements cannot disguise the hemorrhage of tourist and
- investment dollars. Hotels averaged only 30% occupancy last week,
- and seven temporarily closed their doors. More important for
- China's economic outlook, international organizations were
- reassessing their involvement. The World Bank is reconsidering more
- than $700 million in new loans that were scheduled for delivery to
- China by the end of the year.
- </p>
- <p> Caught between the need to reassure the outside world and
- intimidate citizens at home, China's aging leaders are still
- groping for a way out of the political morass. The desire to grind
- out all traces of the democracy movement takes precedence. A court
- in Shanghai accused three people of burning a train that ran over
- a human barricade, and quickly sentenced them to death. The harsh
- actions open the door to a wave of execution orders. Such a move
- would be tragic for China's psychic well-being and potentially
- fatal for its economic health, and it was unthinkable just a few
- weeks ago. But if China's leaders can get away with rewriting so
- recent a past, what is to stop them from scripting any future they
- choose?
- </p>
- <p>--David Aikman/Beijing and Richard Hornik/Shanghai
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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