Gopusa (Texas, USA): SARS Slams the Tiger
By Austin Bay
April 30, 3003
(Clearwisdom.net) The bug has kicked Asia's biggest tiger in the teeth.
The bug is SARS, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, and the tiger is the
Peoples Republic of China.
The sorry fact behind the SARS epidemic is that Beijing chose saving face
over saving lives. The medical and economic consequences of that terrible
decision are already evident. The strategic political repercussions for China
and Asia may be huge.
Plagues have no politics. Politically suppressing the news of an outbreak
doesn't cure the illness. Barring miracle remission on a continental scale, only
aggressive, coordinated medical relief, public health programs and public
information campaigns squelch epidemics.
According to the best guesses, SARS appeared in China's southern Guangdong
province in October or November 2002.
Chinese officials -- exactly who they are we don't know -- weren't honest
with their own people. That's not a new condition for authoritarian regimes of
any stripe, that's business as usual.
North Korea denies its perpetual famine. Castro's Cuba still touts its free
public medical system, though for everyone but the political elite that system
lacks aspirin and bandages.
Dictators who have reason to doubt their own political legitimacy believe bad
news makes them look weak. But truly bad news won't submit to totalitarian
silence. In 1986, Soviet leaders denied the extent of the nuclear reactor
disaster at Chernobyl, until windblown radioactive dust activated Geiger
counters elsewhere in Europe. Germans and Swedes didn't like fallout in their
milk.
Pathogens also leap borders, and they do so rapidly on our 747-connected
planet.
The SARS epidemic demonstrates Beijing's strategic bind. China has opened its
economy to global trade, and the payoff in economic growth is real. But
"political openness" in mainland China has been a very iffy process.
The super-flu is bad enough, but the lies, denial and misrepresentations
surrounding the SARS outbreak magnified Beijing's problems.
-- The Chinese economy has been quarantined. J.P. Morgan Chase estimated
China's economy grew 9.9 percent in the first quarter of 2003. The trend-line
for the second quarter is China's economy will shrink by 2 percent. Beijing's
"capitalist Communists" justify continuing authoritarian political control
because the economy produces. SARS demonstrates authoritarian policies exact a
huge economic price.
-- Beijing's domestic credibility has suffered, and not simply because of the
economic tailspin. It's often tough to gauge the political blowback in an
authoritarian society that results from "lying about something really important"
because the autocrats control the information flow. The fear generated by this
epidemic, however, has overwhelmed the control system. Gossip is now propelled
by paranoia undeterred by jail.
Chinese peasants, technocrats, and even the bureaucrats know government lies
don't stop infections. Senior health officials in Beijing have been sacked. This
past Tuesday, 2,000 people in the village of Chagugang (near Beijing) burned a
school building the government designated a SARS quarantine center. That's not a
democracy's Not In My Backyard demonstration, that's a rebellion.
-- SARS has dealt Beijing an international relations disaster.
Militarily-potent China is already viewed with distrust throughout Asia.
Business, however, is business, until business travel leads to mass death.
Beijing has failed to act as a responsible regional leader. Behind the scenes,
Japan has been displeased with China's failure to help police North Korea's
nuclear zanies; the failure to share vital international medical data adds to
the perception that Beijing cannot be trusted to act as a responsible power.
China, as part of its "one China" strategy, has successfully excluded Taiwan
from the World Health Organization (WHO). The Taiwanese have pleaded for
observer status, arguing international health issues override political
competition. Beijing's mishandling of SARS makes Taiwan's case. We all share the
same disease pool, and political exclusion from WHO must stop.
WHO now says SARS outbreaks have peaked in Canada, Singapore, Hong Kong and
Vietnam, but not in China. China needs the world's help. That means a full and
open accounting of the medical facts and the political failures.
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