![]() | ||||
|
Taipei Times: China's lies are poisoning humanity By Paul Lin
Saturday, Jun 14, 2003,Page 8
By early this month, the number of SARS infections and deaths were clearly
falling in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. This is good news, but people are still
amazed at how China dealt with the SARS epidemic. At a news conference called by the press office of China's State Council on May
30, when Vice Minister of Health Gao Qiang was asked by a UPI journalist whether
former minister of health Zhang Wenkang and former Beijing mayor Meng Xuenong,
both removed for covering up the true extent of the SARS epidemic, would receive
any punishment, his reply was, "First of all, I don't agree with this journalist
that Comrade Zhang was removed because he concealed the SARS epidemic. The
Chinese government has not concealed the epidemic." And when a journalist from the Hong Kong paper Wenwei Po asked him what he
thought of Jiang Yanyong, the doctor who revealed the cover-up of the epidemic
to Time magazine, and also inquired about Jiang's situation, Gao replied, "I
don't understand why everyone is so interested in Professor Jiang Yanyong. We
believe that China has fended off SARS thanks to national mobilization and
reliance on scientific methods, mass prevention and group control under the
leadership of the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese government. ... There
are 6 million medical professionals and health workers
in China. Jiang Yanyong is but one of them." If Zhang, Meng and the Chinese government did not cover up the epidemic, then I
don't know the reason why they were removed from their posts. Meng himself
admitted that the disease was discovered in Beijing on March 1, and that it was
not announced because of the ongoing National People's Congress and Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference, so it seems he was fabricating
facts. At the time, media around the world were praising the new Chinese leadership for
being "pragmatic" and increasing transparency. They even thought it was the
beginning of Chinese reforms and Hong Kong media applauded till their hands
bled. But it was all a misunderstanding. China had tricked the whole world, and not
just the general public. Even US President George W. Bush called Chinese
President Hu Jintao to declare his support, and he also heaped praise on Hu at
the recent G8 summit. Bush appeared to have been duped, too. But the Xinhua News Agency deleted these public statements by Gao, and Bush's
praise for Hu was manipulated to sound like praise for the Chinese government.
With China's official media daring to openly block and manipulate information, I
can't see where the "transparency" would be coming from, or how this could be
the beginning of reform. To show that Jiang, respected as a hero by the public, was not being persecuted
and still enjoyed his freedom, China's mouthpieces concocted an interview with
him. Some people all along suspected it to be made up to placate the foreign
media. As suspected, it was a fake, because, just as Gao said, there are 6
million medical workers in China, so how could the media be so interested in
this particular person? This also highlights the Chinese media's lack of public
credibility. The reason Jiang was not allowed by Chinese authorities to travel to the US was
obviously his rumor-mongering, since China never concealed the epidemic. It seems Zhang and Meng's removal from their posts was an act of expediency
aimed at allaying public anger, especially in other affected nations. Now that
they see the epidemic receding, the CCP once again makes itself out to be
infallible. Thus the Chinese delegation to the World Health Assembly did not
apologize to Taiwan, to which China has brought harm. Not only that, but it also
made it seem as if Taipei was indebted to Beijing. The Cultural Revolution tore the country apart and impoverished the people,
causing the nation to seethe with discontent. The party has since acknowledged
its responsibility for the mistakes during the Cultural Revolution, Mao Zedong's
mistakes during his later years and even reversed cases of "unjust persecution"
that had occurred since the party established political power. But now there is a slight improvement in China's economic situation, and
immediately it begins to behave as if it were rich and powerful, no longer
acknowledging these mistakes but instead applying cruel pressure on the members
of the 1989 student movement. The Anti-rightist Campaign, the Cultural
Revolution, the Great Famine, Mao's mistakes and so on may not be studied or
discussed. In short, these events have nothing to do with the CCP, which has
always been mighty, glorious and correct. Because it acted as if it were opening up, the US signed three joint communiqués
with Beijing. China, however, all along looked on the US as an "enemy power,"
time and again using the communiqués to pressure the US. Little more than half a year has gone by since the eruption and spread of SARS.
The fact that China wants to move on and forget the past even before the bodies
of those who have died from the disease are cold should be a good lesson to the
world and Taiwan. Regrettably, China's continued lies have not been attacked. It
is certain to continue lying, harming the world and poisoning humanity, while we
can only stand by and suffer the consequences of our own inaction. Paul Lin is a political commentator based in New York.
Translated by Perry Svensson
Posting date: 6/16/2003
feedback@clearwisdom.net |