Taiwan: May 2009 Archives
By Michael Wines | THE NEW YORK TIMES
01 May 2009
Behind the west Beijing apartment building where Liu Xia keeps a fifth-floor flat, the police have built a guardhouse. Its purpose is not to protect Ms. Liu, who seeks no safeguarding. The house is for the guards who watch her.
Inside, they take notes to record her comings and goings. When she ventures out, a guard picks up the phone. Soon, a sedan with darkened windows carrying a man with a telephoto-lens camera is trailing her.
During a recent chat in a nearby teahouse, Ms. Liu wondered aloud why she unnerves China's rulers enough to merit her own guardhouse. She is not active in politics, she said, and does not even use a computer. "I take photos, paint paintings, write poems, read books, cook food," she said with a mirthless laugh. "And drink."
But, of course, she knows why. She is married to Liu Xiaobo, a writer, philosopher and democracy advocate. On Dec. 10, Mr. Liu and 302 others issued a manifesto, called Charter 08, that urged China's Communist Party to abandon monopoly rule and establish a multiparty system of government.
The police seized Mr. Liu two days before Charter 08 was released. He has been locked ever since in a windowless room about an hour's drive north of central Beijing. He is denied access to lawyers, to pen and paper and, except for two brief visits, to his wife.
He is allowed to ask for books. His latest request was for the works of Kafka.
Perhaps Mr. Liu sees himself in Gregor Samsa, the Kafka protagonist who, transformed into a giant pest, is locked in a room in the hope that "out of sight" will become "out of mind."
But his captors' plight is also surreal. Signed by leading intellectuals, including some with links to the Communist Party, Charter 08 has been called the most important political statement since the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.
Increasingly, Liu Xiaobo is no ordinary dissident, but an international cause. And the crackdown on him and his wife shows signs of becoming a public-relations dilemma for Chinese leaders.
"If they don't suppress this matter, its influence will keep growing," said Zhang Zuhua, a political theorist who helped Mr. Liu and others draft the charter. "But the more they suppress it, the more its influence will grow."
Mr. Zhang also has a police guard, and a sedan that follows him. He has been warned that he is under investigation and should not make political waves.
Charter 08 concerns party rulers, some contend, because it posits an alternative to their monopoly just as China is integrating with an overwhelmingly democratic world.
Among the 20 largest economies, China is alone in enshrining single-party rule in its Constitution. Russia and China both persecute political opponents. But only China is visibly agitated by Charter 08's premises: that people should elect their leaders, divide power among government's branches and make the military answerable to civilians.
"Freedom is at the core of universal human values," the charter states. "The government exists for the protection of the human rights of its citizens." And, it states, "The most fundamental principles of democracy are that the people are sovereign, and the people select their government."
Mr. Liu and Mr. Zhang first drafted those phrases more than three years ago with about eight other friends. Their inspirations, Mr. Zhang said in an interview, were the Magna Carta, the Declaration of Independence, France's 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen and Taiwan's 1980s democracy movement.
Mr. Zhang says their goals are evolutionary, not revolutionary. Most of the signers witnessed the destruction of China's last pro-democracy movement in Tiananmen Square in 1989; some, including Mr. Liu, were participants in that movement. "Twenty years later," Mr. Zhang said, "we all think that China will head toward liberal democracy eventually. But the problem is that we cannot use such sacrificial means again. So how to find a better way toward democratization that's more suitable to China's situation?
"People must come up with a constructive view. That's the main idea behind Charter 08," he said.
Such manifestos are hardly new. In December 1978, the Fifth Modernization, a proposed liberalization of the political system to go with China's other moves toward modernity, was posted on Beijing's Democracy Wall -- and its author was handed a 15-year prison sentence. Evidence of the document was wiped from Chinese history.
Whether Charter 08 and Mr. Liu will meet similar fates remains unclear. Thirty years later, party leaders appear equally determined to retain power, but more cautious about how.
Censors have deleted Charter 08 from Chinese-language Internet pages and chat rooms, and some Web sites publishing pro-charter bloggers have been shut down. Without mentioning the charter, party leaders have railed against multiparty democracy and separation of powers as Western-imposed "erroneous ideological interferences."
Many of the charter's original signers have been interrogated; some have lost prominent positions or, in one case, been transferred from Beijing to remotest western China.












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