Once bitten, twice shy?
NOT for the first
time, a Chinese leader has made a public appeal for frank and open criticism.
The party “should be
able to put up with sharp criticism, correct mistakes if it has committed them
and avoid them if it has not," Xi Jinping said February 6th. Non-party
members, he added, should “have the courage to tell the truth, speak words
jarring on the ear, and truthfully reflect public aspirations.”
That the public
response was so prompt comes as no surprise to those who are familiar with
China’s vibrant and outspoken community of online commentators. Nor is it
surprising that so many responses were cynical, considering the similarity to
another appeal that was made more than 50 years ago.
In 1956 Mao Zedong
launched his “Hundred Flowers” campaign, in which he urged intellectuals to air
critical views. National policies would be improved, he promised, by “letting a
hundred flowers bloom and a hundred schools of thought contend.”
The responses were
slow at first but later came flooding in—in the form of letters, posters, and
published articles—and by the middle of 1957 Mao had heard enough. Many who had
dared to speak up found themselves targeted as “rightists”, and subjected to
harsh persecution. Some were purged from the party and government; some ended
up in labour camps.
Historians remain
divided as to whether Mao had meant from the outset for the campaign to be laid
as a trap, or whether he changed tack after being surprised by the criticism.
He did boast later that he had “enticed the snakes out of their caves”. That
infamous remark makes the timing of Mr Xi’s new appeal rather unfortunate. He
was speaking at a reception to ring in the Chinese calendar’s year of the
snake.
Like Mao before him,
who said criticism should be frank but “healthy,” Mr Xi made clear that critics
must uphold the basic tenets of “socialism with Chinese characteristics”.
Unlike Mao, Mr Xi must grapple with millions of citizens who have quick and
easy access to social-media outlets. Some have openly questioned whether he is
in fact hunting for snakes. Others have challenged him to end the censorship of
books, news media and internet commentary, and to stop harassing political
activists.
But not all of the
new-media commentary has been so unkind to Mr Xi. Soon after he ascended to the
top job, he became the subject of “The Fan Club of Learning from Xi” on Sina
Weibo, a microblogging platform in the model of Twitter. It tends to feature
humanising and candid (but not always flattering) photos—of a sort that would
be hard for ordinary citizens to obtain. Many of its readers wonder whether it
was a clever official attempt to polish the new leader’s image, rather than the
grass-roots enterprise it purports to be.
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