On
the night of 3–4 June, units of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) entered
Beijing, killing some hundreds of ordinary Beijing citizens as they made their
way to Tiananmen Square — the focal point of massive protests that had begun in
late April following the death of former party secretary Hu Yaobang.
The square
was cleared of protestors, but further killings and arrests ensued over the
following days. A small number of soldiers were also killed. Protests in many
other Chinese cities were simultaneously brought to an end, with varying
degrees of violence. Significant protests in Shanghai were settled, largely
peacefully. Beijing was the worst. This much is known, although a final,
credible death toll has not been published to this day.
After the
event, Deng Xiaoping famously said ‘this storm was bound to happen’. Not
necessarily. The country-wide protests — against corruption, against rising
prices, against an array of contradictions between what opening and reform
seemed to promise and the realities of daily life, as well as demands for
greater freedom and democracy — were almost certainly inevitable. But the
bloody denouement in the nation’s capital was not. The crucial element was a
serious power struggle at the centre of China’s leadership, a struggle that was
exacerbated by the popular protests, which the contending parties sought to
use.
There were
of course other contingent elements: the 70th anniversary of the May 4th
Movement, the Asian Development Bank meeting and, in particular, the historic
visit of Mikhail Gorbachev; and there were divisions among the student leaders
and their supporters, between those favouring a degree of accommodation with
the authorities and others more intransigent. But in the end it was the
hardliners in the government who won the power struggle. It is these hardliners
who, backed by Deng Xiaoping, must take responsibility for the tragic way in
which the protests were suppressed.
And it was
this same Deng who also ensured that, against the clear inclinations of a
number of those on the winning side, the crackdown did not mean turning back
from the policies of opening and reform that he had himself initiated at the
Third Plenum of the 11th Central Committee in late 1978. He understood that
these processes, and the resultant economic growth, must be progressed above
all else if stability were to remain. The domestic and international shocks
resulting from the events of June 1989 notwithstanding, Deng’s Southern Tour of
1992 unleashed another wave of opening and reform that has resulted in the
China we see today — with unprecedented levels of prosperity, openness to the
world, international standing and influence.
For one who
lived through and closely followed the events of 1989 in Beijing, it is hard to
realise that a quarter of a century has now past and that ‘4 June’ means little
to many adult Chinese today who were only children, or not even born, when
those events took place.
At the same
time, China has changed beyond recognition and, in terms of people’s lives, in
many ways for the better. Millions of Chinese travel overseas on holidays every
year and return home with no greater reluctance than tourists of any other
country. Many take pride in China’s global standing.
While the
1980s were a period of unalloyed admiration for the West, particularly from
intellectuals and students, this has been tempered not only by patriotic
education but also much more effectively by Western failures in Iraq and
Afghanistan, the Asian financial crisis, the global financial crisis and the
unmet policy challenges of the Arab Spring.
Of course
China has huge problems and challenges of its own, some of which, such as
pollution, result from its own successes. Others are more traditional, such as
corruption which now greatly exceeds 1989 levels. But while ‘mass incidents’
resulting from particularly egregious and localised causes continue to take
place across the country, the idea that the central leadership is vulnerable to
challenge by mass protests in the heart of the nation seems implausible. This
is not what people want and, even if it were, the range of coercive means —
lethal and non-lethal — at the disposal of the authorities gives them a far
greater degree of flexibility and effectiveness than was the case 25 years ago.
And yet
those same authorities are worried. They have not forgotten what happened. Some
of them are the direct or indirect beneficiaries of the power struggle that
Zhao Ziyang lost and Li Peng won — resulting in the promotion of Jiang Zemin,
who still exercises some influence despite his advanced age. It is noteworthy
that Xi Jinping’s father, Xi Zhongxun, honourably but fruitlessly opposed the
decision to use the PLA.
The millions
of Beijing citizens who lived through the events have not forgotten, whatever
roles they played or didn’t play, and whatever they thought then or think now.
And neither have the parents, siblings, relatives, teachers and friends of
those who died and the greater numbers injured or imprisoned or exiled.
4 June, like
18 March, 4 May, 30 May, and 18 September, has entered Chinese history, and as
such demands an explanation. From time to time an official Chinese spokesperson
says, usually responding to a journalist, that this issue was settled years
ago. It hasn’t. If this were the case, the date would not be as sensitive as it
is.
Every year
in late May people associated with the events of 1989 are encouraged in one way
or another to keep quiet or take a holiday. This year, a significant
anniversary, has already seen a number of arrests, but there have also been new
forms of activism, including a privately sponsored seminar and a series of
messages on Weibo, China’s Twitter. The issue is not going away.
One may
fully understand the desire of the Chinese government, faced as they are with
massive challenges, to avoid rancorous disputes and anything that risks
undermining China’s hard-won stability and prosperity. Good luck to them in
achieving their stated goals for the ‘two centenaries’ (of the Chinese
Communist Party and of the PRC), including moderate prosperity for all by 2021
and democracy by 2049.
But sooner
or later it will become clear that a truthful account of June 1989 will help,
not hinder, the realisation of a China that is stronger for acknowledging its
tragedies as well as its stunning achievements.
Professor Richard Rigby is head of the China Institute
at the Australian National University and was formerly an Australian diplomat
and analyst specialising on Chinese and Asian affairs.
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