China criticises Western democracy
October 30, 2010 00:00:00
BEIJING, Oct 29 (AP): China's Communist Party newspaper issued a scathing attack on Western-style democracy amid calls for reform of the country's political system and a resulting push-back by party conservatives.
Thursday's People's Daily editorial is the latest in a flurry of attacks on Western political institutions to appear in party propaganda organs in recent weeks.
Those follow bold calls for unspecified political reforms from Premier Wen Jiabao, as well as the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize this month to imprisoned Chinese dissident writer Liu Xiaobo, who had urged an end to single-party rule.
The People's Daily editorial blasted concepts such as multiparty democracy and separation of powers as unsuited to China, and praised the country's authoritarian socialist system as the best way of concentrating resources and accomplishing major tasks. Western democracies were founded on colonisation, exploitation and slavery, and would crumble if not for welfare payments to their underprivileged citizens, it said.
"If our country was to indiscriminately copy the Western way, we would lose the foundational thinking of shared struggle, lose the robustness of core leadership, and the country would turn into a sheet of loose sand," the editorial said, using a traditional term for disunity and chaos.
The article, titled "The Western Political Model Cannot be Duplicated," did not mention either Wen or Liu by name, saying only that "Western forces and those with whom they work in concert" were attacking the party and socialist system under the guise of reforming the political system.
In keeping with the party's habitual secrecy and opacity, it appeared open to interpretation.
The awarding of the Nobel prize to Liu has galvanised China's embattled dissident community and enraged party conservatives who appear to be responding with a campaign of vilification of Western political concepts. Liu is serving an 11-year prison term on subversion charges and his wife and other prominent dissidents have been under house arrest since the award was announced. Wen's comments, meanwhile, have been countered by statements from hard-liners criticising any reform that challenges the party's leadership. His most outspoken remarks have been censored by state media.
Wen, who ranks third in the party and is due to step down from his positions beginning in 2012, has not proposed any concrete reforms, arguing only that China's political system must evolve to ensure continued economic growth. The party explored systemic political change in the late 1980s, when reformers studied the possibility of electing leading party members, removing the party from some aspects of government and ensuring civil liberties such as freedom of speech.