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China goes all out to halt 'jasmine revolution'

Straits Times - February 24, 2011

Ching Cheong – The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is pulling out all the stops to prevent a Chinese-style "Jasmine Revolution."

Dissidents, energized by the success of the public revolts in Tunisia and Egypt, used the Internet to mobilize peaceful demonstrations in a dozen major Chinese cities on Sunday. On Wedneday. they called for these protests to continue.

At a meeting of top officials held on the eve of the rallies, Chinese President Hu Jintao urged tighter control of cyberspace and "specific groups of people," a term used to refer to dissidents, rights defenders and the disenfranchised.

Provincial heads, ministry chiefs and senior military officials were summoned to attend the meeting, according to the official Xinhua news agency. All nine members of the CCP's powerful Politburo Standing Committee, which includes Hu, were present.

Hu made it clear that the session was meant to unify the minds of senior CCP cadres in the light of the "new changes in domestic and foreign situations," an oblique reference to the upheavals in the Arab world and their repercussions on China.

He stressed that social management must be strengthened in order to ensure the CCP stays in power.

He defined social management, for the first time, as "managing the people as well as serving them." Traditional communist-speak usually mentions only "serving the people."

According to Hu, the overall objective of social management is to "maximize harmonious factors and minimize non-harmonious ones." He outlined eight ways in which this could be achieved, including:

Zhou Yongkang, the Politburo member in charge of national and public security, echoed Hu and called on Sunday for service to and management of the people to be integrated. He announced that: In other words, the five-tier social monitoring network – an ad hoc system created in 2008 to ensure security during the Olympic Games and the subsequent Shanghai Expo – would become a permanent mechanism.

According to Public Security Minister Meng Jianzhu, this multi-tier network includes: Camera surveillance in public areas, regular police patrols on the streets, Internet surveillance, mutual monitoring by peers in the workplace and monitoring by neighborhood committees.

What Hu did not mention in his speech was how the government will address the root causes of social unrest.

Most scholars agree that a one-party system typically produces corruption of power, which in turn contributes to gross income disparity.

It also leads to the unfettered exercise of power by officials, leading to people's rights being jeopardized, as evidenced by massive land grabs, where farmers are evicted from their land in the name of development.

Hu himself attributed the growing unrest to the "inability of the socialist system in its initial stage to produce sufficient wealth to cope with the increasing aspirations of the people." But in response to this situation, he is merely devising new ways to maintain social stability and is not tackling the root causes of instability.

Hu's speech last Saturday was preceded by the order he issued to the military on Feb 10 to be prepared for contingencies.

Party cells within the military were instructed to study a document entitled Regulation Governing the Works of the Party Committees in the Military. This regulation, according to an explanatory note, is meant to strengthen the party's control over the military.

"Each of all the 33 articles in the regulation centerd on ensuring the absolute control of the party over the military," said the note.

It reminded the military that all its members owe their allegiance first and foremost to the party, and then to socialism, the state and the people.

In urging the military to study the regulation, Hu showed that as China's commander-in-chief, he was not about to take any chances with any potential Arab world-inspired unrest in his country. And if circumstances so required, he would send in the military.

All these precautionary measures show that the CCP is taking the "Jasmine Revolution" seriously.

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