As
land hassles stem the flow of NRI investment in Punjab, the Government
takes steps to ease the legal woes of expatriates.
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CARE
TODAY
INDIA
TODAY HINDI
CURRENT
ISSUE JUNE 30, 2003
COVER: CHINA ESSAY
Who's Afraid of China
There is no need to be mesmerised by the paranoid
power.
By S. Prasannarajan
The paradoxical
power. An exclamatory nation. And a secret society. The ancient land of
the East where wise men in pigtails guarded the secrets of knowledge for
millennia. Where emperors with celestial mandate reigned in sprawling
isolation. Where Revolution swept through the countryside like a morning
deluge. Where the sacred edicts of the supreme revolutionary, the Great
Helmsman, were immortalised on the biggest graveyards in the history of
totalitarianism. Where Marx with Chinese characteristics grinned from
McDonald's. Where comrades read Confucius to keep order. Where the supermarket
hides the super gulag. Where the intelligence of silicon is more valued
than the mind of the citizen. China is more than a one-dimensional dazzle-or
dread.
So let us too read tea leaves.
LONG WAIT: A soldier of the Red Guard keeps
watch at Tiananmen Square in Beijing. In 1989, Deng ordered a crackdown
on students demanding democracy, killing many.
The world is busy reading statistics to romance China, the most favoured
marketplace: the revolutionary wasteland that has morphed into an economic
powerhouse; the China of record-breaking indices in development that has
to be emulated by every other wretched country in the Third World that
aspires to have a place in the global economy. And it continues to be
celebrated by op-ed prophets as the model state for Asian values: How
Democracy Denies Freedom to the Man in the Shopping Mall. Fettered citizens
are invited to buy happiness-"I'll make you happy" is an old
communist conceit after all-in the free market. Their every movement watched
by the keepers of wisdom, a doddering band of brothers. The dictatorship
of the proletariat is still a necessary condition for the market as well
as the man. It ensures that future is bright, free of "counter-revolutionary
viruses".
Does it really?
The projected majesty of the Middle Kingdom allows no such questions.
It evokes envy and fear. The most populous nation on earth-1.3 billion
and growing-with the largest army at the disposal-the PLA, "the mighty
pillar" of the proletariat-and with the fastest growing economy is
destined to take over the world one distant day. The echo of "the
thunder of the East" will reach the entire West. Will the dragon
intimidate its neighbour India and swallow up the tiny "renegade
province" called Taiwan? This is China as oversized awe, as a cultural
alternative to Adam Smith, also a cultural manipulation of Marx-what has
come to be known as socialism with Chinese characteristics.
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee is stepping into a country as forbidding
as this. The idea of China is such a seminar-worn subject that it has
been used ad nauseam to show the Indian rate of non growth. Should the
leader from the world's largest democracy be swayed by the dictatorship
of social capitalism? Should he-not the chosen one but the elected one-feel
intimidated by all those opaque comrades who are not obliged to report
to the people? And mesmerised by the market? He should not.
LARGER THAN LIFE: A fabourer works to erect
a giant portrait of chairman Mao. Today, a leader has no historic
value in China, only market value.
The rising China is an artificial project, sustained by paranoia, and
fear of its own people. Mao may have taken refuge in souvenir shops or
in framed memories in the Forbidden City. Somewhere in the market, still,
his ghost roams, uninterrupted. "I stand for the theory of permanent
revolution. Do not mistake this for Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution.
In making revolution one must strike while the iron is hot-one revolution
must follow another, the revolution must continually advance..."
The chairman struck hard. What had started from the Yanan caves as a sub-rural
revolution metamorphosed into a sanguineous madness. First the Great Leap
Forward. It was the people's republic's first display of economic ambition,
its irrational urge to catch up with the West-and it killed 30 million,
almost 5 per cent of the country's population then. Even Stalin could
not achieve such a revolutionary feat, and no one would. Then the Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution ... and all those slogans of the era:
Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom and a Hundred Schools Contend; Bombard the
Headquarters. Mao, the amateur poet from Hunan, always had a lyrical camouflage
to hide his bloodlust. Even in his loneliest despair, he saw the Land
of Hibiscus (a literary allusion to his homeland) "illuminated by
the light of dawn". Few children of revolution suffered from such
poetic justice.
Deng Xiaoping would take charge of post-Mao China as victim and redeemer.
A victim of the Cultural Revolution, the much-maligned "capitalist
roader" would turn out to be a sorcerer who would put Marx in the
marketplace and do wonders. Today's China is largely his China, the China
of special economic zones, the China of Shanghai high-noon where getting
rich is truly glorious. On the dawn of June 4, 1989 in Tiananmen Square,
Deng's China unravelled itself. It was a revelatory moment: don't take
the bargain in the marketplace to the political arena. The massacre was
justified as a rejoinder to a rebellion that "wanted to overthrow
the state and the Party". The students were asking the Moderniser
only for the last modernisation: democracy. Deng, the victim of the Cultural
Revolution, took revenge on his own personal history. He published the
paperback edition of the Cultural Revolution. It was not entirely accidental:
the students' ideal, the Goddess of Democracy, resembled the Statue of
Liberty. Some Chinese wanted something more than Big Mac. Deng, China's
most famous bridge player, didn't want the market to be contaminated by
the viruses of "bourgeois liberalisation".
The realm of the private has no place in the market, and that is why
the gulag is a necessary companion to the shopping mall, and that is why
questions are not appreciated in take-away happiness joints-the party
still has the copyright over the conscience of the shopper. Marx would
never have anticipated this; nor would have Mao. The new communist rulers
of China will lose everything if they lose the market. It is not that
the market needs them. Not really. It is the other way round. It is hardly
the Red Book that provides the script of salvation. It is the scrip that
matters. The new rulers, mostly the chosen children of Deng, are technocrats
for whom the party ensures some kind of life insurance. The party is with
the rich, and China is still the countryside, poor and wretched. The much
rhapsodised China, the economic superpower, is a poor rich country. And
in today's China, the life of the ruling communist, the legatee of a revolution
that echoed even in the villages of Kerala and West Bengal, has no historical
value. It has only market value. Deng, the Long Marcher, was the first
one to realise it. He turned that knowledge into an existential credo
for the state. Jiang Zemin, the comrade who succeeded him but didn't grow
into a cult like Mao or Deng, didn't deviate. Hu, the new leader, knows
that he too can't afford to change the course.
It is such knowledge that keeps the leader on the edge. Permanent revolution
has long ago graduated into permanent paranoia. China is a nation eternally
scared of viruses, mostly western and counter-revolutionary. And lately
biological. The latest China the world saw was the China with a mask.
A new virus haunted the kingdom-and that mask was real as well as metaphorical.
The metaphorical mask covered the secret tremble. It covered the truth
as well-for a while. Was SARS China's Chernobyl? The nuclear leak gave
new thrust to glasnost and perestroika. China doesn't have a Gorbachev,
and the People's Republic is not a revolutionary carbon copy of the Soviet
Union. Mao's revolution, all said, was not a palace coup. And there was
no market revolution to supplement Marx in Soviet Russia. Is it then eternal
celestial mandate for the Middle Kingdom? The road from the market usually
doesn't lead to the communist's favoured destination. Demands too grow
along with the market-the comrades can't forever contain them with tanks
and truncheons. The future as seen from the Forbidden City is not all
that bright. China is a nervous power.
So Vajpayee, another wise old Asian from another ancient land, is stepping
onto the red carpet with a new value system-least scared, but capable
of scaring the hosts.